BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM. 751 



Theodore Gill. Note on tho genus Dipterodon. 

 Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XI, 1888, pp. 67, 68. 



Theodore Gill. Note on the genua Gobiomorw. 



Proc. V. 8. \at. Mus., XI, 1888, pp. 69,70. 

 Theodore Gill. On the proper generic name of the Tunny and Albicore. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XI, 1888, pp. 319, 320. 

 Theodore Gill. On the Psychrolutidce of Guuther. 



Proc. 77. 8. Nat. Mus., xi, 1888, pp. 321-327. 



F. Du Carl Godmax. 



(See under Osbeet Salvix.) 



G. Brown Goode. Museum History and Museums of | History, | A paper read be- 



fore the American Historical Association in | Washington, D. C, December 2(>-28, 

 1888, | By G. Brown Goode, ll. d., | Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Insti- 

 tution in Charge | of the National Museum. | | [Reprinted from the papers of 



the Association], | | New York. | The Knickerbocker Press. | 1889. 



8v ( .,,pp. 253 [497]-275 1519]. 



G. Brown Goode. The depths of the Ocean. 



Atlantic Monthly, i.xm, January, 1889, pp. 124-128. 



A review of Alexander Agassiz's "American Thalassography," with a historical sketch of tho, 

 deep sea work of the Agassizs, father and son, in connection with the U. S. Coast Survey. 

 G. Brown Goode. An interesting dialogue, in 1G7G, between Bacon "the Rebel," 

 and John Goode of " Whitby." 



Magazine of American History, xvm, November, 1887, pp. 418-422. 



A letter written to Sir William Berkeley, by John Goode, a Virginia planter, giving in dialogue 

 form li the full substance of a discourse" between himself and Nathaniel Bacon, which 

 seems to indicate that Bacon was from the beginning of his career in Virginia a seditious 

 personage, and that his rebellion was not the result of Berkeley's failure to support the 

 colonists in their efforts to repel the incursions of the Indians, as Bacon's admirers have 

 sometimes argued, but was premeditated. Dialogue quoted in full from Colonial Entry 

 Book (Public Record's Office, London), vol. lxxi, pp. 252-240. 

 G. Brown Goode. Memories of Professor Baird. 



The Chautaiit/uan, ix, October, 1888, pp. 21-24. 



G. Brown Goode. (A brief biographical sketch of Professor Baird). 



Report of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1888, pp. 79-89. 

 G. Brown Goode. Virginia Cousins. A study of the Ancestry and posterity of 

 John Goode of Whitby, a Virginia Colonist of the Seventeenth Century, with notes 

 upon related families, a key to southern genealogy, (etc.). With a preface by R. 

 A. Brock. 



Richmond, Virginia, J. W. Randolph & English, 1887. 

 Small 4to. pp. xxxvi, 526. Illustrations. 



Reviewed. — Magaz'neof American History, XXI, pp. 174-5. New England Hist. Genealogical 

 Registers; Southern Churchman, September 6, 1888; Central Presbyterian, Richmond, 

 September 12, 1888 ; Gloucestershire (England), Notes and Queries, January, 1889, (By R. A. 

 Brock). 

 David K. Goss. 



(See under David Stakk JOEDAN). 

 N. S. Goss. New and rare birds found breeding on the San Martir Isle (Gulf of 

 California). 



The Auk, v, July 1888, pp. 240-244. 



New species described are Sula gossi Ridgw. (Blue-footed Booby), p. 241, and Sula brewsteri 

 Goss (Brewster's Booby), p. 242. The additional species mentioned is Phasthan wthcreus 

 Linn. (Red-billed Tropic Bird), p. 244. 



G. Hartlatjb. (Letter to editors of The litis, referring to a " Review of the Genus 

 Psittacula Brisson," by Robert Rigdway, published in Proc. U. S. N. M., 1887, pp. 

 529-548.) 



The Ibis, 5th ser., VI, No. 24, October, 1888, pp. 493-494. 

 E. M. Hasbrouck. Restoration ol the Audubonian form of Geothylpis trichaa to the 

 American avifauna. 



The Auk, VI, April, 1889, pp. 167, 168. 



Geothylpis trichas roscoe (And.) j habitat, "in summer Mississippi Valley, north of Wisconsin, 

 Minnesota, etc. ; in winter Gulf States, including Florida.'' 



