[American.]
ARMY AND NAVY JOURNAL.
May 19, 1900. How to Deal with Orientals. Navy Control of Transports. The Question of Armor-plate. Brilliant Cooperation of the Navy.
May 26. Spanish Captives in Luzon. Army Reorganization Bill. Battle of Cedar Creek. Fighting in the Cebu Mountains. Maxim-Nordenfeldt 75-mm. Gun.
June 2. The Proposed Armor-plate Factory. Spain and the United States. The Naval War College. Control of the Transport Service. Fire-proofing of Wood.
June 9. Militia as a National Reserve. The Troubles in China. Our Position in the Orient. Opening of the Naval War College.
June 16. The German Staff System. Japan and the Chinese Situation. Our National Academies. For a Navy Reserve. Naval Vessels under Construction. The Belleisle Experiment. German View of South African Warfare.
June 23. Protecting American Interests. The Civil Side of Naval Administration. The Belleisle Experiment. The U. S. S. Hartford.
June 30. Disappearing Gun-carriages. Our Army and Navy. A Sound Opinion on Superposed Turrets. The Lessons of the War. Rear-Admiral Sampson on Superposed Turrets. Superposed Turrets for New Battleships.
July 7. Naval Strategic Board. Relations of the Powers in China. The Coming War. Final Trial of the Kentucky. The Armor-plate Question.
July 14. Cable-laying in the Philippines.
July 21. The Task before the Powers. Acoustic Triangulation. Defects of the U. S. S. New Orleans. Civil Side of Naval Administration.
July 28. Peace and War Tests of Ships. Teaching War in Peace. Modern Training in Seamanship. Submarine Cables in War.
August 18. Rapid Fire in the Field. Triple Screws for Warships.
August 25. Operations of the Seymour Relief Expedition.
ARMY AND NAVY REGISTER.
June 23, 1900. The Superposed Turrets. American Forces in China. Armor Contract Requirements. The Naval Appropriation Bill. New Naval Regulations. The Naval Turrets. July 7. Final Trial of the Kentucky.
July 14. Story of the Taku Battle. Professor Alger on High Explosives. Defects of the New Orleans.
July 21. Our Position in China. The Cable in War.
July 28. The Range-finder Embarrassment. Roller Bearings for Artillery. Acoustic Triangulation.
August 4. The Armored Cruisers. Naval Base in Cuba. August 11. Submarine Boats. More Dry Docks.
August 18. Minority Report on Protected Cruisers. The Disappearing Gun-carriage Question.
August 25. Rejoinder on Protected Cruisers. Report of Captain McCalla on Work in China. Fight at Tien-Tsin.
September 1. Tribute from the British. The Manila Bounty. The Alabama.
CASSIER’S MAGAZINE.
June, 1900. Trade Possibilities in South Africa. Naval Architecture and Sanitation. Engineering Graduates from Universities.
July. Electric Power for Factories. Invention as a Factor of American National Wealth.
September. American Ore Dock Machinery. The World’s Coal. The Sloop-of-war Wampanoag.
JOURNAL OF THE MILITARY SERVICE INSTITUTION.
July, 1900. Ideal Ration for Army in Tropics. War Lessons for Laymen. Reorganization for Central Staff. Puerto Rico. In Re National Guard Essays.
September. Care of the Soldiers’ Feet. Cavalry Drill Regulations. Smoky Powder. The National Guard.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NAVAL ENGINEERS.
May, 1900. Contract Trial of the United States Protected Cruiser Albany. The Influence of Compression in Cylinder Clearance Spaces upon Steam Consumption per I. H. P. A Novel Method of Installing Propeller Shafting.
JOURNAL OF THE UNITED STATES ARTILLERY.
May and June, 1900. The Second Boer War. Roller Bearings for Artillery. The Study of Sea Power. The Law of Pressure in Guns. Perforations Formulas. The Dragon Balloon.
July and August. The Maxim-Nordenfeldt Mountain Guns in the Philippines. The Second Boer War. The Modern Infantry Attack and the Artillery of the Defense. The 5-inch B. L. Howitzer.
MARINE ENGINEERING.
June, 1900. Further Trials of Turbine-driven Destroyer Viper. Cable-cutting Operations of U. S. S. St. Louis. Decision Regarding Cambering of Steamship’s Keel. Machinery of Denver Class U. S. Cruisers. Disastrous Explosion on Austrian Torpedo-boat Adler. Naval Steam Engine Scientifically Considered, II. Influence of Spanish War on Naval Construction.
July. Majestic vs. Belleisle Gunnery Experiments. Machinery Equipment of T. S. S. Deutschland. Naval Steam Engine Scientifically Considered, III. German View of Torpedo Craft. Naval Programme for 1900.
August. The Maiden Run of the S. S. Deutschland. Naval Steam Engine Scientifically Considered, IV. Innovations in Modern Shipbuilding. Destruction of Docks and Ships of North German Lloyd Co. by Fire.
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN.
May 26, 1900. Some Needs of Modern Chemistry.
June 9. United States Battleship and Class.
June 16. The Armor-plate Fiasco. Two Remarkable Achievements in Chemical Physics. The Herreshoff 70-foot Yacht Mineola. A Curious Historic Weapon.
June 23. The United States Military Academy.
June 30. The Latest Liquid Air Fallacy. An Improved Valve for Steam Radiators. A Military Automobile. Highspeed Foreign Cruisers.
July 7. Submarine Boat. Wireless Telegraphy.
July 14. Armor-plate. Burning of Steamships and Docks. July 21. Our Battleships. Experiments with the Belleisle. Canet Gun. Steam Turbine.
July 28. Aerial Telegraphy from Balloons. Torpedo-boat Dupont Accident. Fire-proofing Wood.
August 4. Artillery Practice. Protection of Dynamite Magazines. Replacing Broken Propeller. United States Cruiser. Petroleum Fuel for Warships.
August 18. Chinese Artillery. Telegraph Line in Germany. August 25. Armor-plate Bids. Disappearing Gun-carriage. Chinese Campaign.
THE JOURNAL OF THE FRANKLIN INSTITUTE.
June, 1900. Recent Progress in the Aluminum Industry. Electromagnetic Mechanism with Special Reference to Telegraphic Work.
July. Electromagnetic Mechanism, jwrth Reference to Telegraphic Work. The Reaction Breakwater as Proposed for the Opening of the Southwest Pass of the Mississippi River.
August. Prismatic Lighting for the Illumination of Dark Interiors. Electromagnetic Mechanism, with Special Reference to Telegraphic Work.
[Foreign.]
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL UNITED SERVICE INSTITUTION.
May, 1900. French Second-class Cruiser D’Assas. Second Prize Essay—Subject, Considering the Changes Made in Naval Construction during the Past Twenty Years, and in View of the Experience gained during the Chino-Japanese and Spanish-American Wars, what are the Best Types of War Vessels for the British Navy, including Armor, Armament, and General Equipment for Ships of all Types? Proudhon’s Memoirs. The Art of Skirmishing.
June. The New De Bange and Piffard Rapid-fire Gun. Lessons of the War: Personal Observations and Impressions of the Forces and Military Establishments now in South Africa. An Italian View of the Boer War. Firing on Coast Defenses.
July. Naval Prize Essay—Subject, Considering the Changes Made in Naval Construction during the Past Twenty Years, and in View of the Experience gained during the Chino-Japanese and Spanish-American Wars, what are the Best Types of War Vessels for the British Navy, including Armor, Armament, and General Equipment for Ships of all Types. War Maps. An Italian View of the Boer War.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL ARTILLERY INSTITUTION.
March, 1900. The Arracan Expedition, 1825. The Boer War, 1899-1900. The Boer Positions at Magersfontein. Horses for Embarkation to South Africa from England. Ranging with Field Guns—the Fire-hose System. The Western Glacis of India. Measuring and Weighing the Celestial Bodies.
April. A Heavy Battery at the Relief of Ladysmith. Recent Surveys in Western China. The Boer War, 1899-1900.
THE ENGINEER.
May 11, 1900. Machine Guns of Caliber. Field Guns in South Africa. Government Boiler Inspection. Belleville Boilers. A New Shell. Portable Heavy Guns.
May 18. The Belleisle Experiments. Armored Train for South Africa. Mr. Goschen on Ordnance and Explosives.
BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTES.
Navy Boilers. H. M. S. Aboukir. Government Boiler Inspection. Electricity in Warships.
May 25. Liquid Fuel Apparatus of S. S. Cardium. Torpedo- boat Destroyers. The Chances of the Nicaragua Canal. Bethlehem Armor for Russia.
June 1. Some Uses of Aluminum. The Belleisle Experiment.
June 8. U. S. Battleship Pennsylvania and Class. The Lyddite Explosion Huddersfield. Naval Colleges in China.
June 15. The French Commerce-destroyer Guichen. Lessons from the Belleisle.
June 22. Cordite and our Guns.
June 29. Progress of Warships and Machinery Building in England. Action of Explosive Shells on Ships. The American Armor-plate Controversy.
July 13. Water-tube Boilers in Warships. The French Marine. The Belleville Boiler.
July 20. New High-speed Paddle Steamer. H. M. Torpedo- boat Destroyer Viper. Mr. Goschen’s Memorandum on Water- tube Boilers.
July 27. Coaling Warships at Sea. Speed in the Navy. The Provision of Rifle Ranges. The Select Committee on Boiler Explosions.
August 3. Machinery for the United States Navy Armored Cruisers. The Machinery of Fighting Ships. Tests of a Cammell’s 4-inch K. N. C. Plate.
August 17. The Attack on Entrenched Positions. The Future of Aluminum and Copper. Japanese Armored Cruiser Adsuma.
ENGINEERING.
May 11, 1900. Modern Field Artillery. The Electrical Equipment of Ships of War. H. M. S. Torpedo-boat Destroyer Viper.
May 18. The Belleville Boiler. Armored Traction Trains for South Africa.
May 25. The Japanese Battleship Asahi. The Electrical Equipment of Ships of War. The Effect of Oil on Screw Propulsion.
June 8. Submarine Telegraph Enterprise. Boiler Explosion near Bolton.
June 15. Corrosion and Failure of Propeller Shafts.
June 29. The Japanese Battleship Asahi. The Maxim Multi-perforated Powder.
July 13. The Drift and Throw of a Projectile.
July 27. The Navy Boilers. Water-tube Boilers.
July 30. Torpedo-boats for the Dutch Navy. Belleville Boilers.
August 3. Machinery of Warships. The Torpedo-boat Destroyer Viper.
August 10. The Navy Boiler Committee.
August 17. H. M. Armored Cruiser Hogue. Compulsory Boiler Inspection. The Development of German Electricity Works. The Drift and Throw of a Projectile.
THE STEAMSHIP.
June, 1900. Water-tube Boilers. The Britannic Stockless Anchor. Propeller Shaft Failures. Disinfectors for Ships’ Use. Steam Engine Cylinder Proportions and Steam Jackets. Launch of a First-class armored Cruiser at Fairfield. Boiler Compound Question. The Admiralty and Belleville Boilers. The Upbuilding of the American Merchant Marine.
July. The Armor Plate Fiasco. Marine Boiler Explosions. Ventilation aboard Ship. Modern Boiler Making. A Process of Hardening Steel.
August. The Battleship of the Future. The Use of Aluminum. Water-tube Boilers in the Navy. Future of the Turbine. The New German Battleships.
UNITED SERVICE GAZETTE.
May 12, 1900. Fortified Seaports versus Fleets, II. Ambulance Work in War. Mr. Goschen and Naval Guns. American Turret Experiments.
May 19. The Submarines and their Plan of Campaign. Naval Education Afloat. Fortified Seaports versus Fleets, III.
May 26. Fortified Seaports versus Fleets, IV. The Laws and Usages of War, of Prisoners of War.
June 2. Submarine Cables.
June 9. Tactical Exercises in the Fleet. The Laws and Usages of War. The Treatment of Prisoners of War. The Additions to the French Navy.
June 16. A Gold Medallist on the Requirements of a Modern Fleet. Battleships.
June 23. The French Naval Maneuvers. The Mystery of the Europa’s Boilers.
June 30. Masts and Yards at the United Service Institution.
July 7. The New United States Battleships. Superimposed Turrets in the American Navy. French Naval Education. The Navy League and the Requirements of the Fleet. Russian View of Sea Power.
August 11. Lessons of the Naval Maneuvers.
August 18. Belleville Boilers from a Russian Standpoint, I. Long-range Artillery Fire, its Use and Abuse.