Periodical Literature. 
xcix 
Chemical News. Vol. LVI. 
Abbott : Yucca angustifolia : a Chemical Study. 
Thompson : Antiseptic properties of some of the Fluorine compounds. 
Carnelley and Wilson : A new method for determining Micro- 
organisms in air. 
Lindo : The estimation of potash in commercial fertilisers. 
Stocks : Iodide of Starch. 
Phillips : The alleged synthesis of glycose. 
Papers and Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club. No. i. 
Fitz-Gerald : Flora of Hants. 
Woodhouse : Some notes on the plants of Ropley and its neighbour- 
hood. 
Warner : List of Hampshire Mosses. 
Eyre : A List of Hants Fungi. 
Practitioner. 
Vol. XVIII. 
Klein : The Bacteria in Asiatic Cholera. 
„ XIX. 
Bruce : Note on the discovery of a microorganism in Malta-fever. 
Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. Vol. VI, Part 2. 
Gardiner : On the finer structure of the walls of the endosperm cells 
of Tamus communis. 
: Note on the functions of the secreting hairs found upon the 
nodes of young stems of Thiinbergia laurifolia. 
: On the petiolar glands of the Ipomoeas. 
: On the occurrence of secreting glandular organs on the 
leaves of some Aroids. 
Proceedings of the Naturalists’ Field Club, Belfast. Series 2, Vol. II. 
Phillips and Praeger: The Ferns of Ulster. 
Proceedings of the Pathological Society of London. Vol. XXXVIII. 
Rake : Bacilli of leprosy. 
Williams : Vegetable tumours in relation to bud-formation, with a 
new theory of neoplasia. 
Proceedings of the Philosophical Society of Glasgow. Vol. XVIII. 
Bower: Note on a morphological peculiarity of Cordyline australis. 
: On Humboldtia laurifolia , Vahl, as a Myrmecophilous plant. 
Scientific Proceedings of the Boyal Dublin Society. New Series, Vol. V. 
Kinahan : Oldhamia. 
Sollas : On a specimen of slate from Bray Head, traversed by the 
structure known as Oldhamia radiata. 
: Supplementary remarks on the previous paper. 
Joly : On a peculiarity in the nature of the impressions of Oldhamia 
antiqua and 0 . radiata. 
Kinahan : Deal timber in the Lake-Basins and Peat-Bogs of North’ 
East Donegal. 
Wynne : On submerged Peat-Mosses and Trees in certain Lakes in 
Connaught. 
