Abstract

Douglas F. Manning of Alexandria Bay, New York, reported: “We had quite an active display of the aurora last night, September 4, 1937, around 9 p.m., Eastern Standard Time. A low greenish glow with sharply defined rays.” A later phase was observed at Lynn, Massachusetts, by Mrs. Anna P. Ricker, who, in a letter dated September 10, 1937, makes the following statement: “I was awakened about 3 a.m., September 5, 1937, and went to my window and saw these two great balls of fire about three feet in circumference to the naked eye and very close together; from each one several rays of light shot upwards, and these appeared three times in succession and from then on great waves of light at short intervals in a circular motion. These waves were about three or four feet wide and twice as long and in perfect dimension.

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