110 THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
SAUNDERS, W. E. 
Winter birds at Point Pelee, Ont. 
The Ottawa Naturalist, May, 1910, vol. xxiv, No. 2, pp. 35-36. 
STONE, WITMER. 
The Carolina Wren. 
Bird-Lore, vol. xiii, No. 3, 1911, pp. 167-170, with coloured plate. 
SwaLEs, B. H. See Taverner, P. A. 
TAVERNER, P. A. 
Some Raptorial Migrations in southern Ontario. 
The Ottawa Naturalist, August, 1911, vol. xxv, No. 5, pp. 77-81. 
This article treats of the flight, at Point Pelee, of the Sharp-shinned 
Hawk, Cooper Hawk, Red-shouldered Hawk, Red-tailed Hawk and 
the Acadian Owl. 
TAVERNER, P. A., and SwaLes, B. H. 
Notes on the Migration of the Saw-whet Owl. 
The Auk, July ,1911, vol. xxviii, No. 3. pp. 329-334. 
TERRILL, L. McIver. 
Blue Jay imitating Red-shouldered Hawk. 
The Ottawa Naturalist, April, 1911, vol. xxv, No. 1, p. 20. 
Changes in the status of certain Birds in the vicinity of Montreal, P.Q. 
The Ottawa Naturalist, July, 1911, vol. xxv, No. 4, pp. 57-63. 
TUTTLE, ALBERT W. 
Pomarine Jaeger capturing a Phalarope. 
The Auk, October, 1911, vol. xxviii, No. 4, p. 482. 
Observed off Grand Manan, N.B. 
WRIGHT, ALBERT Hazen. 
Other early records of the Passenger Pigeon. 
The Auk, July, 1911, vol. xxviii, No. 3, pp. 346-366. 
Records from Canada, “the former home of the breeding pigeon,” 
are first considered, and later those from New England and New York. 
This paper is concluded (October number, 1911) with United States 
records. 
MAMMALS. 
ANDREWS, Roy C. 
What Shore-whaling is doing for science. 
Nature, December 28, 1911, vol. 88, No. 2200, pp. 280-282, text- 
figures 1-4. 
In discussing whale-fishing methods generally the writer refers to the 
different kinds of north Pacific whales and to the large number of 
individuals captured off the coast of British Columbia. He calls 
attention to the fact that in 1908 as many as 325 whales were killed, 
in seven months, at one of the Vancouver island stations. 
