5tXll 



General Indeoi. 



Kelso, State of the Kirks within the 



Presbytery of, in 1649, by Dr 



Leishman, 214, 349. 

 Kelso Parish and its Kirks, in 1649, 



348. 

 Ker, Mr Robert, Minister of Linton, 



350. 

 Kers of Littledean, 127, 130. 

 Kirklands of Mellerstain, 140. 

 Knives, Flint see under Antiquities. 

 Knox, Rev. Robert, of Kelso, 348. 



Ladykirk, 66. 



Laidlaw, Walter, 233. 



Laidley or Loathly, worm of Spin- 



dlestone, 54. 

 Lasswade and Sir W. Scott, 288. 

 Lauder, 30-7-9, 40, 130. 

 Learchild, 108. 

 Leishman, Rev. Dr, 16, on "State of 



the Kirks within the Presbytery 



of Kelso, July 1649," 214, 348. 

 Lemington, 108. 

 Lempitlaw, Chapel of, 349. 

 Lennox, Earl of, 127. 

 Lepidoptera, see Natural History 



Index. 

 Lessudden, 185. 



Leyland, C. J. of Hag^erston, 236. 

 Lilburn Steads, Cists at, 92. 

 Lindisfarne, Siege of, 186. 

 Linton Kirk and Parish in 1649, 97, 



350. 

 Lithgow, Surgeon-Major General, on 



Mellerstain and the Haitlies 



thereof, 122. 

 Littledean, 97. 

 Localities for Pimpinella magna, by 



Dr Hardy, 77. 

 Long, Rev. Canon, 55. 

 Longcroft, Meeting at, 30 — Hollow 



way,33— Hut circles, 34— Well, 34 



— Stone Walls, 35— probable pop- 

 ulation, 35. 

 Lothian, 188. 

 Lynn, Francis, F.S.A., 31-3— on 



Bnnkle Edge Forts, 365. 

 Lynlythgow, William of Drygrange, 



128. 



Macadam, Dr Stevenson, on St. 



Abb's Lighthouse, 217. 

 Makerstoan Kirk and Parish in 1649, 



350— Ancient Grave, 360. 

 Marston Moor, 74. 

 Matheson, Molly of Warkworth, 59. 



Mayor, Prof., Memoir of C. C. Bab- 

 ington. 



Meeting places for 1895, 96 — for 

 1896, 225. 



Meeting at Addinstone and Long- 

 crofc, 30— Cockburnspath, Inner- 

 wick Castle, and Dnuglass, 47— 

 Spindleston and Bamburgh, 53 — 

 Morpeth and Bothal, 58 — Gordon 

 and Mellerstain, 89 — Berwick, 93, 

 249 — Reston, Bunkle, Preston, and 

 Duns, 208 — Coldingham Loch, 

 and St. Abb's, 216 — Hermitage 

 from Newcastleton, 231 — Hagger- 

 ston Castle, 235 — Widdrington, 

 Chibburn, and Warkworth Meet- 

 ing, 239. 



Mellerstain Meeting, 81 — Bishop 

 Pococke's visit, 82 — Mausoleum 

 and Inscriptions of the Baillie 

 Family, 82 — (see also under Bail- 

 lies of Mellerstain), House, 89 — 

 Portraits,89 — Collections of Birds, 

 89— of Fossils, 89— its Flora, 89 

 —Trees, 90— old Clock and Sun- 

 dial, 90. 



Mellerstain and the Haitlies thereof, 

 by Surgeon-Major General Lith- 

 gow, 122, and by Dr Hardy, 134. 

 (see also under Haitlies.) 



Mellerstain Fairs, 141. 



Members Associated, 97 — deceased, 

 94— new, 93, 253. 



Meteorological observations at West 

 Foulden, 195, 378— Rawburn, 195 

 378 — Cheswick, 196, 380— Glanton 

 Pyke, 197— Gravel fused by light- 

 ning at Chapelhill, 197. 



Midside Maggie's or ToUieshill 

 Girdle, by Robert Romanes, 37, 

 357. 



Miller, Hugh, P.G.S., In Memoriam 

 by W. Gunn, F.G.S., 322. 



Molesworth, Sir Wm., on Restora- 

 tion of Coldingham Priory, 229. 



Mollusca, Berwickshire, by William 

 Evans, F.R.S.E., 170. 



Mons Meg, 186. 



Morpeth, by James Fergusson, 59 — 

 Nurseries. 59 — Chantry, 61 — 

 Maison Dieu, 61 — Asylum, 63 — 

 Lady Chapel Wood, 63— Old 

 Colliery, 63— St. Catharine's Well, 

 65— Our Lady's Chapel, 65— Dr 

 Wm. Turner, New Herball, 67 — 

 Flora, 67. 



