GENERAL INDEX. xlv 
GUZERAT—The Birds of South,—i, 194; Occurrence of the Clucking Teal 
in—, xii, 429 ; Sport and Natural History in Northern—, xiii, 374, 
GWALIOR—List of Birds in the Gwalior State Museum, xi, 136. 
HALY—A New Method of Preserving and Mounting Zoological Specimens, 
vi, 489, . 
HAMILTON, GENERAL— Sport in Southern India,’ (noticed), vii, 537, 
HAMPSON, SIR G, F.—The Moths of India, xi, 277, 438, 698 ; xii, 73, 304, 
475, 697; xiii, 37, 223, 499, 571, 
HARINGTON, EH. C.—A Bush Quail and a Rain Quail laying in the same 
nest, xii, 410, 
HARPER, E. W.—The White-breasted Kingfisher in Captivity, xiii, 364. 
HARRINGTON, J. L.—tThe Asiatic Wild Ass, viii, 430. 
HART, W. E.—Conjugal Infidelity amongst Birds, i, 145; Bombay Butter- 
flies, iv; 69; Two Curious Instances of Mimicry, iv, 228; Prehistoric 
Bombay, v, 132 ; Protective Resemblances, vii, 104. 
HART, Mrs. W. E.—On a Supposed Roct-Parasite,i, 75; Some Post-Plio- 
cene Molluscs from the Byculla Flats, i, 183 ; Some tng bine Palms, iii, 
250; A Caterpillar Farm, iv, 277 ; Protective Mimicry, vi, 410. 
HAUXWELL, T. A.—The Nest and Eggs of the Baza, vii, 403, 
HEATH, R. H.—Wounded Animals carrying their Broken Limbs in their 
Jaws, x, 532; The Effects of a Bite from a Phoorsa, xii, 784. 
HEMIDESMUS, ix, 491. 
HEPA TICAi—The Indian—, ii, 250, 
HEREDITY—A Trait of—,v, 306. 
HERMAPHRODITISM—A Curious Instance of —, xiii, 187. 
HERON—Taming a—.vi, 417, 
HESTIA—On Hestia malabarica, ui, 164, 242. 
HETEROCERA—Catalogue of the Heterocera of Sikhim and Bhutan, xi, 239, 
406, 624 ; xii, 32, 292, 643; xiii, 77, 258, 406, 672. 
HEWETT, H. M.—Has the Bakri a Keen Sense of Smell ?, vi, 497. 
HEWETT, H. W.—Battle between Bees and Wasps, iv, 312. 
HILL, F. J. A.—The Jackal or Lioneprovider, viii, 306; The Kol Bhalu a) 
viii, 438 ; Measurements of Tiger Skulls, x, 149; The Indian Sloth Bear, 
xi, 167, 
HIMALAYAS—Fruit-culture on the—, x, 136, 
HIRUNDINES—Nesting of Indian -, iii, 43. 
HODGKINSON, A.—On Irridescent Colours, viii, 282, 
HOLE, H. A.—The Identification of Birds, x, 150, 
HOLMAN-HUNT, C. B.—Some Entomological Notes from Ceylon, xiii, 375. 
HOPH, C. W.—The Ferns of North-Western India, xii, 315, 527, 621; xiii, 
25, 336, 443, 657, 
HORE, WwW. Se pering a Heron, vi, 417. 
HORNADAY, W, T.—‘‘ Two Years in the Jungle” (noticed), ii, 151. 
HORNBILL,.—The Great Indian Hornbill in Captivity, xi, 307; In a Wild 
State, xi, 308 ; Notes on the Narcondam—, xii, 212. 
