x.xx vi i i;nt> 



PAGE 



Barnabd, .1. Edwin — A Method of Disintegrating Bacteria and other Organic 



Cells (Plate XVIII. and FigB. 72, 73) " 592 



DlSTASS, A.— Bacillus Celhilosx Detagregan* sp.n 686 



Ellis, D. — Spirophyllum ferrugineum .. .. 686 



Omeliansky, W. L., iV- (). P. Ssewerowa — Pigment of Azotolntctir Chroococcum .. 686 



Eber, A. — Human and Bovine Tubercle 686 



Guegcen, F. — Alopecia areata of Bacterial Origin 687 



DlSTASE, A. — Studies of the Intestinal Flora 



Vebderame, Ph. — Sarcina Citrea conjunctivae 688 



Loris-Melikov, J. — New Anaerobe in Typhoid Stool* 688 



Mercies, L., & Ph. Lass el r — Pathogenicity of Bacillus chlororaphis 6S8 



Fetrie, G. F., & G. H. Macalistek — h'at Plague in East Anglia 688 



Jensen, O. — Bacteriological Studies of Danish Butter 689 



Walker, E. \V. A. — Variation and Adaptation in Bacteria 6*'* 



Bibliography 689 



I'avarino, G. L. — Bacterial Diseases of Orchids 802 



Hort, S. — Bacillus Cgpripedii S02 



Smith, E. F. — Bacterium tumefaciens 



Payarino, G. L. — Bacterium briosianum 803 



Meyer, Kurt — Anaerobic Streptothrix 803 



Koenigsfeld, H. — Penetration of the Normal Skin by Tubercle Bacilli 803 



Reyis, C. — Artificial Production of a permanently atypical Bacillus coli 803 



Polacci, G. — Parasite of Babies and Plasmodiophora brassicx 803 



Betegh, I. v. — Foot-and-mouth Disease 804 



Beckwith, T. D. — Diplococcus gadidarum, the cause of the Reddening of Cod and 



other allied Fish 804 



Johnston, J. R. — Bacillus coli and Plant-diseases 804 



Gaspari, F. de — Bacillus pappulus 804 



Bernhardt — Scarlet-fever Virus 804 



Ktjfferath, H. — Growth of Bacterium zopfii 805 



Bibliography 805 



