13 2 Proceedings of the Newport Natural History Society. 
1897. 
February 10. 
March 29. 
April 19. 
May 6. 
October 11. 
November 29. 
December 27. 
1898. 
January 11. 
January 31. 
March 7. 
March 28. 
April 11. 
July 19. 
October 24. 
November 14. 
A Summer’s Fishing in Maine. By Amory Austin. 
A Historical Account of the Maps of Newport and 
Aquidneck Island, R. I. By Charles E. Ham¬ 
mett, Jr. 
Insect Foes to our Elm-Trees. By Lucius D. Davis. 
* 
The Practical Use of Weather-Maps. By Newton Hen¬ 
ry Black. 
Atmospheric Electricity and Lightning-Rods. By Wil¬ 
liam H. Tibbetts. 
The President’s Annual Address. Commercial Pro¬ 
ducts of the Sea in their Relations to 
Newport. By Horatio R. Storer, M. D. 
Our Local Seaweeds. By Dr. C. A. Siegfried, U. S. N. 
A Peculiar Form of Rainbow. By Richard Bliss. 
Plankton. By Newton Henry Black. 
On the Rearing of the Mongolian Pheasant near Boston. 
By Amory Austin. 
Meteorites, and what they tell us of Other Worlds. 
By Dr. Oliver W. Huntington. 
Ice as a Geological Agent. By Richard Bliss. 
Sword-Fishing at Block Island. By Amory Austin. 
Ancient Egyptian Cartography. By F. Cope White- 
house. 
The Human Features. By Prof. Hermon C. Bumpus. 
In and Around Constantinople. By Miss Stormont- 
Lewis. 
A Historical Sketch of Fish-Culture. (Part I.) 
By Amory Austin. 
Fish-Culture. (Part II.) By Amory Austin. 
Taxidermy. By Dr. Douglas P. A. Jacoby. 
On the Fishing-Hawk and the Great Northern Diver. 
By A. O’D. Taylor. 
On the Carolina Wren, and on the Carpenter-Bee. By 
Amon Parmenter. 
Mushrooms and Toadstools. By Dr. Henry W. Gillett. 
On the Doras and Batistes. By Richard Bliss. 
Remarks upon Mushroom-Culture. By Dr. C. A. 
Siegfried, U. S. N. 
