1887 
1888 
1890 
1891 
1904 
1892 
1892 
1893 
1895 
1896 
SIMON HENRY GAGE 
PUBLICATIONS OF SUSANNA PHELPS GAGE 
The commonwealth of mind. The Cornell Review, June, vol. 6, pp. 346- 
351. This paper was given as class essayist at the graduation of her 
class in 1880. It is an argument and an appeal for the fundamental 
democracy of the mind in human beings, and this remained her cher- 
ished belief throughout life. 
Ending and relation of the muscular fibers in the muscles of minute ani- 
mals (mouse, mole, rat, and English sparrow). Abstr. Proc. Amer. 
Soe. Micro, pp. 1-2. 
Form, endings, and relation of striated muscular fibers in the muscles of 
minute animals (mouse, shrew, bat, and English sparrow). The 
Microscope, vol. 8, August, pp. 225-237; 257-272, 5 pl. It is in these 
two papers that the author expounds the true form and relationship 
of the fibers of skeletal muscle in small animals. 
The intramuscular endings of fibers in the skeletal muscles of the domestic 
and laboratory animals. Proce. Am. Soe. Microscopists, 138th meet- 
ing, pp. 132-138, 1 pl. 
A review. The evolution of sex, by Prof. Patrick Geddes and J. Arthur 
Thompson. The Nation, vol. 52, May 14, p. 407. 
The story of little red-spot. Boys and Girls, April, pp. 11-16, 1 fig. The 
author says of this story: ‘‘The scientific name of Red-Spot is Diemyc- 
tylus viridescens . . . . The photoengraving on p. 11 is taken 
from the colored lithographic plate drawn by the present author for 
an article by Prof. S. H. Gage in the American Naturalist, December, 
1891, where he tells the same story in scientific language. The present 
author when making the drawings studied red-spots in their homes 
and wrote the story for her little son.’ Anna Botsford Comstock, 
the nature study expert, says: “‘It is one of the most charming science 
stories for children in our literature.” 
Evolution and the training of children. Abst. Kindly Light, vol. 1, no. 
(i), Te ey 2eyonall: 
A reference model. Proc. Amer. Soc. of Micros. (Rochester meeting), 
pp. 154-155, 1 fig, vol. 14, 1892, printed July, 1893. 
The brain of Diemyctylus viridescens from larval to adult life, and com- 
parisons with the brain of Amia and Petromyzon. Wilder Quarter 
Century Book, pp. 259-313, 8 pl. 
with Anna Botsford Comstock, editors and authors. A tribute 
to Henry W. Sage from the women graduates of Cornell University. 
Ithaca, N. Y., May 30, 84 pp. Illustrated by Anna Botsford Com- 
stock. This is the fullest and best discussion cf co-education in a great 
university, and the only adequate account of it in Cornell University. 
Lines on the engraving ‘‘Two incarnations in stripes,’ by Anna Botsford 
Comstock. Illustrated Buffalo Express, March 1, p. 5. 
1895-1896 Comparative morphology of the brain of the soft-shelled turtle 
(Amyda mutica) and the English sparrow (Passer domesticus). Proc. 
Amer. Mic. Soc., vol. 17, pp. 185-238, 5 pl. Abstr. Am. Month. Mis. 
Journ., vol. 17, Jan., pp. 4-7. 
