Science (journal)/Volume 5/No. 100
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This work is incomplete. If you'd like to help expand it, see the help pages and the style guide, or leave a comment on the talk page. |
This work may need to be standardized using Wikisource's style guidelines. If you'd like to help, please review the help pages. |
- Comment and Criticism (pp. 1-2)
Letters to the Editor
- Why is Water Considered Ghost-Proof? by Lester F. Ward (p. 2)
- Hollyhock-Disease and the Cotton-Plant by J. C. Arthur (p. 2)
- Military Cetology by Frederick W. True (pp. 2-3)
- Man in the Stone Age by Daniel G. Brinton (p. 3)
- Dr. Haacke's Discovery of the Eggs of Echidna by Henry F. Osborn (p. 3)
- Artificial Wampum by Erminnie A. Smith (pp. 3-4)
- Was It Imagination? by E. T. Quimby (p. 4)
- The Managers to the Readers (pp. 4-5)
- The Kongo by Gardiner G. Hubbard (pp. 5-8)
- Lake Mistassini by J. D. Whitney (pp. 8-10)
- The Tasman Glacier (pp. 10-11)
- The Digestibility of Cellulose by H. P. Armsby (pp. 11-12)
- Is the Rainfall of Kansas Increasing? (pp. 12-13)
- American Society for Psychical Research (pp. 13)
- The Natural Bridge of Virginia (pp. 13-14)
- Hereditary Intellect and the Geographical Distribution of Talents (pp. 14-15)
- Dr. Hack Tuke on Hypnotism by Hack Tuke (pp. 15-16)
- Inheritance among the Ancient Arabs by J. W. Powell (pp. 16-18)
- Notes and News (pp. 18-20)