160 



EEPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1903. 



MARLATT, C. L. The lime, sulphur, 

 and salt wash. 



Circ. Div. Ent., U. S. Depi. Agric, Div. of 

 Ent. (second series), No. 52, pp. 8, Feb. 

 20, 1903, pp. 1 to 8. 



The Entomological Club of the 



American Association for the Advance- 

 ment of Science. Eeport by the secre- 

 tary. 



Can. Ent., xxxv, Mar., 1903, pp. 53-58; 

 XXXV, Apr., 1903, pp. 79-87. 



Japan's foremost entomologist. 



Ent. News, xiv. No. 3. Mar., 1903, pp. 6.t- 

 68, pi. IV. 



How to control the San Jose scale. 



arc. Div. Ent., U. S. Dept. Agric, T)iv. 

 Ent. (second series), No. 42, 7 pp.. Mar. 

 25, 1903. Third edition, extensively re- 

 vised. 



Scale insects and mites on citrus 



trees. 



Farmers' Bull., U. S. Dept. Agric. Div. Ent., 

 No. 172, Apr. 17, 1903, pp. 42, figs. 34. 

 Revision of the Yearbook article by Mr. 

 Marlatt. 



— — Applied entomology in Japan. 



Bull. Div. Ent, U. S. Dept. Agric. (new 

 .series), No. 40, pp. 56-63, pis. I, ii. (Is- 

 sued Apr. 2.5, 1903. ) 



A house-boat collecting trip in 



China. 



Can. Ent., xxxv, Apr.^ 1903, pp. 79-87. 



The San Jose scale — its natural 



home and natural enemy. 



Yearbook U. S. Dept. Agric, 1902, pp. 1.55- 

 174. 

 Author's extras were issued June 6, 1903. 



MARSHALL, William B. Tea. 



Am. Joiirn. Pharmacy, Lxxv, No. 2, Feb., 

 1903, pp. 79-94. 

 Part of a lecture before the Pharmaceutical 

 A.ssociation of the Philadelphia College of 

 Pharmacy. Describes the botany, geography 

 and history, cultivation, preparation, chem- 

 istry, effects, social status, adulterants, and 

 commerce of tea. 



MASON, Otis Tufton. (See under Wil- 

 liam H. Holmes. ) 



MAXON, William R. A Japanese Poly- 

 pody. 



Pop. Sci. News, xxxvi, Oct., 1902, p. 221, 2 

 pis. 

 -V popular account of the peculiar way Poly- 

 podiuni japonicum has of forming spirals by 

 the sidewise tortion of its midrib. 



A botanists' mecca. 



Plant World, vi, Feb., 1903, p. 38. 

 Note on the Hart's-tongue in Central New 

 York. ♦ 



MAXON, William R. Notes on Amer- 

 ican ferns, vi. 



Fern Bull, xi, Apr., 1903, pp. 38-10. 

 (1) Mention is made of a cristate form of 

 Woodwardia spimdosa from California. (2) 

 Adiantum modestum Underw. is reported from 

 Arizona. (3) Polystichummunitumsolitarium 

 subsp. nov., is described from Lower Califor- 

 nia. 



A study of certain Mexican and 



Guatemalan species of Polypodium. 



Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herharium, viii, pt. 3, 

 June 27, 1903, pp. i-v; 271-279, pis. lxi, 



LXII. 



A summary of results attending a study of 

 plants referred to, or closely related to, Poly- 

 podium subpetiolatum Hook. Polypodium ae- 

 qualis, P. teresae, P.firmalum, P. fissidens and 

 P. adelphum are described as new. 



(See also under Lucien M. Under- 



MAYER, P. Die Caprellidfe der Siboga- 

 Expedition. Monographic xxxiv aus: 

 I Uitkomsten op Zoologisch, | Botan- 

 isch, Oceano-graphisch en Geologisch 

 Gebied | verzameld in Nederlandsch 

 Oost-lndie 1899-1900 | aan boord H. 

 M. Siboga onder commando van | Lui- 

 tenant ter zee I*' kl. G. F. Tydeman | 

 uitgegeven door | Dr. Max Weber | 

 Prof, in Amsterdam, Leider der Expe- 

 ditie I Leiden | Juin 1903 | 

 Folio, 160 pp., pis. i-x. 

 A comprehensive work covering not only 

 the results of the Siboga Expedition, but col- 

 lections from many different museums. Keys 

 to the genera and species are given, also a 

 bibliography, faunal lists of species, as well 

 as a list of the Siboga collection, and a chap- 

 ter on the morphology, biology, and phy- 

 logeny of the Caprellidie. 



MEARNS, Edgar A. The Ocelot cats. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxv. No. 1286, Sept. 

 17, 1902, pp. 237-249. 

 New species: Felis costaricensis, F. xqaato- 

 rialis. 



MERRIAM, C. Hart. (See under J. A. 



Allen. ) 

 MERRILL, George P. A newly found 

 meteorite from Mount Vernon, Chris- 

 tian County, Ky. 



Am. Geologist, xxxi. Mar., 1903, pp. 1.56-158. 

 A brief paper giving a preliminary notice 

 of a 351-pound pallasite that had recently 

 come into the possession of the National Mu- 

 seum. 



Stones I for | Building and Dec- 

 oration. I By I George P. Merrill, | 

 Curator of Geology in the United States 



