NOTES 411 



Rhoads, Mammals of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, 

 PP- 3 J > 39 [Caption, " Eastern Wapiti or Elk," pp. 29- 



47]. 



P. 172 A recent and full discussion of these facts 

 of the early history of the Wyoming country is to be 

 found in Harvey's History of Wilkes-Barre. Wilkes- 

 Barre. 19x39. Vol. II, ch. XI, ch. XII, and ch. XVIII. 



P. 208 See, H. C. Grittinger. Iron Industries of 

 Lebanon County, Lebanon County Historical Society 

 Papers, III, 3-4. 



P. 210 Cf. Smyth, Tour in the United States, II, 

 387-88 [Long Island]. "There is a very singular in- 

 sect in this island, which I do not remember to have 

 observed in any other part of America. They are 

 named by the inhabitants Katy did's, from their note, 

 which is loud and strong, bearing a striking resem- 

 blance to those words, .... one perpetually and reg- 

 ularly answering the other in notes exactly similar to 

 the words Katy did or Katy Katy did, repeated by one, 

 and another immediately bawls out Katy didn't, or 

 Katy Katy didn't." 



P. 213 " They import many Black or Horned Cattle 

 far and near, from South- Carolina, Southward, and 

 from 300 Miles Westward, and from the Jersies." 



Douglass, British Settlements. Boston, 1750, II, 

 333 " Of Pennsylvania." 



P. 213 Near White's Tavern in 1793 was M'Allis- 

 ter's farm, of which Dr. Cooper has left a minute de- 

 scription, interesting as showing what the good eight- 

 eenth century method was. Some Information respect- 

 ing America. Collected by Thomas Cooper, late of 

 Manchester. Dublin, 1794, pp. 123-134. 



