638 
BRUCE (Col. D.), Address to the Physio- 
logical Section, 533. 
*BrRYAN (Prof. G. H), graphic methods 
in spherical trigonometry, 344. 
BrYcE (Dr. T. H.), on anthropometric in- 
vestigation in the British Isles, 198. 
BucHAn (Dr. A.) on meteorological obser- 
rations on Bei Nevis, 77. 
on the investigation of the upper at- 
mosphere by means of kites, 81. 
BUCKNILL (J. A.), the rise and the growth 
of the protection of industrial property 
in the Transvaal, 480. 
BULLEID (A.) on the lake village at 
Glastonbury, 210. 
Bureury (8. H.), the diminution of 
entropy according to the kinetic theory 
of gases, 333. 
BurtTtT-Davy (J.), the climate and life- 
zones of the Transvaal, 593. 
*Bushmen and their art, by W. A. Squire, 
531. 
Buxton (I. W.), what is credit ? 483. 
Cadmium cell, the preparation of a, F. £. 
Smith on, 98. 
CALLENDAR (Prof. H. L.) on practical 
electrical standards, 95. 
CAMPBELL (Prof. D. H.), the prothallium 
of Gleichenia pectinata, 585. 
CANNAN (Dr. E.) on the accuracy and 
comparability of British and foreign 
statistics of international trade, 187. 
——a search for general principles 
concerning the relation between cen- 
tral.and local government finance, 480. 
Cape Colony, the need for organised 
chemical research in, by C, F. Juritz, 
367. 
*___ the geology of, by A. W. Rogers, 
391. 
——- the physical geography of, by H. C. | 
Schunke-Hollway, 393. 
——— the Stormberg formation 
A. L. du Toit, 394. 3 
~—— plague in, by Dr. J. A. Mitchel}, 551. 
Cape education: its difficulties and 
development, by Rev. W. E. C. Clarke, 
605. 
*Cape Government railways, by A.-M. 
Tippett, 504, 
Cape Town colonial Duteh architecture, 
by C. H. Smith, 502. 
Cape wines, an important characteristic 
of, Dr. H. Tietz on, 368. 
CarRR (Prof. J. W.) on the fossiliferous 
drift deposits at Kirmington, Lincoln- 
shire, Je., 160. 
CaerRick (Dr. J. T.) on the geology of 
the West Rand, 409. 
CARTER (Rev. W. Lower) on the fossili- 
ferous drift deposits at Kirmington, 
Lincolnshire, §e., 160. 
in, by 
REPORT—1905. 
CARTER (Rev. W. Lower) on the move- 
ments of underground waters of North- 
mest Yorkshire, 170. 
ee (M.), chess magic squares, 
0. 
— computation of 7, 350. 
Central and local government finance, a 
search for general principles concern- 
ing the relation between, by Dr. E. 
Cannan, 480. 
tCephalodiscus, by Dr. 8. F. Harmer, 441. 
CHAPMAN (Prof. 8. J.) on the accuracy 
and comparability of British and 
Soreign statistics of international trade, 
187. 
Chemical research, organised, the need 
for, in Cape Colony, by C. F. Juritz, 
367. 
Chemical Section, Address by G, T. Beilby 
to the, 351. 
Chess magic squares, by M. Cashmore, 
350. 
Chlorides in animal and vegetable cells, 
the distribution of, by Prof. A. B. 
Maca!lum, 554. 
Chlorine, the atomic weight of, Prof. 
H. B. Dixon on, 364. 
Chloroform, the administration of, by 
Dr. A. D. Waller, 557. 
CHREE (Dr. Charles) on temperatures of 
thermometers under black cloth and 
under white cloth, 347. 
CLARK (Miss E. M.), the higher educa- 
tion of women in South Africa, 609. 
CLARKE (Rev. W. E. C.), Cape educa- 
tion: its difficulties and development, 
605. 
CLARKSON (W. J.), the practice and 
theory of dumping, 482. 
CLELAND (Prof. J.) on the growing- 
point in the vertebrata, 444. 
tClimate, changes of, as shown by move- 
ments of the snow-line and upper 
tree-limit since tertiary times, by Prof. 
A. Penck, 393. 
—— the effect of, upon health, dis- 
cussion on, 547. 
Climate and life-zones of the Transvaal, 
the, by J. Burtt-Davy, 593. 
Climatology of South Africa, the, by 
C. Stewart, 460. 
CLouGH (C. T.) on the exact significance 
of local terms applied in the British 
Isles to topographical and geological 
objects, 174. 
Coe (Prof. G. A. J.) on the marginal 
phenomena of granite domes, 400. 
COLEMAN (Dr. A. P.), magmatic segre- 
gation of sulphide ores, 400. 
COLLES (W. Morris), the law of copyright 
as affecting the proceedings of scientific 
societies, 50. 
Colonial lands ot Natal, the, by Robert a, 
Ababrelton, 487. : 
