SCIENCE. 



ccoktents and 

 Index. 



Ceook, a. R., North-western Uuiversity Science Club, 



456, 644, 788, 824 

 Crosby, W. O., and A. W. Graham, Modified Dri£t of 



the Boston Kasin, 212 ; Englaoial Drift, 603 

 Cross, Charles R., X-rays, 607 

 Cross, Whitman, Diorite of Ophir Loop, Colo., 605 ; 



Formation of the Rocky Mountain Region, 642 

 Crysostom, Brother, Will Development, 131 

 Currants, 699 

 Currents, Equatorial Counter, 931 ; Planetary and 



Terrestrial, 921 

 Curtis, H. Holbrook, Voice Building and Tone Plac- 

 ing, W. Hallock, 901 

 Curtis, W. E., Social Evil in Japan, 35 

 Curtis, J. G., Recording Muscle Curves, 115 

 Cushing, A. R., Distribution of Iron in Invertebrates, 



110 

 Cushing, H. P., Areal Geology of Glacier Bay, Alaska, 



33 ; Pre-Cambrian and Post-Ordovician Trap 



Dykes, 677 

 CusHMAN, Holbrook, Simplex Spectroscope, 45 

 Cyclones and Anti-Cyclones, H. Helm Clayton, 325 

 Czyszkowski, S., Deposition of Gold, South Africa, 749 



Dall,W. H., Alaska as it was and is, 1865-1895, 37, 87; 

 Gastropoden der Plankton Expedition, Dr. H. 

 Simroth, 69; New Data on Spirula, 343; Geologi- 

 cal Biology, Henry Shaler Williams, 445; A Text- 

 book of Comparative Anatomy, Arnold Lilng, 847 



Dall, Wm. H., St. Elias Bear, 713 



Daly, R. A., Quartz Porphyry and associated Rocks 

 of Pequawket Mountain, 753 



Dana, James Dwight, J. W. Powell, 181 



Dakiel, John, The X-Rays, 563 



Danish Antiquities, 553 



Danube, 473 



Darton, N. H., Stream Robbing in the Catskills, 52; 

 Coastal Plain Series in S. Carolina, 56; Atlantic 

 Coastal Plain from N. Jersey to S. Carolina, 

 57 ; Geology of Black Hills of S. Dakota, 418 



Davis, W. M., Current Notes in Physiographv, 61, 

 137, 195, 375 396, 472, 589, 659, 731, 799, 858, 920 



Davis, W. M., Lava Beds of Meriden, Conn., 32; 

 Outline of Cape Cod, 49; Plains of Marine and 

 Subaerial Denudation, 50; An Elementary Pres- 

 entation of the Tides, 569; Excursion to the 

 Middle Susquehanna, Pa., 786 



Dean, Bashfokd, Biological Section, New York 

 Academy of Science, 33 



Dean, Bashford, Paleospondylus, 314; Gastrulation 

 of Teleosts, 60 



Deaths: EyvindAstrup, 165; Alfonso Ademello, 98; A. 

 E. Beach, 66; J. G. Bourke, 899; Thos. Lincoln 

 Casey, 510; J. B. Cummings, 55t ; Abbe Delaney, 

 804; M. Daubree, 899; Dr. Fauvel, 22; Francis 

 R. Fava, 510; Joseph Fiorelli, 199; Dr. Finkeln- 

 burg, 899; C. P. Frost, 839; Andrew S. Fuller, 

 737; John Gundlaoh, 511; William Hanke, 899; 

 John Russell Hind, 65; Dr. Hossius, 899; George 

 Johnson, 899; Alfred L. Kennedy, 200; Adelbert 

 Kruger, 774; Laughton Macfarlane, 352; Ludwig 

 Mark, 899; Ernst Padova, 838; A. de Cer- 

 qiieira Paito, 98; M. Raulin, 899; Paul Reis, 

 98; Jules Reiset, 239; Russell Reynolds, 899; 

 Gerhard Rohlfs, 864; P. C. Sappey, 555; Prof. 

 Schickendantz, 899; Germain See, 804; William 

 Sharp, 629; Dr. Sickenberger, 98; Richard Sims, 

 899; D. D. Slade, 283; J. A. Stolz, 899; B. F. 

 Tweed, 5^5; A. S. WoiloEE, 33 



Declination Systems of Boss and Auwers, H. J., 241. 

 Decomposition of Ferric Chloride and Oxalic Acid, 22 

 De Lapparent's Lemons de Geographie Physique, 731 

 Descartes' Works, 805 

 Detrital Slopes and Arid Regions, 500 

 Dewey, H. L., The Tumbling Mustard, 832 

 Dewey, John, I'sychology of Number, 286 

 DiLLEE, J. S., Smeeth Separating Apparatus, 857 

 Diller, J. S., Structure and Age of the Cascade Range, 



823 

 Diphtheria, .323 

 Discussion and Correspondence, 66, 99, 167, 301, 241, 



384, 333, 354, 406, 438, 478, 513, 558, 595, 631, 



668, 705, 739, 776, 807, 841, 866, 900, 928 

 Distance, Notes on the Perception of, HiEAJl M. 



Stanley, 781 

 Dodge, C. R., Undeveloped American Fibers, 639 

 Dodge, R. E., Geography and Geology for Training 



and Elementary Schools, 491; Cretaceous and 



Tertiary Peneplains of Eastern Tennessee, 531 

 DoLLEY Chaeles S., and Seneca Egbert, Rontgen 



Rays Present in Sunlight, 367 

 Dolley, Charles S., Food Supply of Oysters, 823 

 Dorsey, C. W., Experiments Imitative of Glacial 



Esker and Sand Plain Formation, 492 

 Douglas, A. W., St. Louis Academy of Science, 36 

 Droughts and Famines in India, 196 

 Dudley, P. H., Steel Rails, 643 

 DwiGHT, Thomas, Our Contribution to Civilization 



and to Science, 75 ; The Significance of Anomalies, 



776 

 Dyae, Harrison G., Coleoptera, 97 



Earll, Robert Edward, G. Brown Goode, 471 



Earthquake in Japan, 924 



Eastman, C. R., Function and Systematic Importance 

 of Aptychus in Ammonites, 751 



Eccles, R. G., Calvcanthus, 333 



Eclipse, Total Solar, 352, 556, 593, 838, 863; The 

 Chance of Observing in Norway, A. Lawrence 

 ROTCH, 356 



Edlnger, Ludwig, Cortical Optical Centers in Birds, 

 339 



Eimei^ G. H. T., Evolution of Butterflies, C. S. 

 MiNOT, 36 



Eldridge, George H., On the Occurrence of Uintaite 

 in Utah, 830 



Electrical, Exposition in New York, 436; Energy ob- 

 tained from Coal, 775 



Elliott, Henry W., Newly Hatched Chickens In- 

 stinctively Drink, 482 



Embryo of Pteris, Development of, F. D. Kelsey, 67 



Emerson, B. K., Improved Blackboard, 168 



Emmons, S. F., Geological Literature of S. African 

 Republic, 347 



Engine, Quadruple Expansion at Cornell University, 

 404 



Engineex'ing, Experiment Stations for, 30 



Entomological Society of Washington, L. O. Howard, 

 36, 107, 294, 453, 678, 905 



Entomology, 474; Bulletins of the Division of, 665 



Equilibrium, the Sense of, C. L. F., 625 



Erosion, lipochs. Two — Another Suggestion, W J Mc- 

 Gee, 796 



Etard, A., Les nouvelles theories chimiques, Ferdi- 

 nand G. WiECIIMANN, 137 



Ethnic Anatomy, Comparative, 834 



Ethno-Botanic Garden, John W. Haeshbeegee, 303 



Ethnographic Surveys, 277 



