) — of the
luminosity
of certain fishes.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
is again his scene, and event follows event well characteristics and powers that would Molesworth (Sir Guilford), The Biggest Fool on
with hurricane rapidity.
probably have remained latent in the seclusion
Earth, 1d.
Cole (Sophie), The Thorn-Bush near the Door, 6/ of the close. The story is well written and
St. Stepben's Press
biggest fool on earth
is the “ British
Mills & Boon interesting; the women are sympathetically Working Man,” because he is subjugated by
This somewhat melodramatic story concerns
drawn, and stand out vividly against a more or the paid officials of the Unions, is cajoled hy
the fortunes of a girl who finds that she is
less shadowy background of men.
Socialist agitators, goes out on strike, thinks
illegitimate. She marries
young artist, Marsh (Richard), Violet Forster's Lover, 6/
he can make the poor richer by making the
who is clever as a painter, but vacillating and
Cassell
rich poorer, and apparently is incredulous of
contemptible as
He is accused of Discredited by his brother officers, reduced the benefits of Tariff Reform. After such a
murder, and we are asked to believe that this to penury, driven even to sordid crime, the catalogue of nefarious deeds, we wonder that
experience has a sobering effect on him, and bero” still finds himself the object of a the working classes have not been incarcerated
that all ends well. The heroine is sym-
con-
The "
a
a
nan.
66
woman's undying love. He sinks from one long before this.
pathetically drawn.
abyss to another, and finds many strange com. Swallow (Rev. H. J. ), The Disestablishinent
Glaspell (Susan), The Visioning, 6/ Murray panions, but even the most censorious reader Rot," 2d.
It is impossible to read this book without a will find his downward career of interest. In
This pamphlet is so defaced by cheap witti-
certain sympathy. Evidently the work of an the end it is the woman's wit and courage cisms, journalistic appeals, and devices to
inexperienced writer, it has the youthful which help to establish his innocence of a tickle the groundlings, that it is impossible to
qualities of headlong generosity and headlong
social misdemeanour.
include it in the category of serious argument.
Jarrold
## p. 341 (#263) ############################################
No. 4404, MARCH 23, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
341
Literary Gossip.
net.
Oriental Congress, and the Jubilee of
FORTHCOMING BOOKS.
the University of Athens at the begin.
MARCE
Theology.
ning of April.
28 Introduction to Dogmatic Theology, by
the late Rev. E. A. Litton, Revised Edition, 10/6
A BOOK which is to be called ' Against
Robert Scott
THE formation of a London Museum Home Rule' will be published towards
28 The Teaching of the Fathers, by the Rev.
T. E. Harwood.
Elliot Stock in a central position has long been urged the end of the month by Messrs. Warne
28. The Epistles of St. Paul, the Text prepared by good citizens, antiquaries, and enthu- & Co. Sir Edward Carson will write an
by Sir Edward Clarke, 2/6 net. Smith & Elder
siasts, but, like other excellent schemes, Introduction, and Mr. Bonar Law has
History and Biography.
28 A Nurse's Life in War and Peace, by E. C.
has been unconscionably delayed. We promised to add a Preface.
Laurence, 5/ net.
Smith & Elder note with satisfaction the establishment in
PROF. SANFORD TERRY of Aberdeen
Science.
Kensington Palace of the show organized
25 That Rock Garden of Ours, by F. E. with wonderful energy and expert care
University is engaged upon a volume of
Hulme, Cheap Edition, 5/ net. Fisher Unwin by Mr. Guy Laking and his assistants.
Documents illustrative of Scottish His-
Fiction
tory, 1603-1707,' which he hopes to
25. Dreams, and Dream Life and Real Life,
Already it contains a surprising wealth publish with Messrs. MacLehose early
by Olive Schreiner, New Edition, Adelphi Library of exhibits, ancient and modern, ranging next year.
from stone implements to the Coronation
Real Life, 2/ net.
Fisher Unwin
25 The Heart of a Russian, by M. Y. Ler- robes of King Edward and Queen Alex. • How 'Twas 'is the title of a new book
montov, translated by J. H. Wisdom and Marr andra, and being particularly strong in by Mr. Stephen Reynolds which Messrs.
Murray, 61
Herbert & Daniel
art.
Macmillan & Co. have in the press. It
26 The Caged Lion, by Charlotte M. Yonge,
New Edition, i/ net.
Macmillan
When its establishment is generally consists of a series of stories and sketches
20. Nebe Madie's Niece boy George, A4, Birming, known and appreciated, it will doubtless similar to those contained in, ' A Poor
Smith & Elder profit by_that generosity which dis- Man's House' and ' Alongshore,' and deals
32. The Little Blue Devil, by Dorothea Mac: tinguishes English collectors
. Enough has with the same working-class life and coast
kellar
28 The Englishwoman, by Alice and Claude been done already to emphasize the de- and fishing scenes.
Askew, 6/
Cassell mand for a special building which will be
Two new books will make their first
William Harvey,
Cheaper Edition, 3 vols. , net worthy of its purpose, and allow of ample appearance in Messrs. Macmillan's Seven-
Chatto & Windus room for accessions.
28 Israel Rank, by Roy Horniman, Cheaper
penny Series on April 2nd. The first is
Edition, 2/ net.
Chatto & Windus "THE MASQUE OF LEARNING AND ITS The Three Knaves,' by Mr. Eden Phill-
28 Service, by Constance Smedley, New
Edition, 6/
Chatto & Windus MANY MEANINGS,' devised by Prof. Patrick potts, a detective story, with its scenes
28 Mothers and Fathers, by Constance Smed- Geddes as a celebration of the twenty- laid mainly at Ealing, the second is a
ley, New Edition, 61 Chatto & Windus fifth year of University Hall, Edinburgh, tale by. Mrs. Hubert Barclay, entitled
General Literature.
26 Misapprehension, Misrepresentation, Mis-
and given on the evenings of March 14th The Giant Fisher. '
judgment, by T. I.
Elliot Stock to 16th inclusive at the Synod Hall of
MESSRS. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & Co.
25 The Autobiography of a Working Woman, that city, was a great success, hundreds have on exhibition in their New York
by Adelheid Popp, with introductions by, August being turned away nightly from a build-book-rooms the first American editions
Bebel and J. Ramsay MacDonald, M. P. , 3/8 net.
Fisher Unwin ing which held over 2,000. We gather of eleven of R. L. Stevenson's books,
26 Responsible Government in the Dominions, that there was a desire to secure
by A. B. Keith, 3 vols. , 42/
presented by the author to Jules Simoneau,
28 A Quiet Holiday, by Oona K. Ball, 1/ net.
larger room, such as the McEwan Hall
, restaurant - keeper of Monterey. The
Cassell but the University authorities refused twelfth volume contains a collection of
28 Success for Boys, by A. M. Apel, bd. net. permission, dreading the interference of letters, and the manuscript of an essay 'The
Cassell
the Lord Chamberlain, who has no Friendship of Robert Louis Stevenson
NEXT MONTH'S MAGAZINES. jurisdiction in Scotland ! Even if he had, and Jules Simoneau,' by Mrs. Katherine
The Cornhill Magazine will contain the cus- it would have taxed his ingenuity to find D. Osbourne, with some drawings and
MA! Vachell, The Grip of Life. " by Ágnes and anything objęctionable in the book of photographs. The
books were purchased
The Masque' which is before us. Begin- | after the death of Simoneau in 1908 at
ness," by Sir Henry Lucy; The Children's Country ning with the great Oriental civilizations, the age of 89, and passed to a San
pletion of The Darweeshes of Damascus,” by it passes in review the Greek, Roman, Francisco collector, who has had them
Mr. T. c. Fowle : biography of Godfrey Sykes Celtic, and Mediæval periods up to the bound in Boston after designs by Miss
Armitage, The Soldier's Breviary, by Mr. G. H. present day, and ends with an attempt L. Averill Cole.
Powell; Granny Ryall's Remeni berings, by Miss to shadow forth the future of higher
Marjory Hardcastle; "The Return from Varennes, education.
THE miners of the Ruhr district have
by Miss H. M. Sturge; . On the Threshold of Russia,'
by Mr. Edward Cadogan ; Birds of a Sussex The whole was a worthy commemora-
lost their poet, Heinrich Kämpchen, whose
Garden," by Mr. Horace Hutchinson, and - Badajoz tion of University Hall
, which, starting death, at the age of 64, is announced
staterem by Magnola Bennett ; in. Johnny in the tribute to the enthusiasm of Prof. Geddes, afforded by a village school, and from the
Harper's Magazine will contain : Your United from small beginnings, is now a fine from Linden in Westphalia. He had
little real education beyond what was
Woods,' by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman; The its founder.
Secret, a poem, by Isabel Ecclestone Mackay ;
age of 16 worked in the mines. His
• The Menace of Cape Race,' by George Harding ;
* The Years,' by James Oppenheim ; The New
MR. HECTOR BURN MURDOCH, a member poems, which show distinct poetical
Meaning of Public Health, by Robert W. Bruère; of the Edinburgh Faculty of Advocates, talent and contain some fine passages,
• The Eyes of the Gazelle, by Richard Washburn has been appointed to the recently for the most part deal with various
Child ;
by the author of The Inner Shrine; Flower instituted Lectureship in English Law aspects of a miner's life--its loneliness and
Asleep,' a poem, by Richard Le Gallienne ;, The in the University. He has acted as its dangers, and the weird legends of
Twain,'Sixth Paper, by Albert Bigelow Paine: “The reporter for English cases in The Scottish the mines.
Lower Animal,' by Norman Duncan; Wild Law Reporter ; contributed the article
Burma,' by Mary Blair Beebe; 'Motion Study at on ‘English Law' to the Encyclopædia from Karlsruhe of Geheimrat Dr. Gustav
The death, in his 86th year, is announced
St. Katharine's,' by Elizabeth Jordan ; 'The Pass-
of Scots Law'; and has been a contri | Wendt, Director of the Gymnasium of
"An Easter Canticle," a poem, by Charles Hanson butor to The Juridical Review and Scottish that town from 1867 till his resignation
Towne ; and 'At Twilight,' by Susan Glaspell.
Law Times.
Scribner's Magazine will contain the opening
in 1907, and one of the foremost classical
chapters of 'The Heart of the Hills,' a serial by
MR. OWEN SEAMAN will preside at the teachers of his day. Among his works
John Fox, jun.
The Positivist Review will contain the first Annual Dinner of the Royal Literary are Gymnasium und öffentliche Meinung'
of two papers on Theism, by Mr. Frederic Fund on May 16th.
and 'Didaktik und Methode des deutschen
Harrison ; a paper by Mr. J. F. Gould, The
Unterrichts und der philosophischen Pro-
Imitation of Christ,' an application of Thomas à
DR. J. P. MAHAFFY, C. V. O. , is to pädeutik,' and translations of Sophocles's
Kempis to modern life; and an account of the
late Frederic Seebohm, by Mr. S, H. Swinny. represent Trinity College, Dublin, at the tragedies.
a
Frowde
## p. 342 (#264) ############################################
342
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4404, MARCH 23, 1912
recognized, comparable with the trans. evolutionist has constantly to remember
SCIENCE
mission of messages by letter-post, by ordi. that adaptation to like conditions of life
nary telegraph, or by wireless telegraphy. may lead to parallelism of development in
Thus the secretions of certain cells may different groups. On taking a broad view
act as stimulants on distant cells by means of recent and fossil reptiles, it is seen that
OUR LIBRARY TABLE. of circulating fluids, as is the case with the they admit of classification in two main
chemical secretions known as hormones : divisions or sub-classes—one a mammal-like
BIOLOGY, or the scientific study of living this is the letter-post method. Or there may brigade termed Theromorpha, the other a
things, is so vast a subject that it has neces- be material connexion by means of nerve bird - like brigade termed Ornithomorpha.
sarily been divided and subdivided into fibres or protoplasmic threads—the telegraph Both divisions were probably derived from
many subordinate sciences, and a student, wires. Again, possibly one cell may act the primæval salamanders known technically
whilo devoting himself to one or more of on another at a distance through the agency as stegocephalian amphibians, the evolution
these branches, often fails to take a philo- of stimuli transmitted without apparent of the class having occurred, it is supposed,
sophical view of the whole. Yet much of the material connexion, like electric waves. in the later ages of Palæozoic time.
educational value of biological study depends The reader who turns over the pages of this The section on the Amphibia is written
on the due recognition of general principles | work will find much of interest on such jointly by Mr. Cunningham and Dr. G. A.
rather than on specialization in any particular subjects as the evolution of sex, the adapta- Boulenger, whilst the former alone is
section. Realizing this, Prof. Arthur Dendy, tion of the organism to its environment, the responsible for the long section on Fishes.
in Outlines of Evolutionary Biology (Con experiments of Mendel, the mutation theory. The treatment of both groups is excellent,
stable & Co. ), takes a general survey of of De Vries, the geographical distribution of so far as the limits of the work permitted.
the broad field of biology, occupying as his life, and the construction of fossil pedigrees, It may bo doubted whether those living
standpoint the elevation which has been or phylogenetic trees, from the record of amphibians that retain gills or gill-slits
raised in recent years by the evolutionist. the rocks. A notable part of the volume throughout life are, as has been commonly
The author brings to his task peculiar is a sketch of the history of the theory of supposed, representative of the most primitive
advantages, inasmuch as he has studied life organic evolution, from Buffon to Weismann. type. It was an old idea that the lungs of
in many distant parts, having held professor: Prof. Dendy, in conclusion, is led to indulge the higher vertebrates had been developed
ships of biology and zoology in New Zealand in the characteristic optimism of the evolu- from the air-bladder of fishes, but it is now
and South Africa, and having seen insular tionist, and from the gradual development believed that, on the contrary, the air.
life in such remote spots as the Chatham of the human race in the past he looks bladder was probably evolved from lungs.
Islands. These islands, about 400 miles E. of with confidence to its progress in the In the well-known lung-fishes the respiratory
New Zealand, were inhabited by a native future.
function of the air-bladder is evident, and
race called Morioris, a peaceful people who in
it is permissible to regard such forms as
the early part of the nineteenth century were Reptiles, Amphibia, Fishes, and Lower distinctly connecting the fishes with amphi-
attacked by an invading party, of Maoris Chordata. By Richard Lydekker, J. T. bians. A very interesting account is given
from New Zealand, and, having lost the art Cunningham, and Others. (Methuen.
) — of the luminosity of certain fishes. It is
of self-defence, were virtually exterminated. When Mr. Pycraft, of the Natural History worth noting that, whilst some fishes that
This is cited as an illustration of the obvious Museum, originally suggested the publica- live in surface-waters possess light-producing
principle that in the struggle for existence tion of a series of four volumes to be entitled organs, many that dwell in the dark depths
natural selection eliminates the weakest, 'Animal Life : an Evolutionary Natural of ocean are probably unable to emit light.
the degenerate Morioris having fallen before History,' it was his intention not only to Prof. Arthur Thomson, of Aberdeen,
the Maoris just as the wingless birds of New contribute the volume on birds, already describes in the latter part of the volume
Zealand, unable to save themselves by noticed in these columns (Athen. , May 28, certain creatures of a primitive type that
flight, are being rapidly killed by the pro- 1910, p. 644), but also to act as general editor seem to occupy the border-land between
daceous mammals introduced by Europeans. of the series. Failing health, however, has vertebrates and invertebrates. These in.
Prof. Dendy furnishes in this work an ex. unfortunately compelled him to relinquish clude the hags and lampreys, which differ
cellent summary of the fundamental facts for a time his editorial labour, and the new from true fishes in that they are destitute of
and principles on which the theory of organic volume of the series now before us has been definitely developed jaws. Probably they
evolution is based. In order to introduce the brought out under the care of Mr. J. T. were given off from the great vertebrate
subject to readers who lack biological train. Cunningham. In these days natural history stem at a much lower level than that at which
ing, he deals in the early part of the volume has become so highly specialized that it is fishes diverged. Of yet lower grade are
with the structure and function of certain dangerous for any writer to venture outside the curious little lancelets, which belong
plants and animals. Here we naturally his own range of close study, and it was to a simple Chordate type, and the tuni-
meet our ever-present friend, the amoeba, consequently wise to distribute the prepara- cates or ascidians, which stand at the
but the writer is not generally concerned tion of this volume among several naturalists “ threshold of vertebrate life. ”
with concrete examples. Speculation, from of distinction, each a recognized authority The work is illustrated with a number of
the nature of the subject, cannot be avoided. on his own section. Their object has been to plates in monochrome and four in colour,
Biological problems are often extremely set forth the natural history of certain classes the latter illustrating such subjects as pro
complicated, and their solution demands of vertebrates as viewed in the light of evolu. tective and warning colours in reptiles and
wide knowledge and acute judgment. In tion, and to do this in such a way that, amphibians, and the brilliant coloration of
discussing the views of opposing schools of without sacrifice of scientific accuracy, the certain fishes in tropical waters.
thought the author shows an impartial spirit, subject may be understood by any reader
but it is not to be expected that all his con. who is interested in nature-study, but may
clusions will receive general assent.
not have been specially trained in science.
On the much-vexed question of the in. Their success is beyond question.
SOCIETIES.
heritance or non - inheritance of acquired The first section of the work, descriptive
ROYAL. -March 14. - Sir Archibald Geikie,
characters, Prof. Dendy, after careful exami. of the great class of Reptiles, is contributed
President, in the chair. -Papers were read as
nation of the evidence on both sides, reaches by the fluent and practised pen of Mr. R.
follows: Prof. Dr. E. Goldmann, *On New
a conclusion not unfavourable to the former Lydekker. Here, as elsewhere throughout Method of examining Normal and Diseased
view, though he expresses himself with the volume, much prominence is naturally Tissues by Means of Intra-vitam Staining,'
commendable caution. It is a question given to extinct types, in order to trace, so
Dr. E. K. Martin, on The Effects of Ultra-
whether a modification of the body which far as the imperfect record permits, the lines
Violet Rays on the Eye,'-and Dr. W. S. Lazarus-
Barlow, On the Presence of Radium in some
has arisen during the lifetime of an indi. along which evolution has proceeded. The Carcinomatous Tumours. "
vidual, not by inheritance, but in response ancestry of all warm-blooded vertebrates Mr. Charles Russ read a paper on 'An
to the environment, can or cannot affect may be carried back to the reptilian stock, Improved Method for Opsonic "Index Estima.
the germ-cells in such a way that the off from which there seems to have been evolved tions involving the Separation of Red and White
spring will inherit the modification. Whilst in one direction the group of birds, in another Human Blood Corpuscles:'. The Opsonic Index
agreeing with Weismann that it is only that of mammals. Modern opinion, how. abandoned. Its liability to error depends chiefly
germinal or blastogenic characters that are ever, does not favour the view formerly held, upon the large variation in bacterial content of
transmitted, the author believes that in that the dinosaurian reptiles, which often the leucocytes. This variation makes the “ error
certain circumstances a somatogenic or assumed an erect attitude and presented of random sampling" liable to be large (Green,
bodily character may be transformed into certain avian resemblances in the skeleton wood and White), and this purely mathematical
error has doubtless been at times responsible
a blastogenic one. True, it is not easy to of the pelvis and hind limbs, represent the for the apparent differences of opsonin when
understand by what kind of organic mechan. ancestral type from which birds have sprung. contrasting two sera (normal and diseased).
ism the conversion may be brought about, Nor is the relationship of the pterodactyles, By repeatedly estimating the opsonin of a normal
but the author's illustrations are suggestive or flying reptiles, to birds generally believed, Mr. Russ found the deviation
from the mean liable
serum, in which all the materials were the same,
Three possible modes of transmission from in the present state of our knowledge, to be to be large. From general considerations this
the cells of the soma to the germ-cells are more than a superficial resemblance, The " content variation was presumed to depend
## p. 343 (#265) ############################################
No. 4404, MARCH 23, 1912
343
THE ATHENÆUM
wa
sea.
upon an uneven distribution of bacteria amongst mercury was avoided. The results were com- having been executed in the time of Richard III.
the leucocytes. A scrutiny of the old method pared with those obtained by simple air-drying. The St. John the Baptist subjects, divided by
showed two serious defects, viz. : (1) Presence of The action of light was excluded during the ex. ornamented buttresses, as in the St. Stephen
500 useless red corpuscles to every leucocyte periments. B. typhosus and B. coli died both in pictures, are unmistakably of foreign origin.
(hindering access of bacteria to leucocytes, and vacuo and in air-dried slips within five days. Gernian and Italian influences are both manifcst,
their even mixture). (2) Sedimentation of the S. pyogenes aureus persists considerably longer and this work came, probably, from the Low
opsonic mixture during incubation (also hindering under both conditions. The interest centres Countries. The treatment is broadly decorative
access, &c. ). To remove these defects (1) the around B. pyocyaneus.
Air-dried films did not in character, and the colour in both instances is
leucocytes were separated in bulk from the red survive beyond nine days. The slips kept in pleasant. Though not of great artistic importance,
corpuscles in human blood by an extension of vacuo were alive at seven months. How much they are both good and vigorous instances of a
Dr. Ponder's work on leucocytes, and used for longer this bacterium will live in vacuo the authors class of work of which iconoclasm has left us
the improved process ; (2) the opsonic mixture are testing.
few examples, and it is greatly to be hoped that
was kept in rotary motion during incubation by B. pyocyaneus was submitted in vacuo to the the authorities at Windsor will see their way to
a suitable mechanism. When repeated tests action of heat, and also to the sun's rays (the tako steps to preserve them from absolute
were made with the same materials by the scaled vacuum tubes being submerged in water). destruction.
improved method there was a largely reduced Its resistance to these agencies, in the dried state,
liability to error. This affected both the average in vacuo, was not materially, if at all, increased.
ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY. -March 16. -Anni-
and maximum deviation from the mean value. The bacillus was killed, moreover, by the action of
versary Meeting. -Jean Gaston Darboux (Paris)
The observed errors by the improved method ultra-violet rays on being removed from the and Elias Metchnikoff (Paris) were elected
were one quarter the magnitude of those by the vacuum and treated in an atmosphere of nitrogen.
Honorary Members of the Academy in the section
old process, the conditions of experiment being So far as the possibility of interplanetary of Science; and Moritz Hoernes (Vienna), Giacomo
almost completely comparable.
bacterial life is concerned, it is evident that bacteria
Lumbroso (Rome), and Wilhelm Dörpfeld (Athens)
Prof. W. M. Thornton read a paper on 'The
in the fully dried state, if free in the interplanetary in the section of Polite Literature and Anti-
Electrical Conductivity of Bacteria, and the Rate vacuum, would
be killed by the solar light. And quities.
of Inhibition of Racteria by Electric Currents. The as Sir James Dewar's experiments have demon-
electrical conductivity of bacteria is measured by strated that the ultra-violet rays will kill undried
observing their orientation when an alternating
bacteria whilst in the frozen condition at the
INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS. ---March 19.
electric current is passed through a series of saline temperature of liquid air, there is little to support
--Mr. A. B. McDonald and Mr. G. M. Taylor read
solutions of graded conductivity containing them. the hypothesis that the living protoplasm on the a paper on The Main Drainage of Glasgow. '
There is no orientation when the conductivity of earth originally immigrated from interplanetary The paper began with a retrospect of the
the liquid is the same as that of the bacteria. space in a free or unincluded condition—that free, many past endeavours to free the River Clyde
The values found range from 35 to 350 ohms per
particulate life has entered the earth's atmosphere,
froni the pollution of the Glasgow sewage, going
centimetre cube, and depend upon the nature as a result of light propulsion, from extramundane
as far back as the year 1805. At this time the
and state of the culture mediuin. The result of space.
river was quite tideless and fordable in many
sub-culturing in broth is found to be that the
places at Glasgow. Trade was insignificant, as
conductivity of the bacteria increases at each step,
seaborne traffic could reach the city only after
reaching a steady value at about the fourth sub-
SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES. —March 14. -Dr. transportage into small boats at Dumbarton.
culture. Tap water containing B. coli communis
C. H. Read, President, in the chair. —The Rev. In 1662 the town council ordered a small
can be completely sterilized by direct currents in
E. K. B. Morgan exhibited, through Mr. Mill quay to be built at the Broomielaw, and this was
several hours at 0-2 ampère sq. cm. Alternating
Stephenson, a palimpsest brass from Biddenden, the commencement of the transformation of the
currents sterilize water nearly if not quite as well
Kent. The brass, which commemorates Thomas Clyde into one of the busiest waterways in the
United Kingdom.
as direct currents having the same current-Fleet, is dated 1572, and is cut out of parts of
density. In order to obtain well-marked and
two Flemish brasses. The reverses of the inscrip- As trade increased, all fishing interests were
consistent results, it is necessary to use high
tion and coats of arms are portions of a brass dating forgotten, and the condition of the river became
current-densities and to have a form of cell with
about 1520, but the reverse of the figure of foul in the extreme. Sixty years ago the con-
a thin film of liquid which can be readily cooled.
Thomas Fleet is more interesting: This is cut dition of things was so bad that a scheme was
Milk is curdled by direct current at the positive
from the lower right-hand corner of a large figure suggested for the construction of a reservoir in
pole, and thinned at the negative pole. Mill can
brass of a lady. Her gown is pounced with the upper ward of Lanark, to impound flood-
be sterilized without curdling by passing alternat-
banner-shaped shields bearing apparently the water and discharge it during the summer, in
ing current, this being largely thermal. The
arms of Hainault and of the family of Borssele order to scour the sewage in the harbour out to
van der Hooge. The
fragment bears a striking
cause of the marked bactericidal action of light is
This was the first of numerous voluntary
resemblance to the Braunch brass at King's
suggested to be syntony between it and the fre-
suggestions which were formulated.
quency of electronic rotation in the atoms of
Lynn, and may be assigned to about the same In 1859 the late Mr. J. F. La Trobe Bateman,
protoplasm.
date, 1364.
Past-President Inst. C. E. , and the late Prof.
Messrs. E. C. Hort and W. J. Penfold read
The front portion of a medieval jewelled mitre Anderson reported on the subject. Further reports
'A Clinical Study of Experimental Fever. ' In
was sent for exhibition by Lady Herries. The were made by the late Sir Joseph Bazalgette,
1911 it was shown that ordinary distilled water
mitre is of cloth of gold ornamented with jewels Past-President Inst. C. E. , and the late Sir John
and solutions in it of salt frequently exhibit
and enamels, but it has apparently undergone Hawkshaw, Past - President Inst. C. E. , and in
pyrogenetic properties as the result of contamina-
two restorations. The enamelled and jewelled 1878 Mr. Bateman again reported, but nothing
bands are so similar to those on the mitre of was done, and the condition of the river became
tion with a hitherto undescribed body. This
substance appears to be an extractive in water or
William of Wykeham at New College, Oxford, worse and worse.
saline of bacterial protein, but its presence bears
that there can be little doubt that originally the Soon after this a Bill was deposited in Parlia-
no relation to the number of micro-organisms
two mitres were more or less identical. At the end ment for the construction of the Glasgow under-
demonstrable at the time of injection of liquids
of the fifteenth or the beginning of the sixteenth ground railway, which was projected in such a
containing it. It is heat-stable, is of small
century the mitre was remounted on the cloth of way as to dislocate the entire sewerage system
molecule, and will pass the ordinary bacterial
gold fabric, while at a subsequent renovation then in existence. The Corporation strongly
filters. In the present communication it is shown
gold lace was added round the edge, and the opposed this measure, but eventually arrived
that the existence of this contamination, to a
arrangement of the jewels and enamels was at an agreement on obtaining from the promoters
great extent, vitiates deductions drawn froni
entirely altered.
an undertaking that they would bear the expenses
previous work on the causation of fever after
A paper on the paintings in the Hastings and of reconstructing the sewers to the approval of tho
injection of a variety of substances dissolved
Oxenbridge Chantries at St. George's Chapel, Council; and in conference with Sir Joseph
or suspended in water or saline.
Windsor, was presented by Mr. W. H. St. John Bazalgette a system was designed whereby the
The archi- sewage of the north-eastern area was conveyed
Water, fever, salt fever, fibrin ferment fever, Hope and Mr. P. H. Newman.
