68 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SIMON NEWCOMB— ARCHIBALD. [MEil01 \%^ T xvn, 



122. The Senate's appointing power. 



The Evening Post, New York, Nov. 12, 1903. 



123. [In A favorite quotation of mine, a calendar published by the King's Daughters, Bingham ton, 



New York, 1903, we find under March 24, 1904, page 38: "Whatsoever thy hand findeth 

 to do, do it with thy might, Simon Newcomb."] 



124. The Carnegie Institution. 



N. Amer. Rev., vol. 178 (Feb., 1904): 172-185. 



Also an extract in Science, vol. 19 (Feb. 12, 1904): 268-269. 



125. The mariner's compass. 



Harper's Mag., vol. 108 (Feb., 1904): 422-427. 



Also in Side-lights on Astronomy (1906): 140-154; see Section II, no. 300. 



126. A statistical inquiry into the probability of causes of the production of sex in human off- 



spring. 



Carnegie Institution, Washington, Publication No. 11. 

 Washington, June, 1904, 34 pp. 

 Quoted on pages 501-503 of J. A. Thomson, Heredity, London, Murray, 190S. 



127. The coming International Congress of Arts and Sciences at St. Louis, Sept. 19-24. 



Pop. Sci. Mo., vol. 65 (Sept., 1904): 466-473. 



128. The evolution of the scientific investigator. [Introductory address delivered as president 



of the International Congress of Arts and Science at the St. Louis Exposition, Sept. 19, 

 1904.] In Congress of Arts and Science, Universal Exposition, St. Louis, 1904, edited 

 by H. J. Rogers, volume 1. 



Boston and New York, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1905, pp. 135-147. 



Also in Science, vol. 20 (Sept. 23, 1904): 92-96. 



Also in Sci. Amer. Suppl, vol 58 (Oct. 2, 1904): 24098-24100. 



Also in Pop. Sci. Mo., vol. 66 (Nov., 1904): 92-96. 



Also as a pamphlet, St. Louis, Universal Exposition, 1904, 24 pp. 



Also ("reprinted from author's revised copy") Smithsonian Report, 1904, Washington, 1905, pp. 221-233. 



Also in Side-Lighte on Astronomy (1906): 236-257; see Section II, no. 300. 



Also in Engineering Education, Essays for English, selected and edited by R. P. Baker,- New York, Wiley 

 (1919): 3-28. 



129. [Letter dated January 19, 1903, signed by Simon Newcomb, chairman, and six others, 



the "Committee od Plan and Scope" for the Congress of Arts and Science, University 

 Exposition, St. Louis, 1904; in Congress of Arts and Science, ed. by H. J. Rogers.] 

 Boston and New York, Houghton, Mifflin and Co., vol. I, (1905): 8-10. 



130. Our antiquated method of electing a president. 



N. Amer. Rev., vol. 180 (Jan., 1905): 9-18. 



131. [Method by which the Carnegie Institution can best promote research work in the exact 



sciences.] 

 Carnegie Institution of Washington Year Boole, no. 3, 1904. Washington (Jan., 1905): 179-181. 

 Letter dated, May 12, 1904. 



132. The Smithsonian Institution. 



Nation, New York, vol. 80 (June 29, 1905): 516-517. 

 Anonymous editorial. 



133. The cost of life insurance business. 



Nation New York, vol. 81 (July 6, 1905): 67. 



Anonymous. 



134. Walking in Switzerland. 



Nation, New York, vol. 81 (Sept. 28, 1905): 256-257. 

 Signed "S. N.," dated " On the Rhine, Aug. 7, 1905." 



135. What the navy needs. 



Nation, New York, vol. 81, (Dec. 28, 1905): 516-517. 

 Anonymous. 



136. The organization of scientific research. 



JV. Amer. Rev., vol. 182 (Jan., 1906): 32^3. 



Also in Side- Lights on Astronomy (1906): 165-181; see Section II, no. 300. 



