134 



BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON. 



Page. 



Dolphin, a spotted, Prodelphimis doris xl 



Dolphin, bottle-nose, habits of the xxx 



E. 



XXXIV 



... 23 



Earth, weighing the 



Empidonax gracilis, n. s 



Enemies, our invisible xxxiv 



Euetheia olivacea intermedia, n. sub-s 22 



Ex-presidents, members of the council. ..xxvi, xxxiii 



F. 



Fats, animal and vegetable, how to distinguish 



between xxxix 



Fauna, the oldest known, on the American con- 

 tinent xxxi 



Fee, annual xxvn 



Fee, initiation xxvn 



Fin-rays in fishes, development of xxxii 



Fish, Chimaerid, new to the western Atlantic. ..xxix 



Fish Commission, Wood's Holl station of xl 



Fish-culture, a necessity for maintaining the 



shad fishery xxxix 



Fishes, development of fin-rays in xxxii 



Fish, new species, related to Muraenoides xxxviii 



Fiske, John, on results in England of the 



surrender of Cornwallis xxxiv 



Flint, J. M., on collecting and studying fora- 



minifera xh 



Flora of Washington, additions to xxxi, 106 



Flora of Washington, changes of nomencla- 

 ture in 127 



Flora of Washington, species excluded from 132 



Flukes of cetaceans and sirenians, origin and 



homologies of ...xxxiv 



Foraminifera, method of collecting and study. 



ins- 



.xli 



Foreign service, the machinery of our xxxiv 



Foreman, Edward, notice of death of xxxvii 



Fort Conger, plants from xxx 



Fossils of Primordial group of St. John, N. B..xxxi 



G. 



Gallaudet, E. M., on the language of signs and 

 combined method of teaching deaf-mutes... xxxiv 



Genital apparatus of Lingula xxxv 



Geological history, application of biology to, 



xxxiii, 1 



Germs and germicides xxxiv 



Gihon, A. L., on sanitary ignorance among 

 high and low xxxiv 



Gill, T., on the classification of the Monotre- 

 mata xx x 



Ginkgo tree, recent flowering of, in Washing- 

 ton xxxix 



Goode, G. B., on natural history features at 

 the New Orleans Exposition xxxii 



Goode on the beginnings of natural history 

 in America xliii, 35 



Grape vine, mildews of the xli 



Grasses of the arid plains xxxi 



Page. 



Greely, A. W., marine invertebrates obtained 

 by xxxii 



Guereza monkey xxxviii 



Gutta percha, use of, in making casts of fos- 

 sils x^xv 



Gynceeium of Datura stramonium, multipli- 

 cation in the xlii 



H. 



Haidi gambling sticks, casts from xxxix 



Harporhynchus guttatus, n. s 21 



Henshaw, H. W., on hybrid quail xxxviii 



Hepaticae of Washington HO, 116 



History, oldest, in the light of newest 



science xxxiv 



Hitchcock, R., exhibition of cholera bacillus 



by xxxvii 



Hitchcock on the red snow xli 



Hornaday, W. T., on natural history and peo- 

 ple of Borneo xxxiv 



Hough, M. B. W., notice of death of xxix 



Human body, mutilations of the xlii 



Hybrid quail xxxviii 



Hydro-Medusae, origin of alternation of genera- 

 tion in xxxi 



I. 



Intracellular digestion xxxv 



Isosoma, phytophagic habit in xxx 



J- 



Japanese plum in Washington xxxvii 



Johnson, A. B., on plants from Fort Conger xxx 



Johnson on the shipworm and sheepshead. ...xxxvii 

 Johnson, Blanchard F., notice of death of xxix 



K. 



Knowlton, F. H., on additions to the flora of 

 Washington •' 10(S 



Knowlton on Alaskan willows and birches. ..xxxvii 



Knowlton on the multiplication in the gynce- 

 eium of Datura stramonium xlii 



Koch's method of isolating and cultivating bac- 

 teria * xxvii 



L. 



Lainpornis thalassinus, n. s 23 



Language of signs xxxiv 



Lectures, Saturday, 1885 xxxiv 



Lichens of Washington I 18 



Life, searching for the first forms of xxxiv 



Lingula, genital apparatus of xxxv 



Locust, seventeen-year, occurrence of, in Vir- 

 ginia xxix 



M. 



Mammary glands, development of, in Cetacea, 



xxxvi 



