CXII ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
Region II. (Shelburne County), E. C. Allen, Principal Public 
School, Yarmouth. 
Region II. (Queens County), Minnie C. Hewitt, Science Teacher, 
Lunenburg Academy. 
Region II. (Lunenburg County), Burgess McKittrick, B.A., Prin- 
cipal, Lunenburg Academy. 
Region III. (Kings and Annapolis Counties), Ernest Robinson, B.A., 
Principal, Horton Academy. 
Region IV. (Hants and South Colchester), J. E. Barteaux, M.A., 
Inspector of Technical Schools. 
Region V. (Halifax and Guysboro Counties), G. R. Bancroft, B.A., 
Science Master, Halifax County Academy. 
Region VI. A and B. (Cobequid Slope), F. G. Morehouse, Prin- 
. cipal Public Schools, Springhill. 
Region VII. (Cumberland, North Colchester), (Pictou and Anti- 
gonish Counties), W. P. Fraser, M.A., Science 
Master, Pictou Academy. 
Region VIII, IX and X. (Cape Breton Island), M.D. Davidson, B.A., 
Principal Public Schools, North Sydney. 
TaBLE IL, CANADIAN PHENOCHRONS, 1909. 
The next table gives the dates throughout Canada of the first ob- 
servance only of each phenochron, except in the cases of the provincial 
phenochrons which are the averages of the first observances given in the 
other tables. 
The following observers reported directly to me from the following 
stations — | 
Princeton, British Columbia: Mrs. Hugh Hunter. 
Mistawasis, Saskatchewan: C. W. Bryden, B.A 
Aweme, Manitoba: Norman Criddle. 
Guelph, Ontario: J. W. Eastham. 
St. Stephen, New Brunswick: J. Vroom. 
Guelph, Ontario, J. W. Eastham. 
St. Stephen, New Brunswick, J. Vroom. 
Very full reports worthy of local, and sometimes possibly of general, 
publication have occasionally been made by some observers. These are 
carefully filed for future use. For instance, the schedule from Aweme, 
Manitoba, contained two hundred and seventeen plants on the list, with 
evidently accurate double observations of “when first seen” and “ when 
becoming common” and fruiting. 
