lOS ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



CCCXL. Remarks on certain determinations of the ^constant of aberration by 

 the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. Astr. Jl., XXII, 114-115 ; March 

 20, 1902. 

 CCCXLI. The Problem of the Universe. International Monthly, V, 395-417; 



April, 1902. 

 GCCXLII. What the Astronomers are doing. Harper's Mag.; CV, 246-9; July, 



1902. 

 CCCXLIII. " Astronomy." Article in Encyclopaedia Britannica, tenth Edition, 

 Vol. 25, pp. 728-56. A. & C. Black, London, Edinburgh and New York, 

 1902. Newcomb is also the author of the following articles : " Eclipse," 

 pp. 626-32, of Volume 27; "Moon," p. 827 of Volume 30; -"Sun," pp. 

 61-65, and " Telescope," pp. 238-42 of Volume 33. 

 CCCXLIV. On the statistical relations among the Parallaxes and the Proper 

 Motions of the Stars. Astr. Jl., XXII, 16.5-169; Oct., 1902. Dated 

 Maloja, Engadine, July 15, 1902. 

 CCCXL V. Are other worlds inhabited? The Youth's Companion, LXXVI, 639- 

 40; Dec. 11, 1902. See Literary Digest, XXVI, 1.52-3; Jan. 31, 1903. 

 CCCXLVI. Universe as an Organism. [Report of an address before the As- 

 tronomical and Astrophysical Society of America, Dec. 29, 1902]. Sci- 

 ence, XVII, 121; Jan. 23. 190.3. Also Sc. Amer. Suppl., LV, 22694-6; 

 Feb. 21, 1903. See Lit. Digest, XXVI, 267; Feb. 21, 1903. 



French translation in Revue Sc, XIX. 321-7. An abridgement 

 translated into German in Astr. Rundschau, V, 113-19. 

 CCCXLVIL Carnegie Institution of Washington, Year Book No. 1, 1902. Pub- 

 lished Jan., 1903. 



" Present State and Needs of Astronomical Research," dated Oct. 8, 

 1902, pp. 147-52. 



Report of advisory committee on astronomy submitted by Simon 

 Newcomb, et al., pp. 82-93. 

 CC(.'XLVII1. On the Desirableness of a Re-investigation of the problems 

 growing out of the Mean Motion of the Moon. M.N.R.A.S., LXIII, 

 316-24; March, 1903. 

 CCCXLIX. The End of the World ; A story. McClure, XXI, 3-14 ; May, 1903. 

 Illustr. 



This article was translated into Japanese by Kuroiwa Ruiko and 

 published May 6-25, 1904, in Yorozu Choho, a Tokio newspaper. This 

 translation arranged in alternate paragraphs with the English was pub- 

 lished as a book of 90 pages, with the following dedication : " To 

 Dr. Anita McGee this humble translation of her father's valuable work 

 is most respectfully dedicated by the translator, who wishes to offer 

 hearty thanks for her practical sympathy for our nation and to erect 

 a slight monument in memory of her merciful deeds in this country by 

 this translation." Dr. McGee had charge of the American nurses who 

 gave their services to the Japanese Government for six months of 1904. 

 CCCL. Review of " The Moon considered as a Planet, a World, a Satellite, 

 by James Nasmyth and James Carpenter, London, 1903;" Nation, Vol, 

 77, pp. 368-9; Nov. 5, 1903. Anonymous. 

 CCCLI. Outlook for the Flying Machine. Independent, LV, 2508-12; Oct. 22, 



1903. See Literary Digest, AXVII, 615; Nov. 7, 1903. 

 CCCLII. New Problems of the Universe. Harper's Mag., CVII, 872-6;' Nov., 

 1903. 



