LXII ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
Before the end of January, at the latest, reports of the work done 
within the various provinces during the year ended December the 31st 
previous, should be made by the secretaries for the provinces to the 
general secretary, from which the annual report to the Royal Society 
shall be principally compiled. By the first of January, therefore, the 
annual reports of county secretaries and members should be sent in to 
the secretaries of the provinces. 
To cover the expenses of official printing and postage, a nominal fee 
of twenty-five cents per annum is expected for membership (or one dol- 
lar for five years in advance, or five dollars for life membership). Secre- 
taries for the provinces, when remitting the amount of fees from mem- 
bers to the general treasurer, are authorized to deduct the necessary 
expenses for provincial office work, transmitting vouchers for the same 
with the balance. 
The names of those reporting any kind of valuable botanical work 
during the year will be published in the list of active members, even 
should the payment of fees be forgotten. All payments are credited to 
the current year and the future. Lapsed active membership can, there- 
fore, be restored at any time without the payment of arrears—for there 
are no arrears recorded in the Botanical Club of Canada. 
PHENOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS, CANADA, 1900. 
STATIONS AND NAMES OF THE OBSERVERS. 
Nova Scotia. 
Yarmouth, Yarmouth Co.—Miss Janet Keith Bruce Kelley. 
Berwick, Kings Co.—Miss Ida A. Parker. 
Musquodoboit Harbour, Halifax Co.—Rev. James Rosborough. 
Wallace, Cumberland Co.—Miss E. G. Charman. 
East Wallace, Cumberland Co.—Miss A. B. Mackenzie. 
Prince Edward Island. 
Principal John MacSwain. 
Ontario. 
Miss Alice Hollingworth. 
Charlottetown 


Beatrice, Muskoka 
Assiniboia. 
Pheasant Forks—Mr. Thomas Donnelly. 
Saskatchewan. 
Willoughby—Rev. C. W. Bryden, B.A. 
British Columbia. 
Vancouver—Mr. J. K. Henry, B.A. 
