XXXV 1 



Index 



Minor Planets, the Ring of, Dr. P. Stroobant, 17 



Mira, the Spectrum of, V. M. Slipher, 17; Magnitudes ol 



Mira, December 14, 1906, to 1-cbruary 16, 1907, Mr. 



Robinson, no; the Mira Ma.ximum of 1906-7, Prof. 



Nijiand, 259; the Spectra of Sun-spots and Mira Ceti, 



Father Cortie, 647 

 Mirage observed at Llanelly, Carmarthenshire, John Innes, 



»59 



Mirande (Marcel), Parasitic Phanerogamic Plants and 

 Nitrates, 536 



Mitchell (H. V.), Colour and Constitution of Azo-Com- 

 pounds, 237 



Mitchell (W.), Structure and Growth of the Mind, 195 



Mobius (Prof. W.), Phytogeny of the Various Groups of 

 the Plant Kingdom, 389 



Modern Painters, John Ruskin, 267 



Modestov (Basile), Introduction i I'Histoire romaine, I2t 



Moedebeck (Hermann W. L.), Pocket-book of Aeronautics, 

 100 



Mollusca, Land and Freshwater, of India, Lieut. -Colonel 

 H. H. Godwin-Austen, 244 



Monti (Prof. V.), Earthquake Shadow, 597 



Montmorin (Vicomte d'Aurelle), a Modern Sun-dial, 648 



Moon, the Electric Action of the Sun and of the, Dr. 

 Nodon, 560, 580 



Moore (D. McFarlane), New Method of Lighting in the 

 Courtyard of the Savoy Hotel, 206 



Moore (S. L.), Plants collected on Mt. Ruwenzori by Dr. 

 A. F. R. WoUaston (1906), 287 



Moorwood (F. C), Sentinel Pyrometers and their Appli- 

 cation to the Annealing, Hardening, and General Heat 

 Treatment of Tool Steel, 66 



Morale de la Nature, M. Deshumbcrt, 77 



Morbology : Tuberculosis communicated to Young Cattle 

 by the Ingestion of Tuberculosis Virus of Human Origin, 

 A. Chauveau, 23 ; Experimental Diagnosis of Tuber- 

 culosis, H. ValUe, 167; New Method of Diagnosis of 

 Tuberculosis in Man by the Tuberculin Ophthalo- 

 reaction, A. Calmette, 215; the Tubercle Bacillus, Prof. 

 Arloing, 571 ; Tuberculosis, the most Usual Mode of In- 

 fection in Man, Dr. Ravenal, 571 ; Prof. Flugge, 571 ; 

 Epidemiology of Malta Fever, Colonel Bruce, F.R.S., 

 39 ; Malta Fever, 104 ; Ravages of Sleeping Sickness in 

 the Ruwenzori Region, Dr. A. F. R. Wollaston, 133 ; 

 International Conference on Sleeping Sickness, Lord 

 Fitzmaurice, 188 ; Fermentation of Glucosides by Bacteria 

 of the Typhoid-coli Group, and the Acquisition of New 

 Fermentating Powers by Bacillus dysenlcriae and other 

 Micro-organisms, F. W. Twort, 142 ; the Control of a 

 Scourge, or How Cancer is Curable, Charles P. Childe, 

 171 ; the Essential Similarity of Innocent and Malignant 

 Tumours, Charles W. Cathcart, 171 ; Guy's Hospital 

 Reports, 171 ; Meeting of the General Committee of the 

 Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Sir William Church, 

 226 ; Occurrence of the Leishman-Donovan Body in the 

 Peripheral Circulation in Cases of Kala-azar in Madras, 

 Captain Patton, 227 ; Sexual Cycle of Development of the 

 Hsemogregarine Parasite of the Dog, the Lcucocytozoou 

 caiiis, in the Tick, R. sanguineus. Captain Christophers, 

 227 ; the Role of the Spleen in Trypanosomatous Diseases, 

 A. Laveran and M. Thiroux, 264 ; Destructive Function 

 of the Spleen towards Trypanosomes, A. Rodet and G. 

 Vallet, 344 ; Experimental Treatment of Trypanosomiasis 

 in Rats, H. G. Plimmer and J. D. Thomson, 607; Is 

 the LTse of .^rsenious Acid a Preventative against 

 Trypanosomiasis? A. Laveran and A. Thiroux, 608; 

 Function of the Spleen in Trypanosomiasis, A. Massaglia, 

 608 ; a New Trypanosome, T. soudnnense, A. Laveran. 

 376 ; Commission to inquire into the Nature of Dis- 

 temper in Dogs in Great Britain, 277; Plague and Fleas 

 in India. 336; Plague Prevention in India, Prof. Ronald 

 Ross, F.R.'S., 518; Plague, the Best Methods of Ridding 

 Shins of Rats, Dr. Giemsa, 571 ; Preventive Inoculation 

 in Plague, Dr. Strong, .';7i ; Studies in the Bacteriology 

 and Etiologv of Oriental Plague, Dr. E. Klein, F.R.S., 

 Prof. R. T. Hewlett, 609: Fleas and Plague, Sir Lauder 

 Brunton, F.R.S., at London School of Tropical Medicine, 

 648 ; Human Yaws is Transmissible to Monkevs, M. 

 Castellani, 422 ; Typhoid and Paratyphoid Infections of 

 Man, Prof. Loffler, 1571 ; Dr. Lentz, 571 ; the Serum 

 Treatment of Typhoid Fever, Prof. Chantemesse, 572 ; 



Typhoid Fever in Surrey for 1906, Dr. Seaton, 669 ; 

 Insects as Carriers of Disease, Dr. Donitz, 571 ; Para- 

 sitic Protozoa as Pathogenic Agents, Prof. v. Wasielew- 

 ski, 571 ; Parasites of Malaria Fevers, Prof. Hewlett, 

 571 ; Mosquitoes and Malaria in Bengal, Mr. Chatterjee, 

 596; the Extinction of Typhus in Edinburgh, Mr. Bal- 

 four, 668 ; Causes of Trypanolytic Crises and Relapses, 

 .\. Massaglia, 680 



Morel (Prof. L.), Sequence of Scientific Studies, 506 



Morgan (G. T.), a Series of Coloured Diazo-Salts Derived 

 from Benzoyl-i :4-naphthylene-diamine, 237 



Morgan (Prof. Thomas Hunt), Experimental Zoology, 313 



Morozewicz (J.), Conditions Essential to obtain Accurate 

 Results in the Estimation of Potassium by Method based 

 on the Precipitation of Metal in the form of its Chloro- 

 platinate, 257 



Morphology : Structure of the Larynx in Bats, H. Elias, 

 25s 



Morris (J. T.), An Oscillographic Study of Low-frequency 

 Oscillating Arcs, 486 



Morse (L. G. E.), the Gases Exhausted from a Petrol 

 Motor, 485 



Mosquitoes, a Monograph of the Culicid;e or, F. \'. 

 Theobald, 466 



Mosquitoes and Malaria in Bengal, Mr. Chatterjee, 596 



Moss (R. J.), Free Gases Contained in Monazite, 263 



Moth, Fecundity of the Leopard, Prof. R. Meldola, F.R.S., 

 382 



Motion, the ^ther and Absolute, Prof. J. Larmor, F.R.S., 

 269 ; Dr. C. V. Burton, 270 



Motors : Motor-car Fuels, 373 ; Motor-cars, Lessons of 

 Prince Borghese's Journey from Pekin to Paris, 420; a 

 Manual of Petrol Motors and Motor-cars, comprising 

 the Designing, Construction, and Working of Petrol 

 Motors, F. Strickland, 491 



Moulin (Marcel), Secondary Kathodic Emission of Metals 

 under the Influence of the a-Rays, 239 



Moulton (Dudley), Pear-thrips (Euthrips pyri), 373 



Mouneyrat (A.), Occurrence of Iron in Tissues, 95 ; In- 

 fluence of the Rapid Displacements of Air caused by 

 the Motor-car on the General Nutrition, 167 



Mountaineering, the Bernese Oberland, H. Diibi, 246 



Mountains : Altitude of the Summit of Aconcagua, Fr. 

 Schrader, 376; the Making of Mountains, 423 



Mouton (H.), a New Optical Property of Magnetic Bl- 

 refraction belonging to Certain Non-colloidal Organic 

 Liquids, 344 



Muir (M. M. P.), Permanganic Acid, 287 



Miiller, Orme and Co. (Messrs. C. E.), Flow Extraction 

 Cup Apparatus, 161 



Murray (James), Encystment of Tardigrada, 239 



Museums : Catalogue of the Madreporarian Corals in the 

 British Museum (Natural Hostory), H. M. Bernard, 

 146; the Extension of the British Museum, 224 



Music, la Voix, sa Culture physiologique, Th^orie nou- 

 velle de la Phonation, Conferences faites au Conserva- 

 toire de Musique de Paris en 1906, Pierre Bonnier, 

 170 



Muttermilch (M.), Existence of a Tyrosinase in Wheaten 

 Bran, 192 



Mvcology : a Text-book of Fungi, G. Massee, 6; the 

 Hymcnomycete Fungus in Australia, D. McAlpinc. 109 ; 

 .Action of Insoluble Substances in Modifying the Effects 

 of Deleterious .'\gents upon Fungi, R. Fitch. 100 ; the 

 Rind Disease of the Suifar Cane caused by the Fungus' 

 Melanconium sacchari, L. Lewton-Brain, 256; .\merican 

 Gooseberry Mildew, E. S. Salmon, 27S 



Mvres (Prof. J. L.), on the Beginnings of Iron, 462 ; a 

 Terminology of Decorative Art, 463 



Mythology, the Pawnee, George A. Dorsey, E. Sidney 

 Hartland, 230 



Nagaoka (Prof. H.), the Eruption of Krakatoa and the 



Pulsation of the Earth, 80 

 Nagaraja (Mr.), Helium Absorption in the Solar Spectrum, 



389 

 Name of the Cave Horse, the. R. Lydekker, F.R.S., 54 

 Names of Star Catalogues, Abbreviations for the. Dr. A. 



Auwers, in 



