city with sixty-two fellowships, covering a wide variety of different problems. These fellowships employ one hundred and ten research chemists and engineers. The continued financial support of the Messrs. Mellon has made it possible to develop the system to its present strong position. By the application of the Industrial fellowship system, the Institute has been successful in demonstrating to Ameri- can manufacturers, irrespective of size, that industrial re- search, properly carried out, is profitable to them. Most of the problems accepted for study, 1911-1928, have been A Corner in the Machine Shop of Mellon Institute solved satisfactorily, and many chemists and chemical engi- neers have been trained in research methods and then placed in useful industrial positions. The Institute has also been active in stimulating research in other laboratories and in cooperating with other research establishments, both in the United States and abroad. It is however best known by the successful commercial processes which it has developed and by its contributions to the literature of chemistry and allied sciences. The total contributions to literature for the fifteen years ended January 1, 1927, were as follows: 12 books, 56 bulletins, 411 research reports, 636 other articles, and 322 United States patents.