In a previous communication to the Royal Society (‘Phil. Trans.,’ 184 (1893), A, p. 337), I have described a method of experimentally determining the velocities of the ions during electrolysis, by observations on the phenomena at the junction of two salt solutions, one at least of which is coloured, when a current of electricity is passed from one to the other. For the success of the method it is necessary to choose two solutions which (1) are different in density, (2) different in colour, and (3) have nearly equal conductivities at equivalent concentrations, i. e , when the number of gram-molecules dissolved in 1 litre of solution is the same for both. These conditions seriously restrict the number of cases to which the method is applicable, but the results obtained for copper and for the bichromate group (Cr 2 O 7 ) agree well with the values theoretically deduced by Kohlrattsch from measurements of the conductivity. Alcoholic solutions of cobalt nitrate and chloride were also used, and the sum of the velocities of the opposite ions, in each case, observed in my experiments, was as nearly as could be expected, the same as their sum calculated from the conductivities by Kohlrausch’s method.