1028 J THE AMERICAN NATURALIST. 
College, Akron, Ohio, and lately professor of geology in Throop Institute, 
at Long Beach, Cal, August 17, aged 66.— A. Constant, student of 
Lepidoptera in Golfe: Juan, France, May 13, aged 71. — Maxime Cornu, 
professor of botany in the Jardin des Plantes, at Paris, April 4, aged 58. 
— Adolf Fick, professor of physiology in the University at Würzburg, 
August 21, aged 71.— H. W. Harkness, botanist, in San Francisco, 
May ro, aged 8o. — W. Hartwig, curcinologist, in April, in Berlin. — 
Rev. Moses Harvey, who added much to our knowledge of the giant squid, 
at St. John's, Newfoundland, September 3, aged 82.— Professor Felix 
Joseph Henri Lacaze-Duthiers, the eminent French zoólogist, aged 8o. — 
Professor Gustav Lindstróm, paleontologist of the Royal Museum at 
Stockholm, May 16, aged 72. — Dr. Otto Lugger, entomologist of Minne- 
sota since 1887, May 21.— Dr. P. Calvin Mensch, professor of biology 
and chemistry in Ursinus College at Collegeville, Pa., July 3o. — Dr. Joshua 
Miller, archeologist of Arizona. — Dr. Charles Mohr, botanist, at Ashe- 
ville, N.C., July 17. — P. G. von Móllendorff, a writer on the natural 
history of China, April 19, aged 53. — Dr. Adolf Erik Nordenskjéld, the 
well-known arctic explorer and naturalist, August 13, aged 68.— Miss 
Eleanor A. Ormerod, the British entomologist. — Dr. Antonio Piccone, 
algologist, in Genoa, May 21, aged 57. — Dr. Otto vom Rath, well known 
for his studies of myriapods and cytology, in Cologne, April 23, aged 43. — 
Miss Eva M. Reed, botanist and indexer in the Missouri Botanical 
Gardens, killed by a train July 7. — Dr. A. F. W. Schimper, professor of 
botany in the University at Basel, September 9, aged 45. — Dr. Domenico 
Stefanini, professor of bacteriology in the University at Pavia, aged 80. — 
Professor C. A. Tenne, custodian of the Berlin Mineralogical Museum at 
Bad Nanheim, aged 48. — Friedrich Tiemann, conservator of the Zoólogical 
Museum in Breslau. — Anthony Wilkin, an English archeologist and eth- 
nologist, at Cairo, Egypt, May 17, aged 24.— Martin F. Woodward, 
demonstrator in biology in the Royal School of Science at South Kensington, 
drowned September 15. 
