Rocket 4015 Rockford disease.' With the initial gift of $200,000, scholarships and fellowships were distributed among existing laboratories throughout the country; but the need of greater concentra- tion in the work was met by the further do- nation of $1,000,000 for land and building purposes. Mr. Rockefeller gave $2,600,000 for endowment purposes in 1907. The Insti- tute has three departments: the department of laboratories, department of the hospital, and the department of animal and plant pathology. Rocket Flight denotes a method, as yet unachieved, of flying and conveying by pow- er-driven 'rockets' or projectiles instead of the familiar airplane, airship or balloon. In have all contributed to the aspiration of a human expedition to the moon—and a safe return. Already in 1930 Robert Esnault- Pelterie of France, an expert on the rocket system of propulsion, had published a work on interstellar navigation and outlined plans for a moon flight, with the confident predic- tion that this would be accomplished within the next 15 years. Radio and television would be employed to describe the flight while in progress. Important experiments with rock- ets have been recently conducted in the U. S. by Prof. R. H. Goddard. Rockets, in warfare, are used for making signals, for setting fire to buildings or ship- ping, or as projectiles. Signal rockets gener- Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York City. 1865 the ingenious French novelist Jules Verne published a fantastic but fascinating story, From the Earth to the Moon. In this imaginary voyage, made by three adventur- ous scientists, the aerial vehicle was an elabo- rately constructed projectile, fired from a huge cannon deeply rooted in the earth, and aimed towards the moon. Grotesque and im- possible as the story seemed for more than half a century, modern scientists have been taking the matter very seriously, for Verne had woven fiction around airplanes, airships, submarines and television long before any one of those marvels existed. The remarkable stratosphere ascents of Piccard (1931 and 1932), and of the Russian Goltzman in 1933; the development of motors and pro- pellers, the experimental rocket engine of Paul Heylandt (Germany, 1931)* and a rocket turbine for airplanes patented by R. H. Goddard (U. S. A., ally have a tubular case and head of stout Daper. The head contains a composition which when ignited bursts into stars of vari- ous colors; the bottom is choked until it forms a single vent in the center, where the rocket is lighted. They are fired from a rocket trough, by which the required elevation may be given. Rockfish, the name of many fishes notable for haunting rocky parts of the coast or bot- tom. The term is most distinctively applied to the numerous species of the family Scorpse- nidas, found chiefly on the Pacific Coast of the United States and in Japan. The group is composed of gaily colored, viviparous, ma- rine shore fishes, varying in length from 10 in. to 3 ft. Rockford, city, Illinois. The finest grades of furniture are produced and more walnut is consumed than by any other furniture cen- ter in the country, Other leading manufac-