INDEX, 
647 
MITCHELL (Dr. J, A.), plague in Cape { *Natal, a revised list of the indigenous 
Colony, 551. 
MITCHELL (Dr. P.C.) on zoology organisa- 
tion, 186. 
tModern languages, the teaching of, by 
H. W. Atkinson, 615. 
Motr (Dr. James), the law governing the | 
solubility of zinc hydrate in alkalis, 
370. 
MONCRIEFF (Col. Sir C. Scott), Address 
to the Engineering Section, 490. 
Moore (T. H.), the development of the 
wool industry, 475. 
MorGan (Prof. C. Lloyd) on zoology 
organisation, 186. 
MokRISON (Prof. J. T.) and Prof. J. C. 
BEATTIE on the magnetic survey of 
South Africa, 330. 
Morrison (Walter) on the movements 
of underground waters of North-West 
Yorkshire, 170. 
Motor-car in South Africa, the, by A. T. 
Hennessy, 503. 
Mountain folds, a contribution to the 
theory of, by E. H. L. Schwarz, 397, 
Mountains, the sculpture of, by glaciers, 
by Prof. W. M. Davis, 393. 
Mucus in corals, the réle of, by Prof. 
J. E. Duerden, 436. 
Murr (H. B.) on the fossiliferous drift 
deposits at Kirmington, Lincolnshire, 
&e., 160. 
MUIRHEAD (Dr. A.) on practical electri- 
cal standards, 95. 
Munro (Dr. R.) on the age of stone 
circles, 197, 
-—— on the lake village at Glastonbury, 
210. 
*MurrAy (Dr. J. A. H.), the world of 
‘words and its exploration, 608. 
Murray (Sir John) on meteorological 
observations on Ben Nevis, 77. 
Musical instruments of South Africa, 
the, by H. Balfour, 528. 
Myers (Dr. C. 8.) on anthropometric in- 
vestigation in the British Tsles, 198. 
on anthropometric investigations 
among the native troops of the Egyptian 
army, 207. 
Myres (J. L.) on anthropometric in- 
vestigation in the British Isles, 198. 
——— on archeological and ethnological 
* researches in Crete, 208. 
on the collection of photographs of 
anthropological interest, 222. 
Naples zoological station, report on the 
occupation of a table at the, 181. 
Natal, the colonial lands of, by Robert 4 
' Ababrelton, 487. 
*____ the colony of, the development 
and working of railways iv, by Sir 
Dayid Hunter, 487, 
plants of, by J. Medley Wood, 596. 
Natal Observatory, meteorological notes 
from, by R. F. Rendell, 342. 
*Native circumcision lodges, by C, A. 
Wheelwright, 532. 
{Native education, by E. 
615. 
Native plants, the preservation of our, by 
Prof. G. S. Boulger, 52. 
Native question, some aspects of the, by 
Howard Pim, 484. 
*Native tribes of South Africa, the, by 
J. W. Shepstone, 532. 
Natives, diseases among, 
Liengme, 556. 
Nerve fibre, some points in the micro- 
chemistry of the, by Prof. A. B, 
Macallum and Miss M. L. Menten, 
555. 
Neuro-syncytial theory of development, 
a, by Dr. W. H. Gaskell, 443. 
*NEVILL (E.), the value of the secular 
acceleration of the moon derived from 
the early eclipses of the sun, 339. 
NEWTON (Prof. A.) on the zoology of the 
Sandwich Islands, 186. 
NEWTON (E. T.) on the fossiliferous drift 
deposits at Kirmington, Lincolnshire, 
Se., 160. 
—— on the fauna and flora of the Trias 
of the British Tsles, 161. 
Noses (E.), the importation from abroad 
of foodstuffs producible in Cape Colony, 
476. 
Nutra (G. H. F.), W. F. Cooper, and 
R. D. Smedley, the buccal apparatus 
of a tick, 439, 
B. Sargent, 
py “DrieG; 
OLDHAM (H. Yule) on the exact signifi- 
cance of local terms applied in the 
British Isles to topographical and 
geological objects, 174. 
= the unveiling of the coast of Africa, 
459, 
OLDHAM (R. D.) on seismological investi- 
gations, 83. 
OLIVER (Prof, F. W.) on the structure of 
Fossil plants, 227. 
OmonD (R. T.) on meteorological observa- 
tions on Ben Nevis, 77. 
Orange River, irrigation farming on the, 
by F. B. Parkinson, 590. 
tOrange River Colony, education in the, 
by Hon. Hugh Gunn, 616, 
Ore veins and pegmatites, the relation 
between, Prof. R. Beck on, 400. 
Orton (Prof. K. P. J.) on the transfor- 
mation of aromatic nitroamines and 
allied substances, and its relation to 
substitution in benzene derivatives, 
103, 
