INDEX. 



References to reports and papers printed in extenso are given in Italics. 

 An Asterisk * i7idicates that the title only of the communication is given. 

 The mark f indicates the same, but a reference is given to the Journal or Newspaper 

 'where the paper is published in extenso. 



OBJECTS and rules of the Association, 

 xxix. 



Places and times of meeting, with names 

 of officers, from commencement, xxxix. 



List of former Presidents and Secretaries 

 of Sections, xlix. 



List of evening lectures, Ixvii. 



Lectures to the Operative Classes, Ixx. 



Officers of Sections present at Oxford, 

 Ixxi. 



Officers and Council for 1894-95, Ixxiii. 



Treasurer's account, Ixxiv. 



Table showing the attendance and re- 

 ceipts at the annual meetings, Ixxvi. 



Report of the Council to the General 

 Committee at Oxford, Ixxviii. 



Committees appointed by the General 

 Committee at Oxford : (1) receiving 

 grants of money, Ixxxi. ; (2) not receiv- 

 ing grants of money, Ixxxvi. Papers 

 ordered to be printed in extenso, Ixxxix. 

 Resolutions relating to the constitu- 

 tion and titles of sections, xc. Resolu- 

 tions referred to the Council for con- 

 sideration, and action if desirable, ib. 



Synopsis of grants of money appropriated 

 to scientific purposes, xci. 



Places of meeting in 1895 and 1896, xcii. 



General statement of sums which have 

 been paid on account of grants for 

 scientific purposes, xciii. 



General meetings, cviii. 



Address by the President, Lord Salisbury, 

 K.G., D.C.L., F.R.S., Chancellor of the 

 University of Oxford, 3. 



Abel (Sir F.) nn the best method of estab- 

 lishing an international standard for 

 the a7ialysis of iron and steel, 237. 



Abelian system of differential equations, 

 a method of determining all the rational 

 and integral algebraic integrals of the, 

 by W. R. Westropp Roberts, 557. 



Abercromby (Hon. R.) on meteorological 

 observations on Ben Nevis, 108. 



Abney (Capt. W. de W.) on the best 

 methods of recording the direct inten- 

 sity of solar radiation, 106. 



on the action of light upon dyed 



colours, 238. 



on wave-length tables of the spectra 



of the elements and compounds, 248. 



Adams (Prof. W. G.) on practical electri- 

 cal standards, 117. 



Addition theorem. Prof. Mittag-Leffler 

 on the, 561. 



Aerotonometer and gas-burette. Prof. L. 

 Fredericq on an, 807. 



Africa, tropical, tlie climatological and 

 hydrographical conditions of, third 

 report on, 348. 



After-damp, Dr. J. Shaw Lyttle on the 

 effects of, 817. 



Agriculture, co-operation in, Harold Moore 

 on, 736. 



Air, experiments to find if subtraction of 

 water from, electrifies it. Lord Kelvin, 

 M. Maclean, and A. Gait on, 554. 



* , a new gaseous constituent of, 



Lord Rayleigh and Prof. W. Ramsay 

 on, 614. 



Aloyonium, the development of. Dr. S. J. 

 Hickson on, 345. 



Aldehyde, phosphorus, and sulphur, the 

 rate of oxidation of, Dr. T. Ewan on, 

 609. 



Alg», some chalk-forming and chalk- 

 destroying, by Prof. T. Johnson, 683. 



, two Irish brown, by Prof. T. John- , 



son, 683. 



an exhibition of, by A. Church, 



684. 



Allen (E. J.) on the later stages in the. 

 development of decapod Crustacea, 345. 

 (Prof. F. J.) on mirror writing. 



793. 



g2 



