Index 
viii. 
Six-footed, Ways of the, by Anna B. Coin- 
stock, 173. 
Sixteen Years 'with the Common Sparrow , by 
Joseph P. Nunn, 73. 
Skuas, 234. 
Slug, A Thread-spinning, 21S. 
Slugs, 77, 96. 
Smoke and Vegetation, 136. 
Snake Feeding at the Zoological Cardens, 
Humanitarian League Leaflet , 74, 164. 
Society for the Protection of Birds, 12 th 
Annual Report of the , 73. 
Somerville, Mrs., The Colour of the Sea, by, 3. 
South Eastern Union, Temporary Museum, 
23, 162. 
South London Entomological and Natura ^ 
History Society, 1902, Proceeaings of the, 
134- 
Sowerby’s “ English Botany ” Supplement. 23. 
Spare the Birds, 135. 
Sparrow, Piebald, 236. 
Sparrows, 52, 75. 
Sfarr&ws, Sixteen J ears with the Common, 
by Joseph P. Nunn, 73. 
Spiral Torsion in Plant Growth, 191. 
Spoliation of British Scenery. The,' 202. 
Springtime, by A. R. Frances, 188, 218. 
S/urious Sports Considered from an Educa- 
tional Standpoint , by the Rev. Dr. Gray, 
T 74* 
Squirrels Carrying Young, 214. 
Squirrels in Scotland, 15. 
Steward, the Rev. Canon, and Miss Alice E. 
Mitchell, The Nature Student's Note 
Book , by, 50. 
Stoat and Mole, 219. 
Stoats. Polecats, and 51, 95, 134, 175, 194. 
Stonehenge, Preservation of, 163. 
Stratford on-Avon, Henley Street, 142, 226. 
Swallow’s Nest, 34, 216. 
Swanley Horticultural College, 244. 
Swifts, 195, 216, 233. 
Subscriptions and Donations, 19, 39, 59, 78, 
99, 138, 156, 178, 196, 219, 237, 251. 
Thames Preservation, 115. 
Thunderbolts, 77, 96. 
Thunderstorms far North, 177. 
Tiger Cub that Ate its Own Mother. A. by A. 
Yaldwyn, Lt.-Col. D.S.O., 29. 
Toads 237. 
Tortoise and Dog, 236. 
Transactions of the City of London Entomo- 
logical and Natural History Society for 
1902, 74. 
Trays for Feeding Birds, 135. 
Trees, The Sap of, 188, 218. 
Trout, Tame, 34. 
Un-Selbornian Parson, The, 83. 
Ussher, Mrs. Beverley, and Dorothy Jebb, 
Observation Lessons on Plant Life, by, 
230. 
Variations in Orchis maculata, 177. 
Victorian Naturalist , The, 43, 74, 134, 152, 
175, 212, 231. 
Vivisection, 227. 
Vole, Field and Bank Vole, Notesjon the 
Short-tailed Field Mouse, or, by^G. T. 
Rope, 133. 
Wagtails and Flycatchers, 217. 
Waiting for the Tiger’s Approach, by Lt.- 
Col. A. Yaldwyn, D.S.O., 146. 
Wakes, The, 21. 
Walpole Bond, J. A., Bird Life in Wild 
Wales, 246. 
Walton and some Earlier Writers on Fish 
and Fishing, by R. B. Mansion, 149. 
Water Babies, The, by^Charles Kingsley, 93. 
Ways of the Six footed, by Anna B. Com- 
stock, 173. 
Wealth and Progress of New South Wales , 
1900- 1, by T. A. Coghlan, 33. 
Webb, Wilfred Mark, Nature Knowledge . its 
Progress and Interpretation, &-c., by, 30. 
Wellcome Physiological Research Labora- 
tory, The, 152. 
Westell, W. Percival, Country Rambles, 133. 
Westell, W. Percival, The Garden of My 
Youth, 8. 
White, Mrs. C. A., Sweet Hampstead . 250. 
White’s Stoats, 134, 175, T94. 
White’s Thrush, 53. 
Wild-fowl in Euston Park, 95. 
Wimbledon Common, An Autumn Evening on, 
G. M. B. Durham, 182. 
Windermere, Pollution of, 203. 
Winter Below Beachy Head, by A. E. R., 71. 
Winter Hoards, 51. 
Winter, The Woods’in, by Early Bird, '67. 
Woodpecker, Black, 16, 34. 
Woodpeckers, 53. 
Woodpigeon, Late Nesting of the, 237. 
Woods in Winter, The, by Early Bird, 67. 
Wounded Grouse, 181. 
Yaldwyn, Lt.-Col. A.. D.S.O., A Tiger Cub 
that Ate its Own Mother, by, 29. 
Yaldwyn, Lt.-Col. A., D.S.O., Waiting for 
the Tiger’s Approach, by, 146. 
