SCIENCE. 



Potter's Wheel in Ancient America, H. C. Mer- 

 ger, 919; D. G. Bkinton, 598 



Poudre, Ludoyic Estes, 805 



Pratt, F. H., Vessels of Thebesius, 906 



Preuss, K. T., The Meaning of Mourning, 141 



Prosser, Chas. S., Carboniferous and Permian of 

 Nebraslca and Kansas, 283, 519; and Logan, on 

 the Uplands and Valleys of Kansas, 945 



Pseudo Aurora, Au Explanation of the so-called, 

 J. Paul Goode, 186; H. A. Hazeu, 447. 



Psychological, Association, The American, Liv- 

 ingston Parkand, 206; Index, 803; Labora- 

 tory of University College, London, 874 



Psychology, Academy of Sciences, Livingston 

 Farband, 283, 776 ; and Comparative Psychol- 

 ogy, Wesley Mills, 718: Experimental at 

 Cambridge, 739; and Anthropology, ^N. Y. 



Purrington, C. AV. , Telluride Mining District in 

 San Juan Mountains, 890 



Putnam, F. W., American Association for the Ad- 

 vancement of Science, 760 



Putnam, F. W., Early Presence of Man in the 

 Delaware Valley, 196 



'Quadrangle,' Use of the, 581 

 Quaternary of Missouri, J. E. Todd, 695 

 Quevedo, S. A. L., The Chaco Idioms, 308; The 

 Chaco Tribes, 988 



P., E., Anleitung zur mikrochemisohen Analyse, 



H. Behrens, 115 

 Rambaut, Rate of an Equatorial Clock, 333 

 Ratzel, Frederick, The State and its Soil, 54 

 Ravold, Amand, Test for Typhoid Fever, 159 

 Rees, J. K., Great Shower of Meteorj of 1833 and 

 1866, 70; and Harold Jacoby and Herman S. 

 Davis, Variation of Latitude, 759 

 Reflection, Total, Kewton's Experiment, F. W. 



jMcNair, 620 

 Regnault, A Lecture by, Wolcott Gibbs, 409 

 Reid, Clement, Excavations at Hoxne, 357 

 Reid, Harry Fielding. Glaciers of North Ameri- 

 ca, Israel C. Russell, 660 

 Reid, Harry Fielding, Glaciers, 91, 190, 318, 925 

 Remsen, Ira, Hydrolysis of Acid Amides, 665; and 

 G. W. Gray, On Isomeric Chlorides of p-Nitro- 

 o-Sulphobenzoic Acid, 963 

 Renouf, Edward, Jletallic Carbids, 193 

 Research, and the University, 470; Fund, 580 

 Reubens, H , and E. F. Nichols, Heat Rays of 



Great Wave-Length, 316 

 Reymond, Emil Du Bois, S. .1. Meltzeb, 217 

 Richards, H. M., Reactions of Plants, 596 

 Richardson, G. M. and P. Allaire, Specific Gravi- 

 ties of Water Solutions of Formic Acid, 357 

 Ridgway, Robert. Birds of the Galapagos Archi- 

 pelago, C. H.M., 770 

 Ries, Heinrich, Mineralogical Notes, 560 

 Rifles, Modern Army, 142 

 Rinderpest, 58, 373, 654, 918, 990 

 Ripley, W. Z., Racial Geography, 101, 797 

 Ritchey, G. W., Large Specula, 593 

 Ritter, W. E., Social Ascidians from California, 434 

 Roberts, A. W., The Value of Light Ratio, 521 

 Rontgen Rays, Electrification of Air by, Lord 

 Kelvin, J. G. Beattie, M. Smoldchowski de 

 Smolan, 189 

 Rood, Irene E., Papers presented to the World's 

 Congress on Ornithology, C. F. Batchel- 

 DER, 189 



Roosevelt, Theodore, A Layman's Views on 

 Scientific Nomenclature, 685 ; The Discrimina- 

 tion of Species and Sub-Species, 879 



Rose, T. K., Extraction of Gold by Chemical 

 Methods, 615 



RoTCH, A. Lawrence, The International Meteoro- 

 logical and Hydrologioal Meetings, 17 ; The 

 Meteorological Conference at Paris, 152 ; 

 Monument to the late Buys-Ballot, 994 



Rotch, A. L., Exploration of the Free Air, 613 



Royal, Institution, 340, 729; Society, Election of 

 Members, 873 ; Conversazione, 875 



Rudolph, E., Volcanic Phenomena of 1894, 796 



Runge and Paschen, Oxygen in the Sun, 522 



RusBY, H. H., Torrey Botanical Club, 36 



Rusby, H. H., Botany at the Pan American Med- 

 ical Congress, 1896, 36 ; Solanaceaj, 451 



Russell, H. L,, Milk Preservation, 408 



Russell, Israel, C ., A New Geographical Jour- 

 nal, 477 



Russell, I. C, Geology of Northeastern Washing- 

 ton, 94 ; Glaciers of North America, 437 ; 

 Harry Fielding Reid, 660; Glacial Ice, 590 



Rydberg, P. A., Sand Region of Central Nebraska, 

 590 ; Flora of Western Nebraska, 92G 



Saginaw Valley, The Drainage of the, Alfred C. 

 Lane, 553 



St. Louis, Academy of Science. Wii. Trelease, 

 36. 159, 340, 863, 452, 524, 633, 704, 776, 892 



Salaries, in the Department of Education, 24 ; of 

 German University Professoi-s. 59, 307 



Salisbury, R. D., Loess on the Wisconsin Drift- 

 formation, 191 ; Stratified Drift, 191 ; Baraboo 

 District, Wis., 870, and W! W. Atwood, Drifi- 

 Phenomena, 519 



Sandi^lains of Truro, Wellfleet and Eastham, 

 Amadeus W. Grabau, 334 



Sanitation and Hygiene of Railways, International 

 Congress of, 474 



Sapper, Carlos, Geology of Chiapas, Tabasco and 

 the Peninsula of Yucatan, 191 ; Physical Geo- 

 graphy of Yucatan, 734 



Sardeson, F. W., Galena and Maquoketa Series, 

 486 



Schaper, H,, Nervous System of Vertebrates, 430 



Schlegel, G., The Position of Women in China, 393 



Sohmeltz, J. D. E., Ethnographical Museums, 545 



Schmidt, Emil, Systematic Anthropology, 913 



Schrenk, H. von. Parasitism of Lichens, 36 



Schuchert, Charles, What is a Type in Natural 

 History ? 686 



Schultheiss on Visibility of Mountains and Atmos- 

 pheric Dust, 613 



Schuster, Arthur, Oxygen in the Sun, 038; and 

 Sees, Practical Physics, 805 



Schwarz on Two Genera of Beetles, 856 



Sohweger-Lerchenfeld, A. von. Atlas der Him- 

 melskunde, 837 



Schweinitz, E. a. de. The War with the Mi- 

 crobes, 561 



Science, A National Department of, Chas. W. 

 Dabney, Jr., 73; Washingtonian, 147; and 

 Pseudo-science in Medicine, George M. 

 Sternberg, 199; in College Entrance Exam- 

 inations, 399; Teachers' Association, The N. 

 Y. State, Franklin W. Barbow,s, 457, 498, 

 531; S. H, Gage, 458; E. L. Nichols, 464; 

 Albert L. Arey, 460; Ralph S. Tarr, 498; 



