48 PROCEEDIXGS OF THE SAIXT LOUIS MEETING 



Yellowstone National Park folio, Wyoming. General description. United 

 States Geological Survey, Geological Atlas of the United States, folio 

 number 30, 1896. 



The age of the igneous rocks of the Yellowstone National Park. American 

 Journal of Science, fourth series, volume 1, 1896, pages 445-457. 



Absaroka folio, Wyoming. United States Geological Survey, Geological Atlas 

 of the United States, folio number 52, 1899. 



Early Tertiary volcanoes of the Absaroka Range. Washington Geological 

 Society, Presidential address, pages 25; Science, new series, volume 9. 

 1899, pages 425-442. 



Descriptive geology of Huckleberry Moimtain and Big Game Ridge 'Yellow- 

 stone National Park). United States Geological Survey, Monograph 32, 

 part 2, 1899, pages 165-202. 



A geological relief map of the Yellowstone National Park and of the Absaroka 

 Range. Science, new series, volume 9, 1899. page 454. 



Othniel Charles Marsh. United States Geological Survey, Twenty-first An- 

 nual Report of the Director, part 1, 1900. pages 189-204. 



Report of the Congress of Geologists. International Universal Exposition. 

 Paris. 1900. Report of Commissioner General for the United States, vol- 

 ume 6, 1900, pages 198-204. 



Origin of the thermal waters in the Yellowstone National Park. Presidential 

 address. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, volume 22, 1911, 

 pages 103-122. 



Biographical memoir of Samuel Franklin Emmons, 1841-1911. National Acad 

 emy of Sciences, Biographical Memoirs, volume 7, 1913, pages 307-334. 



MEMORIAL OF EOBERT HILLS LOUGHRIDGE ^ 

 BY EUGEjNfE ALLEN SMITH 



Eobert Hills Loughriclge, tlie son of Eev. Eobert McGill Loughridge 

 and Olivia D. Hills, daughter of David Hills, of Eome, Xew York, was 

 born at Kowetah Mission, Creek Xation, Indian Territory, October 9, 

 1843, of which mission his father had charge at the time. His mother 

 died when he was about two years old, and his father afterwards married 

 Miss Harriet Johnson, of Sturbridge, Massachusetts, a graduate of Mouni 

 Holyoke Seminary and an educated, refined, Christian woman. 



When the Tallahassee Mission, larger and better adapted to the train- 

 ing of Indian boys and girls, was established near Muskogee, the mission 

 at Kowetah was abandoned, and the Eev. Mr. Loughridge was assigned 

 to the new station. Here Eobert received his early education under the 

 careful and sympathetic direction of his father and stepmother. 



When about seventeen years old he was sent to the Synodical College 



Read before the Society Deceml>er 27. 1017. 



Manuscript received by tlie Secretary of the Society January 31, 1918. 



