Inde:i 



565 



Larva and Puparium of the Frit-fly 

 (Hewitt), 313. 



Lichens of Howth, Maritime and Marine 

 (Matilda C. Knowles), 79. 



Local Application of Itadiiiin in Thera- 

 peutics (Joi.y), 290. 



Maritime and Marine Lichens of Howth 

 (Matilda C. Knowles), "9. 



Mendelian Prohleras (Wilson), 302, 369, 

 481. 



Method for the Estimation of Hygroscopic 

 Moisture in Soils (Haigh), 529. 



Morbid Changes, spread of, through Plants, 

 from Branches killed by Heat (Dixon), 

 207. 



Morphology, some fiesearclies in Experi- 

 mental (Dotle), 405. 



Nickel and L'ou Wires, Fatigue of, when 

 subjected to the Influence of Alternating 

 Magnetic Fields (i^ROWN), 336. 



Nickel and Iron Wires, Subsidence of Tor- 

 sional Oscillations in, when subjected to 

 the Influence of alternating Magnetic 

 Fields (Buown), 215, 393, 521. 



Nickel Wire, change of length in, due to 

 small Longitudinal Loads and TjOW alter- 

 nating Magnetic Fields (Bkown), 297. 



Oedanometer, Preliminary Account of a 

 New, for Measuring the I'ispansive Force 

 of Single Seeds, or Similar Small liodies, 

 when wetted (Bdtlek and Sheridan), 

 462. 



Osmotic Pressures in Plant-Organs. 

 III. — The Osmotic Pressure and Elec- 

 trical Conductivity of Yeast, Beer, and 

 Wort (Dixon and Atkins), 9. 



Osmotic Pressures in Plants. IV. — On the 

 Constituents and Concentration of the 

 Sap in the Conducting Tracts, and on 

 the Circulation of Carboh}'drates in 

 Plants (Dixon and Atkins), 374. 



. V. — Seasonal Variations in the Con- 

 centration of the Cell-Sap of some De- 

 ciduous and Evergreen Trees (Dixon and 

 Atkins), 445. 



Oxydases and their Inhibitors in Plant 

 Tissues (Atkins), 144. 



Part II. — The Flowers and Leaves 



ef Iris (Atkins), 157. 



Oxydases and their Inhibitors in Plant 

 Tissues, Part III: The Localization of 

 Oxydases and Catalase in some Marine 

 Algfe (Atkins), 199. 



■ Part IV. — The Flowers of Iris 



(Atkins), 317. 



Pectase, Action of (Hall), 349. 



Pethybridge (George H.). Further Ob- 

 servations on Phyinphthora erythrosep- 

 tica Pethyb., and on tlie Disease produced 

 by it in the Potato Plant, 179. 



Photographic Plates, lifl'eot of a Low 

 Potential Electric Current on (Gill), 

 74. 



Phytophthora erythrosepticu, Further 

 Observations on (PuTHrBRiDGE), 179. 



Pigments of Fruits in Relation to some 

 Genetic Experiments on Capsicutn 

 ntmuuin (Atkins and Shere.akd), 328. 



Plant Tissues, Oxydases and their Inhi- 

 bitors in (Atkins), 144, 157, 199, 317. 



Polygamous Mendelian Factors (James 

 Wilson), 302. 



Praeger (R. Lloyd). Buoyancy of the 

 Seeds of some Britannic Plants, 13. 



Preliminary Account of a New Oeda- 

 nometer for Measuring the Expansive 

 Force of single Seeds, or similar small 

 Bodies, when wetted (Butlkr and 

 Sheridan), 462. 



Uuantitative Examination of tbe Elements 

 of the Wood of Trees in Relation to the 

 Supposed Function of the Cells in the 

 Ascent of Sap (Dixon .and Miss E. S. 

 Marshall), 358. 



Radio-Therapy : Its Scientific Basis and 

 its Teaching (Jolt), 491. 



Radium in Therapeutics (Jolyj, 290. 



Reproductive Organs and Newly Hatched 

 Larva of the Warble-Fly {Hypoderma) 

 (Carpenter and Hewitt), 268. 



Researches in Experimental Morphology. 

 I.— On the Change of the Petiole into a 

 Stem by means of Grafting (Dotle), 405. 



Rush - Skerries Carboniferous Section, 

 Faunal Zones of the (Smyth), 535. 



Sap, changes produced in, by the Heating 



of Branches (Dixon), 224. 

 Sap, Tensile Strength of (Dixon), 2i!9. 



