INDEX TO VOLUME XIX. 



Aai'OD, Eugene Murray, on museume, 77. 



Abbott's The Evolution of Chrlstlanitj-, 333. 



Academy, National, of Sciences, 242; New Members 

 of, t43. 



Accidents in Germany, 117. 



Actinism, 142. 



Adams, J. C, death of, 78. 



Agriculture, status of experimental, 270. 



Airy, Sir G. B., 64. 



Alaska, catlve fairs In, ^87. 



Aldrlch, J. M., on the diptera, 244. 



Algol, system of, 898. 



Allen, Harrison, on teaching anatomy, 86. 



Alphabet, origin of the, 25. 



Altenburg Oriental Society, 200. 



Aluminium, production of, 284; soldering of, 74. 



Amenhotep, tomb of King, 212. 



Amulets from the East, 172. 



Anatomical nomenclature, 341. 



Anatomy teaching, 85. 



Anemographs, 326. 



Anemometer comparisons, 27' 



Annalen der Physik und Chemle, 177. 



Antarctic espeoltion, 9. ^ 



■—Anthropology, 165; application of psychological re^ 

 search to, 22; notes on, 146; of Europe, 49. 



Anthropometric scheme, 202. 



Ant-nest beetles, 117. 



Archoiology at TJnWersity of Pennsylvania, 130. 



Architectural exhibition in Brooklyn, 854; scholar- 

 ship for Philadelphia, £C9. 



Argentine Eepubllc, F. J. Matthew's journey in, 354^ 



Armstrong and Norton" ^ '^' '""" *' ' 



Chemistry, 181. 



Arsenic in common life, 3; poisoning from fabrics, 

 J 04. 



Art-Motives, identity of primitive, 286. 



Artesian wells in the Sahara, 327; In Iowa, 310. 



Appalachian Mountain Club exploration, 327. 



Appleton's General Guide, 8153. 



Ashmead, Albert S., on immunity from disease, 342, 

 —Asia Minor, pre- historic ethnology of, 286. 



Ass, origin of, 7.3. 



Astronomical Handbook, 110; lectures, popular, 103 



Astronomy and Astro-Physics for May, 276. 



Atlantic Monthly, li. 



Atmosphere, circulation of the, 301. 



Auchincloss, W. S., on yearly tides, 242. 



Aurora, periodicity of the, 250. 



Australia, Koebele's second trip to, 80; 

 in, 75. 



Autenrieth's Homeric Dictionary, 47. 



British Museum Psychological Memoirs, 179; New 

 Guinea, Sir Wm. Macgiegor's Journey in, 355. 



Brockway's Essentials of Physics, 177. 



Brooklyn Ii stitute, 33; and political science, 282. 



Brooks, W. K., on Johns Hopkins marine laboratory, 

 10. 



Browning Cyclopcedia, 11. 



Buckley's Moral Teachings of Science, 67. 



Buddhism in the Occident. 316. 



BulflLchs Age of Fable, 361. - 



Bullet, moderit, woinds from, 341. 



Butler's The Place of Comenlus in the History of 

 Education. 361. 



BythoscopldsB, local, .318. 



C 



, wells in Iowa, 310; 



Call, K. Ellsworth, on arte 

 human hyold bone, 60. 



Campbell's The Puritan in Holland, England, and 

 America, 3.33. 



Canada, Royal Society of, 307, 337. 



Carlyle lectures, 25. 



Carus's Homilies ol Science, 11, 39. 



Cathcart's Literary Reader, 278. 



Cats, singular, 173. 

 .Celts, the question of the, 140, 175, 194, C07, iio. 



ChaffaLjOD, on Venezuela, 171. 



Chalicoiherlum, ancestry of, 276. 



Chamberlain. A. F., on Nanlbozhu, 19. 



Chambers's Encyclopasdla— IX., 293. 



Chandler, C. F., on arsenic 3. 



Chandler, H., on raiu-maklug, 66. 



.-.„-„.... ^ — , Charencey,H. de, on a native Maya historian, 23). 



Laborato'ry'Manuar of-f-Chatelier, A., on Mahgreb, 34'^. 



Children, giowth of, i'56, 281. 



Chinook jargon, 129. 



Churohlil's Men, Mines, and Animals of South Af- 



Clerke," A.' M., on Algol, 298. 

 i Climate ol British Isles, 362; of Egypt, 4. 

 Climatic change.-^, 359. 



Coal in Argentine Republic, 103; in Straits of Magel- 

 lan, 74; resouioes of Belgium, 145. 

 Coffee-berry carbohydrates, .349. 



Colbert's Humanity in its Origin, 180. 

 Cold waves, 24; warnings in New York, 74. 

 CoUignon, R., on International anthropometric 



scheme, 20^. 

 Color question, 175, 264. 

 Columbia College School of Pure Science, 61 

 Combustion of human body, 100. 

 Comet, a, 189 -■, 275; Denning, j71, 229. 246; Swift, 145, 



229, 246, 817; Wlnnecke's, 9, 78, 171, 246, 2',b, 317: 



Wolf s, 9, 78. 

 — Commerce, evolution of, 216; prehistoric, between 



Airica atid Asia, 175. 

 Comstock, J. H., on wire-worms, 18. 

 C^omsiock, T. B., on vein-formation,. 

 Congress of archeeology and zoology at Moscow, 159; 



botanical, 241. 3^0; of experimental psychology, 44 



gpographicalat Genoa, 313; geographical. In Spain, 



839; orientalists, 365. 

 CouD, H. W., on uses of bacteria, 258. 

 Conway, W. M., on the dawn of art in the ancient 



world, 343. 

 Corean paper, 327. 

 Corn-plant, chemical composition of, 211; planting 



sploratlon 



B 



Bacteria in drinking water, 138; some uses of, 268. 

 Baldwin, J. Mark, on infant's movements, IB; on 



psychological laboratory at Toronto, 143. 

 Balloon problem, 136. 

 Bamboo products, 354. 

 Barbour, E. H., on gigantic fossils, 99; on pocket 



gopher, 204. 

 Barnes. C. R., on botany in high schools, 91. v. 



Bartholomew's Graphic Atlas, 96, 236. 

 Batteries, secondary, 334. 

 Baur, G , on Galapagos Islands, 38, 166; on fauna of 



Galapagos Islands, 176. 

 Bayley, C. C, , on a fire-ball, 349. 

 Beal, W. J, on making an herbarium, 123. 

 Seals, A. H., on magnetic cane, 183. 

 Beauchamp, W. M., on Indian occupation of New 



York, 76. ^ v..,..„, .^^...„s e, , .— 



Becher, F. A., on business and college educationHoragln, F, W,, 116; on saber-toothed tiger, 17. 



297. 

 -Bent, J. Theodore, on Zimbabwe, 343. 



Bereman, T. A., on circulation of the atmosphere, 

 301. 



Blbllotheca Electrotechnioa, 3-33. 



Bigelow, R. P., 5. 



Birds, extinct, In New Zealand, 163. 



Blackberry seedling, 94. 



Blairs Organic Analysis of PotaWe Waters, 177. 



Blocd, 1 aDmoglobln in, 13. 



Blowholes, 33; detection of, 75. 



Boas, F., on Chinook jargon, 139; on growth of chil- 

 dren, 866; ;S1. 



Bolland's Iron Founder, 39. 



Bolley, H. F., on experitnental agriculture, 270. 



Bologna, University of, 2. 



Bone, human hyold, 60. 



Bonvalot's Across Thibet, 81. 



Books, forthcoming scientific, 192. 



Bostwick, Arthur E,, on estimates of distance, 118. 



Botanical laboratory, 185; nomenclature and con- 

 gress, 284. 



Botany in high schools, 91; section of A. A. A. S., 81. 



Bower in Thibet, 284. 



Bradley, Jlilton, on color, 175. 



Brain, the avian, 16. 

 - Brazilian tribes, 831. 



Bread-raiding, 60. 



Brinton, I'. G., anthropological notes, 146, 174, 202, 

 230, 255,286, 316 .342; on the Celts, 191, 335; on Euro- 

 pean origin of white race, 360yOn Hongote lan- 

 guage, 877. / 



Corufli, naval architecture at, 116; the change at 

 300 



Coulter, J. M., on botanical congress and nomen- 

 clature, 3,0. 



Cows, feeding grain to, 130. 



Cremation, 131; iu Japan. 2, 



Criminal anthropology, 255; of women, 316. 



Crosby and Bell's Electric Railway, 96 



Crouter, ^. L. E., on higher education of the deaf, 



199. 

 Culture, retrogressive, iu prehistoric times, 174. 

 Currents of the Pacific, 103. 



Dana, J. C, on family types, 264. 



Dana, J. D.,263, S7t. 



Dareste, on artificial production of monsters, 202. 



Davis, W. M., 271, on Loup Rivers, 107, 220. 



Deaf, association for teaching speech to the, 1 



higher education of the, 199, 231. 

 Dehll and Chamberlln'a Norman Monuments in 



Palermo, 25. 

 Deserts of North America, 158. 

 Diamond, large, 75. 

 Diamonds, hardness of cut, 331. 

 Dietrich, Dr. F. C, death of, 2. 



DImmock, George, on electricity in agriculture, 109. 

 Diphtheria propagated by steam, 229; tox-albumin, 



198. 

 Diptera, systematic position of the, 244, 320. 

 Diseases, cure of, 60; immunity from^ 342. 

 Distance, estimates of, 118, 149. 

 Donnelly's Cipher in the Plays, 11. 

 Dorsey, J. Owen, on Nanibozhu, 19; on Slouau onoma- 



topes, 4; on Dhegiha language, 256. 

 Dorsey's The Dhegiha Language, 362. 



Drummond, A. T., on lake temperatures, 47. 

 Drummond's Natural Law in the Spiritual 'World, 



177. 

 Dust, microbes in, 102; In the air, 242. 

 Dymond, T. S., on lettuce, 201. 



E 



Earthquakes in Japan, 187. 

 -Easter I.-land native language, 256. 

 Education, relation of business to college, 297. 

 Edwards, Amelia B., death of, 871. 

 Edwards, C. 8., 75. 



Edwards, Henry, entomological collection of, lo9. 

 Edwards's, Henry, publications, 8'2. 

 Ehrenrelch, P , on Brazilian iribfs, 2.31. 

 Ehrenrelch's Volkerkunde Brazlliens, 68. 

 Else berg's Bacteriological Diagnosis, 891. 

 Electrical engineer, the education of the, 344. 

 Electricity in agriculture, 35, 109. 

 Element, a new, 3.9. 

 Embryonic causes of variation, 202. 

 Endlich's Blowpipe Analysis, 332. 

 English mechanics to visit Chicago exhibition, 81. 

 Epidemics, atmospheric theory of, 144. 

 Epileptic automatism, 45 

 Eskimo thrcwiug-stlcks, 333. 

 Esmarch, G. von, 5. 

 Ethnic nosology, 342. 

 Evaporation and condensation, 101. 

 Ever hart. Dr., on Texas Academy of Sciences, 358. 

 Ewell, Erwln E., on coffee-berry carbohydrates, 349. 

 Exhibition building. New York, 103; Columbian, in 



Spain, 339; Historical American, in Madrid. 37; re- . 



ligious, 101; of objects used in worship, 215, 225; 



South Alrican, 354. 

 Eye-nabits, 53. 

 Eyes, the, and facial expression, 253. 



Falling, sensations during, 284. 



Family traits, ISS, 231 319; types, 264. 



Famine in Russia, 131. 



Farrlngton, E. H., on corn-plant, 211. 



Fasts, tamous, 3. 



Ferree, Barr, on an architectural scholarship, 309; on 

 Brooklyn archltlctural exhibition, 264; on historical 

 American exhibition in Madrid, 37. 



Ferrero, G., on criminal anthropology of woman, 316. 



Fertilizer, experiments at Georgia station, 102. 



Field, Geo. 'W., 172. 



Find lay's Working of an English Railway, 178. 



Fire-ball, 249. 



Fishes, distribution of, 187; Dr. Storer's work on, 295. 



Flske's Discovery of America, ISO; Evolution In Sci- 

 ence, Philosophy, and Art, 69; History of the United 

 States, 308. 



Fitzner, R., on lotos eaters, 230. 



Flexner, S., on tox-albumin diphtheria, 198. 



Florldite, 3, 



Flower's 'I he Horse, 6S. 



Fog, Frank's explanation of, 61; in London, 4. 



Food exhibition. 74. 



Forbes, Henry O., on extinct birds of New Zealand 

 163. 



Foshay, P. Max, on the Celts, 175. 



Fossils, gigantic, 99. 



FothergiU's The Will Power, 179. 



Foxes in Australia, 313. 



Fruit-trees, is it dangerous to spray, 275. 



Fungi on plants, 17'3, 343. 



G 



Gabelentz's Sprachwissenschaft, £6. 



Galapagos Islands, 38, 166; fauna of, 176. 



Gallaudet, E. M., on tbe higher education of the 



deaf, 231. 

 Games, children's, 11. 

 Garman, S., on distribution of fishes, 187; on Sistrurus 



and Crotalophorus, 890; on Dr. Storer's work on 



fishes, 296; on vesicles of Savl, 128. 

 Gatschet, A. P., on Klamath language, 256. 

 Geer, de, Gerard, 2^1. 

 Geikie, A., on volcanic action, 145. 

 Gems, detection of artificial, 844, 276; of the Ural, 101. 

 Genealogy, scientific, 157, 990. 

 Geneva, soundings in lake of, 46. 

 Geographical names, orthography of, 34; society in 



Liverpool, 33. 

 Geological Survey of Alabama, 38. 

 German Science Ass relation, 3'26. 

 Glacial man, 317; period. Professor Geikie on, 107; 



period, 103; phenomena in New York, .341. 

 Glaser, E , on the alphabet, 355, 

 Glass, solubility of, 33. 

 Gold in meteorite, 61. 

 Golden, Katherine, E., on a botanical laboratory, 



185. 

 Gopher, pocket, extermination of, 204. 

 Qorby's geological collection, 3. 

 Gorilla bra ns, 940. 

 Grasses, homoptera Injurious to, 228. 

 Gravels, Lafayette, 31. 

 Green, G. C, ou habits ol Jackdaws, 229. 

 Greenland, relief expedition to, 44. 

 Growoll's Bookseller's Library, 11. 



/'fC 



