304 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 
SOUTH DAKOTA. 
Rapip Crry.—South Dakota School of Mines: 
Notes on the geology and mineral deposits of the Black Hills, by Cleophas O’Harra, 28 
pp.; 6pll. Mining geology and mining, by A. Forsyth, 12 pp.; 2 pll. 
TENNESSEE. 
KNOXVILLE.— University of Tennessee: 
University of Tennessee Record, Nos. 1-7, 405 pp. 
NASHVILLE.—S/ate Board of Health: 
Bulletins, vol. XII, Nos. 6-12, pp. 81-192. Vol. XIII, Nos. 1 and 2, 32 pp. 
TEXAS. 
AUSTIN.—Tevas Academy of Science: 
Transactions, vol. I, No. 5, 1896, 126 pp. Molecular theories of organic reproduction, by 
Dr. Edmund Montgomery, pp. 1-17. The criterion for two-term prismoidal formulas, by 
George Bruce Halsted, pp. 19-24. On the theory of the prismoid, by Herman Kinklin, pp. 
24-32. Prismoidal formule, with special derivation of two-term formule, by Thomas 
U. Taylor, pp. 33-55. The culture given by science, by George Bruce Halsted, pp. 57-59. 
Are we conscious automata? by Edmund Montgomery, pp. 65-80. Economy of good roads, 
by Thomas U. Taylor, pp. 82-94. 
Vol. II, No. 1, 1897, 107 pp. Aural perception by the blind, by Drs. S. E. Mezes and H. L. 
Hilgartner, pp.1-5. The economics of concentrated capital, by Maj. C. E. Dutton, pp. 7-20. 
Vertical curves for railways, by J. C. Nagle, pp. 21-28. Experiments with X-rays upon the 
blind, by Drs. H. L. Hilgartner and E. F. Northrup, pp. 29-31. On the biogeography of 
Mexico and the southern United States, by C. H. Tyler-Townsend, pp. 33-86. Some Texas 
oil horizons, by E. T. Dumble, pp. 87-92. Texas Permian, by W. F. Cummins, pp. 93-98. 
Science on the conduct of life, by George Bruce Halsted, pp. 99-104. 
VERMONT. 
BuRLINGTON.— University of Vermont and State Agricultural College: 
Bulletins: No. 53. The polliaation of plums, pp. 47-65; 6 figs. 
No. 56. Orange hawkweed or “ paint-brush,”’ 15 pp.; 5 figs. 
No. 57, Analysis of commercial fertilizers, pp. 19-31. 
No. 60, Insects of the year, 16 pp.; 5 figs. 
No. 61. Hardy apples for cold climates, pp. 21-32; 6 figs. 
No. 62. Home-grown grapes in Vermont, pp. 37-44; 10 figs. 
Nos, 63, 64, 65. Analyses of commercial fertilizers, pp. 47-124. 
Report of the horticulturist, pp. 87-132; 12 pll. 
Eleventh annual report, 404 pp.; 10 pll.; 4 figs. 
WASHINGTON. 
SPOKANE.—L. A. Armstrong, Publisher: 
Mining, a monthly magazine. 
WISCONSIN. 
Mapison.— Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters: 
Transactions, vol. XI, 1896-’97, 576 pp.; 50 pll. The methods of science as being in the do- 
main of logic, by J. J. Blaisdell, pp. 49-65. Floral structure of some Graminee, by Herman 
F. Lueders, pp. 109-111; 1 pl. Some uses of the low potential alternating current in a 
chemical laboratory, by Milo S. Walker, pp. 114-118. The forms spontaneously assumed by 
folk-songs, by John Comfort Fillmore, pp. 119-126. Second supplementary list of parasitic 
fungi of Wisconsin, by J. J. Davis, pp. 165-178. On the limnetic crustacea of Green Lake, 
by C. Dwight Marsh, pp. 178-224; 10 pl. Transcendental space, by Charles H. Chandler, 
pp. 239-248. Aluminium alcoholates, by Orin Edson Crooker, pp. 255-260. Codfish, by 
James Davie Butler, pp. 261-273. Plankton studies on Lake Mendota—II: The crustacea 
of the plankton from July, 1894, to December, 1896, by E. A. Birge, pp. 274-448; 28 pll. The 
real singularities of harmonic curves of three frequencies, by Etting H. Comstock, pp. 452- 
464. Earth movements, by C. R. Van Hise, pp. 465-516. 
Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey: 
Bulletin No. 1. Economic series No.1. On the forestry conditions of northern Wiscon- 
sin, by Filibert Roth, 78 pp.; 1 map. 
Bulletin No.2. Scientific series No.1. On the instincts and habits of the solitary wasps, 
by George W. Peckham and Elizabeth G. Peckham, 245 pp.; 2 col’d pll.; 12 uncol’d. 
