XX ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
commodious Lecture Hall on O’Connor street at the disposal of the club 
for the remaining meetings. 
Volume XIV. of the Ottawa Naturalist, the organ of the club, con- 
taining eleven numbers and 240 pages of text, has been completed under 
the editorship of Dr. James Fletcher. The volume has several illustra- 
tions and many interesting articles. Among the more important are the 
following :— 
Botany. 
“ Manitoba’s Wild Flowers,” by J. Fletcher, Ott. Nat., vol. xiv., No. 1, 
pp. 19-20. 
“ Additions to the North American and European Bryology,” by N- 
Conr. Kindberg, Ott. Nat., vol. xiv., No. 5, pp. 77-88. 
“The Kentucky Coffee Tree (Gymnocladus Canadensis),” by Rev. John 
Morrison, Ott. Nat., vol. xiv., No. 6, pp. 118-119. 
Chemistry (Agricultural). 
“Soils and the maintenance of their fertility through the growth of 
legumes,” by F. T. Shutt, Ott. Nat., vol. xiv., No. 3, pp. 37-48, and 
No. 4, pp. 57-69. | 
Conchology. 
< On an addition to the Molluscan Fauna of Canada,” by Bryant Walker. 
“ A slug new to the Canadian list,” by Geo. W. Taylor, Ott. Nat., vol. 
xiv., No. 8, pp. 150-151. 
* Notes on some land and fresh-water Mollusca from Fort Chimo, 
Ungava Bay, Ungava,” by J. F. Whiteaves, Ott. Nat., vol. xiv., No. 
12, pp. 221-223. 
Entomology. 
“Some interesting moths taken at Ottawa,” by Arthur Gibson, Ott. Nat., 
vol. xiv., No. 1, pp. 13-18. 
“Fauna Ottawaensis,” by W. Hague Harrington, Ott. Nat., vol. xiv., 
No. %, pp. 127-134. 
Geology. 
“ On the occurrence of a species of Whittleseya in the Riversdale Forma- 
tion, Nova Scotia,” by H. M. Ami, Ott. Nat. vol. xiv., No. 5, 
pp. 99-100. 
