110 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1914. 
No. 6. Physical Tables. Sixth edition. F. HE. Fowle. (Publ. 2269.) In press. 
No. 7. New subspecies of mammals from Equatorial Africa. By Edmund 
Heller. June 24,1914. 12 pp. (Publ. 2272.) 
Volume 64. 
No.1. Cambrian geology and paleontology. III. The Cambrian Faunas of East- 
ern Asia. By Charles D. Walcott. April 22, 1914. Pp. 1-76, pls. 1-3. 
(Publ. 2263.) 
No. 2. Cambrian geology and paleontology. III. Pre-Cambrian Algonkian Algal 
Flora. By Charles D. Walcott. Pp. 77-156, pls. 4-28. (Publ. 2271.) 
in press. 
SMITHSONIAN ANNUAL REPORTS. 
Report for 1912. 
The Annual Report of the Board of Regents for 1912 was received 
from the Public Printer in completed form in October, 1913. 
Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, show- 
ing operations, expenditures, and condition of the Institution for the year 
ending June 30, 1912. xii, 780 pp., 72 pls. (Publ. 2188.) 
Small editions of the following papers, forming the general ap- 
pendix of the annual report for 1912, were issued in pamphlet form: 
The year’s progress in astronomy. By P. Puiseux. 8 pp. (Publ. 2189.) 
The spiral nebule. By P. Puiseux. 10 pp. (Publ. 2190.) 
The radiation of the sun. By C. G. Abbot. 18 pp., 4 pls. (Publ. 2191.) 
Molecular theories and mathematics. By Emile Borel. 20 pp. (Publ. 2192.) 
Modern mathematical research. By G. A. Miller. 12 pp. (Publ. 2193.) 
The connection between the ether and matter. By Henri Poincaré. 12 pp. 
(Publ. 2194.) 
Experiments with soap bubbles. By C. V. Boys. 8 pp., 1 pl. (Publ. 2195.) 
Measurements of infinitesimal quantities of substances. By William Ramsay. 
11 pp. (Publ. 2196.) 
The latest achievements and problems of the chemical industry. By Carl 
Duisberg. 26 pp. (Publ. 2197.) 
Holes in the air. By W. J. Humphreys. 12 pp., 2 pls. (Publ. 2198.) 
Review of applied mechanics. By L. Lecornu. 16 pp. (Publ. 2199.) 
Report on the recent great eruption of the volcano “ Stromboli.” By Frank A. 
Perret. 5 pp., 9 pls. (Publ. 2200.) 
The glacial and postglacial lakes of the Great Lakes region. By Frank B. 
Taylor. 37 pp. (Publ. 2201.) 
Applied geology. By Alfred H. Brooks. 24 pp. (Publ. 2202.) 
The relations of paleobotany to geology. By F. H. Knowlton. 6 pp. (Publ. 
2203.) 
Geophysical research. By Arthur L. Day. 11 pp. (Publ. 2204.) 
A trip to Madagascar, the country of beryls. By A. Lacroix. 12 pp. (Publ. 
2205.) 
The fluctuating climate of North America. By Elsworth Huntington. 30 pp., 
10 pls. (Publ. 2206.) 
The survival of organs and the “culture” of living tissues. By R. Legendre. 
8 pp., 4 pls. (Publ. 2207.) 
Adaptation and inheritance in the light of modern experimental investigation. 
By Paul Kammerer. 21 pp., 8 pls. (Publ. 2208.) 
