NEw SERIES 
VoL. X. 
Murray, A. D., Integral Calculus, C. J. Keyser, 414 
MuRRAY, SIR JoHN, Address of President of Geo- 
graphical Section of British Association, 751, 796 
Museums, Foreign, Work of, F. A. L., 446 
NACHTRIEB, H. F., Das zoologische Practikum, Willy 
Kikenthal, 733 ; Permanent Preparations, 771 
National Academy of Sciences, 776 
Natural History, of the Tres Maria Islands, ROBERT 
E. C. STEARNS, 121; at South Kensington, 605 
Naturalist’s Directory, E V. WILcox, 937 
Naval Observatory Report, 745, 747 
Nebraska Acad. of Sci., LAWRENCE BRUNER, 969 
New York Academy of Sciences, Biology, FRANCIS E. 
LLOYD, 578, 896 ; Anthropology and Psychology, 
Cuas. H. JUDD, 656, 934 ; Astronomy and Phys- 
ics, WM.S. DAy, 735, 894 ; Geology and Miner- 
alogy, ALEXIS A. JULIEN, 895 
Newspaper Science, JAMES H. Hys.Lop, 695 
Newsholme, A., Vital Statistics, WALTER F. WILCOX, 
217 : 
Newton Alfred, A Dictionary of Birds, F. A. L., 774 
Nicaragua Canal Route, C. WILLARD HAYES, 97 
Nomenclature, of Some North American Vertebrates, 
O. P. HAY, 253; A Reform in, A. L. Herrera, 120 
Noyes, W. A., Chemical Experiments, J. F. Wood- 
hull, 654; Chemistry, A. Smith, 654; H. W. 
Hillyer and Felix Lengfeld, 692 
O., H. F., Recent Zoo-paleontology, 458, 538 
Observatory, The U. S. Naval, A. HALL, Jr.,57; 745,747 
Oceanography, A. LINDENKOHL, 803 
Onondaga Academy of Science, H. W. BRITCHER, 737 
Ornithologists’ Union, American, JOHN, H. SAGE, 849 
Orton, EDwARD, Address of the President at the 
Columbus Meeting of American Association, 268 
OsBoRN, HENRY F.,Catalogue of Scientific Literature, 
165, 170 ; ASkeleton of Diplocodus, 870 ; A Com- 
plete Mosasaur Skeleton, 919 
P., G. H., Zoological Results, ARTHUR WILLEY, 80 
P., M. I., La théorie de Maxwell, H. Poincaré, 655 
P., T. M., Muir and Ritchie’s Bacteriology, 655 
PADDOCK, W., Body Blight of Pear Trees, 85 
PaumeER, T. S., Danger of Indiscriminate Accli- 
matization, 174 ; Family Name of the Dormice, 
412; Catalogus Mammalium, E. L. Trouessart, 491 
PARK, W. H., Vaccination, W. Scott Tebb, 533 
Parsons, F. T., Ferns, L. M.UNDERWOoD, 50 
Patagonia, Third Princeton Expedition to, 580 
Pear Trees, Body Blight of, W. PADDocK, 85 
Perrrce, B. O., The Perception of Lines, 425 
Perception of Horizontal and of Vertical Lines, B. O. 
PEIRCE, 425 ; JosEPH J ASTROW, 579 
Philosophical Society of Washington, E. D. PRESTON, 
777, 933 5 
Phosphorescent Substances at Liquid Air Tempera- 
tures, C. C. TROWBRIDGE, 245 
Physical Society, American, W. H., 660 
Physicist, Highest Aim of, H. A. ROWLAND, 825 
Physics, Notes on, W.S. F., 86, 298, 378; F.C. C., 
220; at the American Association, WILLIAM 
HALLOCK, 438 ; International Congress of, 459 
Physiology, A Card Centralblatt of, W. T. PorTER, 
370; P. H. WYNNE, 535 
PICKERING, EDWARD C., A Long Photographic Tele- 
scope, 581 ; U.S. Naval Observatory, 747 
Pictures in Three Dimensions, C. L FRANKLIN, 45 
Plant Physiology, CHARLES R. BARNES, 316 
SCIENCE. 
vil 
Poincaré H., Théorie du potential Newtonien, Ciné- 
matique, R. S. W., 213 ; La théorie de Maxwell, 
M. I. P., 655 
Polar Bear, The Proper Name of, LEONHARD STEJ- 
NEGER, 377; JAMES A. G. REHN, 254 
Polaris, Companions of, 501 
POLLARD, C. L., Washington Botanical Club, 455, 859 
Porter, W. T., Card Centralblatt of Physiology, 370 
Pot-hole vs. Remolino, Oscar H. HERSHEY, 58; F. 
F. Hiuper, 88; OLIVER H. FARRINGTON, 187; 
GEORGE P. MERRILL, 298 
PoyntTiING, J. H., Address to the Mathematical and 
Physical Section of the British Association, 385 
Practice and Habit, W. SMYTHE JOHNSON, 527 
Prehistoric Implements, W. K. MOOREHEAD, 777 
Preparations, Permanent, HENRY F. NACHTRIEB, 771 
Presidents, New College, 501 
Preston, E. D., The Philosophical Society of Wash- 
ington, 777, 933 
Protoplasm, The Structure of, KE. B. WILSON, 33 
Pseudoscope, A New Form of, R. W. Woop, 648 
Puerto Rico, Fauna and Flora of, MARK W. HAR- 
RINGTON, 286; Spelling of, W. F. MORSELL, 978 
Putnam, F. W., Problems in Amer. Anthropology, 225 
Ratzel’s History of Mankind, Oris T. Mason, 21 
RAYLEIGH, LORD, Transparency and Opacity, 104 
Red Color of the Salt Lake, J. Dew1tTz, 146 
Reeve, Sidney A., The Entropy-temperature An- 
alysis, R. H. THURSTON, 728 
REHN, JAMES A. G., Name of Polar Bear, 254 
Reye’s Geometrie der Lage, J. H. TANNER, 577 
Rhythmic Action, E. W. SCRIPTURE, 807 
Rice, WILLIAM NorTH, Scientific Thought, 945 
RicHTER, M. M., Lexikon der Kohlenstoff-Verbin- 
dungen, CHARLES BASKERVILLE, 613 
Ripley, W. Z., Races of Europe, FRANZ BoAz, 292 
Robertson, J. M., Free-thought, R. M. WENLEY, 83 
Roth, R. H. S. and R. L. Nitsche, The Mysterious 
Mammal of Patagonia, J. B. HATCHER, 814. 
Row.anp, H. A., Highest Aim of the Physicist, 825 
Royal Society of Canada, HENRY M. Amt, 50 
Russell, J. E., German Higher Schools, C. L. FRANK- 
LIN, 116 
S., C., Fossilliferous Rocks of N. Y. State, John M. 
Clarke, 119 
SarrorD, T. H., U. S., Naval Observatory, 153 ; 
Astronomy in first half of 19th Century, 962 
SaGu, JoHN H., American Ornithologists’ Union, 849 
St. Louis Acad. of Sciences, W. TRELEASE, 615, 973 
Sanctis, Sante De, I Sogni, M. W. CaLKINs, 334 
Seal, Fur, Investigations on, J. A. ALLEN, 885 
SCHUCHERT, CHARLES, Blastoidea, F. A. Bather, 495; 
The Fossil Fields Expedition to Wyoming, 725; 
and JOHN M. CLARKE, The N. Y. Series of Geo- 
logical Formations, 874 
Science and Scholasticism, R. M. WENLEY, 536 
Scientific, Books, 21, 52, 80, 116, 147, 180, 213, 249, 
288, 334, 373, 413, 451, 491, 531, 574, 608, 652, 
685, 728, 772, 814, 856, 885, 929, 964; Journals 
and Articles, 23, 56, 84, 119, 151, 185, 252, 297, 
337, 377, 416, 454, 497, 535, 578, 655, 692, 734,775, 
858, 893, 969 ; Notes and News, 29, 62, 91, 125, 
157, 190, 222, 259, 300, 341, 381, 421, 462, 502, 
540, 581, 620, 660, 701, 741, 781, 821, 862, 901, 
940, 978 ; Thought in the Nineteenth Century, 
WILLIAM NORTH RICE, 945 
ScLateR, P. L., Second Bottegs Expedition, 951 
