268 



KANSAS ACADEMY OP SCIENCB. 



Eosinweed, an examination of its resinous exudation. L. E. Sayre XI 



Sot, black, of the grape. C. R. Carpenter XI 



Rotation periods of Mercury, Venus, and tlie satellites of the solar system. 



E. Miller XIV 



Saccharine substances in the stem of Sorghum vulgare. G. H. Failyer IX 



Salamander, common, mode of respiration (illustrated). F. H. Snow XII 



Salt, analysis of. G. E. Patrick IV 



Salt beds in Ellsworth county. Robert Hay XI 



Salt marshes, Kansas, notes on ( illustrated ). Robert Hay XII 



Salt plains of Oklahoma. C. N. Gould XVII 



Sand-dune collecting. Warren Knaus XIV 



Sandstone, red, of central Kansas. B. F. Mudge I 



Sap, notes on circulation. W. R. Lighton XI 



Savage, Joseph, memorial of. Robert Hay XIII 



Saw-fly, red cedar, notes on (illustrated ). C. L. Marlatt X 



Science in education. S. W. Williston XVI 



in the public schools. D. S. Kelly XV 



Serpent, sonoran, from Kansas (new variety). F. W. Cragin X 



Shawnee county stratigraphy. J. W. Beede XV 



Silica cement mortars. W. Tweedale XVII 



Silico-barite nodules from near Salina (illustrated). E. B. Knerr XVI 



Sink holes in Wabaunsee county. Joseph Savage VII 



Siphoning extraction apparatus, glass ( illustrated ). J. T. Willard and G. H. 



Failyer XII 



Sky, the (illustrated). E. L. Nichols X 



Small things. E. H. S. Bailey XIV 



Smell sensations, classification. W. S. Franklin XII 



• Some special tests in regard to delicacy of sense of smell. E. H. S. Bailey 



and L. M. Powell IX 



Smut, sorghum, notes on ( illustrated ). W. A. Kellerman and W. T. Swingle XII 



Snakes, Kansas, list of, in museu.n State University. Annie E. Mozley VI 



Soils, Kansas, analysis of. G. E. Patrick IV 



Soils, composition, effect upon, of continuous cropping by wheat. J. T. Wil- 

 lard XVII 



Solanum rostratum, examination of. W. S. Amos and L. E. Sayre XIII 



Solar attachment to the engineer's transit, note on precision of. F.O.Marvin, XII 

 Solubilities, on determining the solubilities of metallic salts (illustrated). G. 



E. Patrick and A. B. Aubert Ill 



Sorghum, improvement of, by seed selection. G. H. Failyer and J. T. Willard . . XIII 



Sound transmission by electricity. J. T. Lovewell VI 



Spanish Peaks, notes on geology of. Joseph Savage IX 



Spectra absorption, new method of studying (illustrated). W. S.Franklin IX 



Spermophilus Richardsonii. S. W. Williston VI 



Sphinx, sage, larva and chrysalis of. F. H. Snow IV 



Standard time. H. S. S. Smith VIII 



Stone, building, composition of some. E. H. S. Bailey and E. C. Case XIII 



Stone implements in Trego county. Joseph Savage VII 



Sugar content, variation in, of Sorghum vulgare. J. T. Willard X 



Sugar crystals, observation of their formation in the juice of Sorghum saccha- 



ratum. E. B. Cowgill X 



Sugar, invert, its sweetness and notes on its preparation. J. T. Willard X 



Sugar, ultramarine blue in. H. L. Raymond XI 



• of watermelons. J. T. Willard XII 



Sun, corona of (illustrated). E. Miller XVII 



Tabanidse, North American, notes and descriptions. S. W. Williston X 



Taraxacum dens-leonis, as illustration of variable chemical composition of 



plants at different seasons. L. E. Sayre XIII 



root, experiments on. L. E. Sayre XIV 



Taste, selective power of the sense of. E. H. S. Bailey XII 



some experiments on the relation between the taste and the acidity of cer- 

 tain acids. E. H. S. Bailey XI 



Tea, is the alkaloidal strength of tea an index of its commercial value? L. E. 



Sayre XI 



