Sept. 8th-lO(h, 1915^ PROCEEDINGS. vii 



Case 2. Selection of Papers, etc., relating to Dalton. 



Case 3. Syllabuses of Dalton's Lectures. 



Case 4. Dalton's Note Books and Meteorological Journals. 



Case 5. Dalton's Account Books, Bank Book, and Kendal 



School Records. 

 Case 6. Selection of Dalton's manuscript Lecture Notes. 

 Diploma presented to Dalton by the Royal Medical Society of 



Edinburgh. 

 Portraits, etc. (See list in room). 



G. Natural History Room. 



1. ^Dalton's Diagrams relating to Optics. (For Description see 

 Memoir by Professor W. W. Haldane Gee, Dr. H. F. 

 Coward and Dr. Arthur Harden.) 



2.*A Two-foot Reflecting Telescope (Gregorian), with two 

 eyepieces. 



3.*Hadley's Sextant. By D. Adams, London. 



4. ^Terrestrial refracting Telescope. 



5.*" Magic Lanthorn " and five coloured lantern slides. 



6.*Drawing Camera. 



7. Reflecting Stereoscope. By Watkins and Hill, London. 



8.*One large concave Mirror (circular) and two small concave 

 Mirrors (rectangular and circular). 



9.* Model of human eye. By B. Martin, London. 

 10. "Microscope, Culpeper and Scarlet. A very primitive instru- 

 ment made of wood with cardboard tubes. (1750.) (See 

 Quekett's " Microscope," p. 22, fig. 20.) 



11. Microscope, with cog-wheel to incline the instrument at a 



convenient angle. Made by Adams in 1776. Mahogany 

 stand, with accessories, including boxes of slides. 



12. Microscope, with case, lenses, etc. By B. Martin, London. 



13. Microscope, Dr. Goring's improved reflecting, with case. 



By J. Cuthbert, London. (See Goring and Pritchard's 

 " Micrographia," 1837.) 



14. Microscope, binocular. By Powell and Lealand, London. 



