30 ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



Nash, C. w. 



Check List of th" Vertebrates of Ontario, and Catalogue of Specimens 

 in the Biological Section of t|he Provincial Museum. Birds. 

 Department of Education, Toronto, pp. 1-82. 



The Robin and the Fruit Grower. 



Canadian Horticulturist, July, 1905, pp. 249-251. 



Papers on " The Nesting Season, " the " Night Hawk and Whip-poor- 

 Will,' and on " The Chimney Swift)," in the Farming World, To- 

 ronto, for June, July and xVugust, 1005." 



Taverner, p. a. 



The Origin of the Kirtland's Warbler. 



Ont. Nat. Sci. Bulletin, Guelph, no. 1, pp. 13-17. 



"S'OUNG, A. F. 



Bird Notes from Penetanguishene, Ontario. 

 Idem, pp. 38 and 39. 



louNG, Rev. C. J. 



The Thrushes of Eastern Ontt3,rio. 

 Ibidem, pp. 17-20. 



Fishes. 

 Cox, Dr. Philip. 



Extension of the list of New Brunswick Fishes. 



Proceedings of the Miramichi Natural History A.ss:ciation, no. \v, 

 pp. 41-44. 



Prince, Professor E. E. 



I. Canadian Sturgeon and Caviare Industries. 



II. Methods of Coarse Fish Extermination. 



Thirty-seventh Report of the Department of Marine and Fisheries, 

 1905. Special Appended Reports, pp. liii-lxxxii. 



Invebtebrata. 



BAKER, F. C. 



New species of Lymnœa. 



(In this paper a variety of L. stagnalls, from Michipicoten Bay, on 

 the north shore of Lake Superior, is described as var. higleyi, " in 

 honor of Profes.çor William K. Higley, Secretary of the Chicago 

 Academy of Sciences.") 

 The Nautilus, April, 1905, vol. xviii, no. 12. pp. 141 and 142. 



Dall, W. H. 



Alaska. Volume xiii. Land and Fresh Water Mollusks. 



(This important memoir includes a " summary of our present know- 

 ledge of the mollusks " of North America north of latitude 49° north, 

 "deduced in parlj from the literature, and in larger part from ma- 

 terial actually examined." It includes and practically almost super- 

 sedes the previous and scattered literature relating to the land and 



