INDEX. 
Reactions between ammonium salts and | 
metals, Prof. W. R. Hodgkinson and 
A. H. Coote on some, 502. 
READ (C. H.), on the lake village at 
Glastonbury, 324. 
on the present state of anthropologi- 
cal teaching, 341. 
——on the work of the Corresponding 
Societies Committee, 377. 
‘Realistic arithmetic,’ by Lieut.-Col. G. 
Mackinlay, 844. 
{Receiver drop in a compound engine, 
the effect of, by J. W. Hayward, 676. 
Reflex and direct response to galvanic 
and faradic currents, Prof. J. A. Mac- | 
William on, 741. 
REICHEL (Principal) on the courses of 
studies most suitable for elementary 
schools, 352. 
REID (A. S.) on the collection of photo- 
graphs of geological interest, 242. 
REID (Clement) on seismological investiga- 
tions, 41. 
on the fossiliferous drift deposits at 
Kirmington, Lincolnshire, Jc., 272. 
REID (Prof. E. Waymouth), on the state 
of solution of proteids, 341. 
Rejuvenation, by Dr. C. 8. Minot, 606. 
RENNIE (J.) on practical electrical 
standards, 30. 
Rent, the influence of agricultural im- 
provements on, by Prof. A. W. Flux, 
647. 
Research method, the, applied to ex- 
perimental teaching, by Prof. H. E. 
Armstrong, 854. 
Respiration of plants, report on the, 344. 
** Reststrahlen’ and the optical qualities 
of metals, Prof. H. Rubens on, 465, 
REYNOLDS (Prof. Osborne) on the tidal 
régime of the Mersey, 318. 
REYNOLDS (Prof. 8. H.) on the collection 
of photographs of geological interest, 242. 
RICHARDSON (H.) on the courses of 
studies most suitable for elementary 
schools, 352. 
RICHARDSON (Nelson) on seismological 
investigations, 41. 
RICHARDSON (Dr. O. W.), the electrical 
properties of hot bodies, 472. 
RIDGEWAY (Prof. W.) on archeological 
and ethnological researches in Crete, 
321. 
an anthropological view of the 
origin of tragedy, 710. 
River capture in the Don system, by 
Rev. W. L. Carter, 558. 
*RIVERS (Dr. W. H. R.), some funeral 
customs of the Todas, 726. 
—— on the senses of the Todas, 749. 
RoBERTS (H. A.), the employment of the 
graduate, 666. 
Roman sites in Britain, excavations on, 
report on, 337. | 
1904. 
881 
Rontgen radiation, the relation of, to 
ordinary light, Prof. J. Larmor on, 438. 
Rosco (Sir H. E.) on wave-length tables 
of the spectra of the elements and com- 
pounds, 66. 
Rorcn (A. L.), the temperature of the 
air in cyclones and anticyclones, as 
shown by kite-flights at Blue Hill Ob- 
servatory, U.S.A., 468. 
RorH (H. Ling), on the present state of 
anthropological teaching, 341. 
RotTHPLETz (Prof. A.) on the nature and 
origin of earth movements, 556. 
*RUBENS (Prof. H), on ‘reststrahlen ’ 
and the optical qualities of metals, 465. 
RUCKER (Sir A. W.) on magnetic observa- 
tions at Falmouth, 29. 
—— on practical electrical standards, 30. 
—— on the influence of examinations, 360. 
RUDLER (F. W.), on the present state of 
anthropological teaching, 341. 
—— on the work of the Corresponding 
Societies Committee, 377. 
RUHEMANN (Dr. S.) and E. R. Watson, 
the action of organic bases on olefinic 
ketonic compounds, 527, 
RUSSELL (Dr. E. J.) and N, Smrrn, a 
new method of forming nitrites and 
nitrates, $09. 
*RUSSELL (Dr. H. N.) on the masses of 
the stars, 469. 
*Rynchelmis (Prof. Vejdovsky), demon- 
stration of cytoplasmic figures in 
segmenting eggs of, by Prof. M. 
Hartog, 611. 
Ryparobius, the ascocarp of, B. T. P. 
Barker on, 825. 
SALMON (E. S.), further cultural experi- 
ments with ‘biologic forms’ of the 
Erysiphacee, 821. 
*Salts in solutions, the formation of, 
especially amongst tautomeric com- 
pounds, by Prof. J. W. Briihl, 500. 
*Sand ripples, the origin of, Mrs. H. 
Ayrton on, 676. 
SANDERSON (Sir J. S. B.) on oxidation 
and functional activity, 742. 
Sandwich Islands, the zoology of the 
Sourteenth report on, 298. 
Saponarin, a glucoside coloured blue by 
iodine, by G. Barger, 530. 
—— (‘soluble starch’), by G. Barger, 
819. 
SAUNDERS (Miss E. R.), heredity in 
stocks, 590. 
“Scarabs, the entomology of, Prof. 
W. M. F. Petrie on, 700. 
ScHAFER (Prof. E. A.) on the state of 
solution of proteids, 341. 
— on the physiological effects of 
peptone and its precursors when intro- 
duced into the circulation, 342. 
3L 
