296 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 



biology. Vol. XIII, 1S92, Nos. 10-12, pp. 225-292; 3 pU. Index of refraction, by 



A. B. Aubert, M. S. The Protozoa— a phylum of the animal kingdom con- 

 sidered biologically, by H. L. Osborn. A Bacteriological potato-section cutter, 

 by Charles F. Dawson, M. D. Bacteriology: What has been done in rela- 

 tion to Hygiene. Diatomology, by K. M. Cunningham. Diatoms of the Con- 

 necticut shore.— Ill, by W. A. Terry. Radiolaria: Life-history and classi- 

 fication, by Rev. Fred'k B. Carter. The analyzing eye-piece, by William 

 Lighton. The practical use of the microscope in Pharmacy, by Alfred H. 

 Dohme, Ph. D. Bacterioidal forms in tissues and eggs of insects, by Prof. F. 

 Blochmann. Notes on new rotifers, by Charles Rousselet. Callidina magna- 

 calcarata, by P. A. Parsons. The grasshopper, Oedipoda Carolina: An in- 

 troductory study in Zoology, by H. L. Osborn. The Brine Shrimp of the Great 

 Salt Lake, by J. E. Talmage. 



Vol. XIV, Nos. 1-12, IS'Jo, 358 pp; 12 pll. Contains: Experiments with Yeast— 

 a biological study, by J. W. Smith. A parasitic fungus (Heterosporium aspe- 

 ratum), by George Massee. Influence of the study of bacteriology in the de- 

 velopment of aseptic surgery in the hospitals of Paris in 1892, by Robert Rey- 

 burn. Diatoms of the Connecticut shore.— IV, by Wm. A. Terry. Has the 

 fresh-water sponge a nervous system? by J. M. Stedman. Biological de- 

 scriptions of certain common hydroid animals, by H. L. Osborn. Radiolaria, 

 by Rev. Fred'k B. Carter. On some minute magnetic and hyaline spherules 

 found in terrace dust, from Bulletin of the Microscopical Society of Calcutta. 

 Seeds of Mullein (Verbascum thapsus L.), by R. H. Ward, M. D. Flexible 

 sandstone, by R. D. Oldham. A study of a new fungus, by Geo. F. Atkinson. 

 A pneumatic bubble remover, by A. P. Weaver. On some recent advances in 

 water analysis and the iise of the microscope for the detection of sewage con- 

 tamination, by Geo. W. Rafter. On the microscope in medicine, by Ephriam 

 Cutter, M. D., LL. D. Trichinae spiralis, by W. N. Sherman; 4 colored figures. 

 The American potato rot or blight, by Joseph F. James, 2 figs. Crenation of red 

 blood-corpuscles, by M. L. Holbrook. Microscopical study of Ohio limestone, 

 by G. Perry Grimsley. Spiral vessels of castor-oil plant, by R. H. Ward. The 

 contractile vesicle, by Dr. Alfred C. Stokes. Fungous diseases of the sugar- 

 beet, by L. H. Pammel; 4 plates. Magnetic and glassy particles on house-tops, 

 by K. M. Cunningham. Microscopy at the Columbian Exposition, by Henry L. 

 Tolman. Classification of the Radiolaria, by Rev. Fred'k B. Carter. The use or 

 ruthenium red in plant histology, by A. B. Aubert. Penicillium and some other 

 fungi, by Henry Leslie Osborn. Aberrant forms in cultivated diatoms, by Dr. 

 Samuel Lock wood. Observations on Amoeba and Stentor, by James H. Logan; 

 11 figures. Preliminary list of the microscopical animals found in the Ridge- 

 wood water-supply, by Smith Ely Jelliffe. The Chicago water-supply in 

 the World's Fair Ground, by Smith Ely Jelliffe. Karyokinesis in embroyos of 

 the domestic cat, by Frank S. Aby. Stereoscopic photomicrography, by Dr. 

 W. C. Borden. The action of leucocytes toward foreign material, by Edith 

 J. Claypole. 



Vol. XV, Nos. 1-11, 1894, 360 pp.; 11 pll. On the Study of Yeasts, with de- 

 scriptions of the Hansen culture box and of a new infection needle for 

 the study of lower organisms, by J. Christian Bay. Sarcina ventriculi in 

 blood stains, by W. N. Sherman. The Bacillai'iaceae or Diatomaceae, by 

 Arthur M. Edwards. Aeration of tissues and organs in Mikania and other 

 phanerogams, by W. W. Rowlee. Radiolarian shale from Manitoba, by Fred'k 



B. Carter. Studies of the histology of various mammalian tissues, by Henry 

 L. Osborn. Red snow as seen by means of a microscope, by Arthur M. Ed- 

 wards. Formalin in Bacteriology, with more especial reference to its action 

 on the bacillus of diphtheria, by Dr. W. W. AUeger. Studies in the biology of 

 the Diatoms, by K. M. Cunningham. Some new or little-known Diatoms, by 

 M. P. T. Cleve. The Diatom, considered as a protozoan, with method of 

 demonstration, by K. M. Cunningham. Synura, with plate, by George C. 

 Whipple. On the limitation of Tuberculosis, by Dr. W. W. AUeger. Study of 

 the microscopic phenomena of commencing inflammation, with special ref- 

 erence to the diapedesis of the white blood corpuscles, by Charles F. Craig, 

 M. D. The geranium leaf as a cell aggregate, by Henry L. Osborn. The 

 fruits of the order Ranunculaceae, by Karl M. Wiegand. Histological struc- 

 ture of the enteron of Necturus maculatus, by B. F. Kingsbury. Keys to the 

 genera of Pediculidae and Mallophagidae, by Herbert Osborn. 



WASHINGTON.— Congres Geologique International: 



