INDEX. 



829 



Manchester Corporation gas undertak- 

 ing, the. by J. G. Newbigging, fi-tS. 



Manchester drainage scheme, the, by de 

 Courcey Meade, 639. 



•fManchester electrical undertaking, the, 

 and the projected Barton station, by 

 S. L. Pearce, 642. 



Manchester Municipal School of Techno- 

 logy, the, the special work in the 

 mechanical engineering department of. 

 by Prof. A. B. Field, 642. 



Manouveieb (Prof. E.), une application 

 anthropologique a I'art militaire, 671. 



*Manson (Dr. J.), hereditary syndactil- 

 ism and polydaotUism, 671. 



*Manurial situation, the, and its diffi- 

 culties, by Prof. J. Hendrick. 770. 



*Map on the scale of 1 : 1,000,000, the, 

 by A. R. Hinks, 488. 



Maps for school and imivcrsity tise, the 

 choice and style of, re]>nrt on, 150. 



Marchant (Prof. E. W.) on 'earth re- 

 sistance,' 647. 



Marett (Dr. R. R.) on the exploration of 

 La Cotte de St. Brelade, Jersey, 194. 



• on the distribution of bronze age im- 

 plements, 199. 



071 archmohgical investigations in 



Malta, 208. 



Maer (Dr. J. E.) on the preparation of a 

 list of characteristic fossils, 116. 



on the excavation of critical sections 



in the lower palceozoic rocks of England 

 and Wales, 117. 



on the 'preparation of a list of strati- 

 graphical names used in the British 

 Isles, 123. 



Marsupials, report of the Committee ap- 

 pointed to obtain a representative collec- 

 tion of, 147. 



Mason (W.) on stress distributions in en- 

 gineering materials, 1.59. 



Masson (Prof. Orme) on the chemical in- 

 vestigation of natural plant products of 

 Victoria, 86. 



on the influence of weather conditions 



on the amounts of nitrogen acids in the 

 rainfall and atmosphere in Australia, 

 87. 



on the botanical and chemical charac- 

 ters of the eucalypits and their correla- 

 tion, 97. 



Mathematical and Physical Section, Ad- 

 dress by Sir F. W. Dyson to the, 357. 



Mathematical tables, the calculation of, re- 

 port on, 27. 



Mather (Rt. Hon. Sir Wm.), the relation 

 of education to industry, 754. 



Matheson (Miss M. C.) on the question of 

 fatigue from the economic standpoint, 

 283. 



Meade (de Courcey), the Manchester 

 drainage scheme^ 639. 



*Meek (Prof. A.), the future of scientific 

 literature in relation to the war, 464. 



* exhibition of lantern slides of maps 



illustrating tertiary changes in the 

 Northern hemisphere, 469. 



Meldola (Prof. R.) on seismological in- 

 vestigations, 52. 



Mental capacities, some, the development 

 of, in chiklren from five to fifteen year-g 

 of age, by Miss M. E. Bickersteth, 692. 



Mental defect, the use of mental tests for 

 measiu-ing, by A. R. Abelson. 697. 



Mentally defective children, the family 

 histories of fifty cases of, bv Miss A. 

 Kelley, 697. 



Meredith (j\Irs.)o?i the question of fatigue 

 from the economic standpoint. 283. 



Jliddle Tees, the, and its tributaries, by 

 C. E. Fawcett, 493. 



*MiDDLETON (T. H.), farming and iood 

 supplj' ; the need for more tillage, 771. 



MiEES (Sir Henry) on university scholar- 

 ships, exhibitions, and bursaries, 238. 



Blilitan' training in schools, bv Rev. A. A. 

 David. 747. 



by J. L. Paton, 747. 



by A. A. Somcrvillc, 748. 



Military training of vouth in schools, the, 

 by A. B. Wood, 749. 



MiUv, the production of, methods of esti- 

 mating the cost of food in, by J. 

 Mackintosh, 774. 



on three Yorkshire farms, cost 



of food in, bj' Prof. C. Crowther and 

 A. G. Ruston, 775. 



Milking, the significance of the act of, by 

 Prof. C. Q-owther. 779. 



JIiLLs (C. E.), a unit gas producer or 

 steam boilers, 643. 



Mrs CHIN (Prof. E. A.), Address to the 

 Zoological Section, 437. 



Mitchell (Dr. Chalmers) on the 7i07)ien- 

 clator aninmlium genera et sub-genera, 

 147. 



Mitokinetism, the discession of the chro- 

 mosomes and, by Prof. M. Hartog, 470. 



Molecular state of salts in solution, the, 

 by W. E. S. Turner and J. D. Cau- 

 wood. 402. 



*Molinia cerulea, the vegetative ana- 

 tomy of, by Rev. T. A. Jefl'eries, 731. 



MoND (Robert), nitheniura dicarbonyl, 

 393. 



* Egyptian tombs, 671 



*MooRE (Prof. Benjamin), the action of 

 light on certain inorganic and organic 

 substances, 686. 



MoKQAS (Prof. G.) nn non-aromatic dia- 

 zonium salts, 95. 



Morris (Dr. J. E.), history as a subject 

 of school study, 742. 



Moss (Dr. C. E.) on the vegetation of 

 Ditcham Park, Hampshire, 232. 



