892 



REPORT — 1903. 



BOWLEY (A. L.) on the economic effect 

 of legislation regulating rvomen'slabovr, 

 315. 



statistical methods and the fiscal 



controversy, 750. 



■f Boyle (David) on the Canadian Indians 

 as they are, 823. 



Boys (C. Vernon) on seismological in- 

 vestigation, 77. 



on the investigation of the vpjyer 



atmosphere by means of kites, 31. 



on the B.A. screw gauge, 378. 



Address to the Section of Mathe- 

 matics and Physics, 525. 



Beabbook (E. W.) on the economic effect 

 of legislation regulating women's labour, 

 315. 



on (i pig meditation survey of the 



school children of Scotland, 415. 



■ on the Silchester excavation, 412. 

 on the conditions of health essential 



to the carrying on of the work of in- 

 struction in schools, 455. 



. Address to the Section of Economic 



Science and Statistics, 729. 



Bracken from different habitats, the struc- 

 ture of leaves of the, by L . A. Boodle, 855. 



Beadshaw (F.), the commercial rela- 

 tions between Canada and the United 

 Kingdom, 748. 



Bramwell (Sir F. J.) on the B.A. screw 

 gauge, 378. 



* a universal language, 847. 



Bray (G.) on the movements of under- 

 ground waters of North-west Yorkshire, 

 192. 



*Bebkbton (C. a.), King Edward VII. 

 bridge over the River Thames between 

 Brentford and Kew, 773. 



British carboniferous rocks, life-zones in 

 the, report on, 185. 



British reptiles, some recent observa- 

 tions on, by Dr. G. Leighton, C94. 



Brittleness in steel, Stead's recent re- 

 searches as to the causes and preven- 

 tion of, by Prof. T. Turner, 613. 



Brodrick (H.), Martin Mere, 656. 



Brooch, the origin of the, and the pro- 

 bable use of certain rings called ' arm- 

 lets,' by E. Lovett, 822. 



Brough, the Roman port at, by J. Gar- 

 stang, 808. 



Brown (Prof. A. Ctnm) on meteorological 

 observations on Ben JVevis, 58. 



Brown (Dr. H. T.) on the worh of the 

 Corresponding Societies Committee, 465. 



Brown (J.) on the resistance of road 

 vehicles to traction, 365. 



Brown (Prof. J. Campbell), apparatus 

 for determining latent heat of evapora- 

 tion, 602. 



* the nature and quality of some 



potable waters in South-west Lanca- 

 shire, 775, 



Bryce (Dr. T. H.) on anthropometric 



investigation in Great Britain and 



Ireland, 389. 

 BuCHAN (Dr. A.) on the investigation of 



the upper atmosphere by means of kites, 



31. 

 — — on meteorological observations on 



Ben Nevis, 58. 

 * on the relation of the rainfall of 



Scotland to the Sun-spot periods, 



185.5-1898, 549. 



diurnal range of the summer tem- 



perature of the Levant, 578. 



BCLLEID (A.) on the lalte village at 

 Olastonbury, 414. 



BULLEY (Miss A. A.), some points about 

 crosses, chiefly Celtic, 822. 



Burns (D.) on the phenomena accom- 

 panying the volcanic eruptions in the 

 West Indies, 567. 



Burstall (Miss S. A.) on curricula of 

 girls' schools, 882. 



Burton (F. M.) on the erratic blocks of 

 the British Isles, 231. 



f Butterflies, Malayan, exhibition of con- 

 vergent series, by H. C. Robinson, 

 694. 



Caerwent, Monmouthshire, excavations 

 at, 1899-1903, by T. Ashby, jun., 

 806. 



Callendae (Prof. H. L.) on practical 

 electrical standards, 33. 



* ■ electrical self-recording instru- 

 ments, 581. 



♦Cambridge, the new botanical labora- 

 tory at, by Prof. H. M. Ward, 859. 



Cameeon (.lohn) on the origin of the 

 epiphysis in Ampliibia as a bilateral 

 structure, 689. 



Canada and the United Kingdom, the 

 commercial relations between, by 

 F. Bradshaw, 748. 



f Canadian Indians, the, as they are, 

 D. Boyle on, 823. 



Cannan (Dr. E.), what is success in 

 foreign trade? 751. 



Capacities as multipliers for electro- 

 static voltmeters in alternating cur- 

 rent circuits. Prof. E. W. Marchant 

 and G. W. Worrall on the use of, 

 572. 



Carbonifero\js acanthodian fish, Gyra- 

 canthides, Dr. A. S. Woodward on a, 

 662. 



Carter (Rev. W. Lower) on the move- 

 ments of underground waters of North- 

 west Yorkshire, 192. 



*Cell division, the function of chromatin 

 in (Part I. Heterotype), by Prof. M. 

 Hartog, 693. 



Cells, the micro-chemistnj of, report on, 

 310. 



