APPENDIX F XCIII 
Pending the erection of the new building, which will include halls, 
library and museum, the work of the Society, during the season 1911-12, 
has been practically confined to giving successful courses of lectures. 
The following communications were read at the monthly 
meetings :— 
Monday, Nov. 6th, 1911.—Some Hungarian Plants, by Rev. Robert 
Campbell, M.A., D.D. 
Monday, Nov. 27th, 1911.—The Dry Rot of Timber, by Miss Carrie 
M. Derick, M.A. 
Notes on the recent exposure of rock, 
corner of Drummond and Sherbrooke 
Streets, by H. Lampard, Esq. 
Monday, Jan. 29th, 1912.—Explorations in North-East Quebec, by 
Dr. Alfred E. Barlow. 
Some recent additions to the Flora of 
Montreal, by Rev. Robert Campbell, M.A., 
DAD: 
Monday, Feb. 26th, 1912.—Some Rare Fungi at St. Andrew’s, N.B., 
by Miss Van Horne. 
Mountain Building, by Dr. J. Austen 
Bancroft. 
Monday, Mar. 25th, 1912.—A Peep at one of Nature’s Laboratories, by 
Dr. Albert G. Nicholls. 
Monday, April 27th, 1912.—The Algal Flora of the Island of Montreal, 
Miss Clare Miller, M.A. 
The Somerville Course of Free Lectures, delivered in the Lecture 
Hall of the Young Men’s Christian Association, was as follows:— 
Thursday, Feb. 8th, 1912.—Anchor Ice and its Influence on the De- 
velopment of Water Power. by Prof. H. 
i Barnes Dr sesh Rio: C: 
Thursday, Feb. 15th, 1912.—Some Facts and Myths about Animals in 
the East, by Prof. Arthur Willey, D.Sc., 
FRS. 
Thursday, Feb. 22nd, 1912.—The St. Lawrence and the Great Lakes, 
by John Kennedy, Esq. 
Thursday, Feb. 29th, 1912.—The Natural History of the Slum, by 
Harry Brage, M.J.I. 
Thursday, Mar. 7th, 1912.—Some Phases of Economic Botany, by 
S. Karsch, Ph. D. 
Thursday, Mar. 14th, 1912.—Certain Diseases of Plants, by Miss Carrie 
M. Derick, M.A. 
