THE NAUTILUS. 105 
Fulgur canaliculata Say. Not common, and smaller than those 
from more northern localities. 
Fulgur pyrum Dillw. Not common. . 
Nassa vibex Say. Common on the sand bars between tides. 
Nassa acuta Say. Rare. I doubt whether this is the same as N. 
ambigua Mont. This was the most common gasteropod in a deposit 
of shell brought up from forty feet below the surface in sinking the 
well of the Ponce de Leon Hotel. 
Nassa obsoleta Say. Common on the mud between tides. 
Nassa trivittata Say. A few on the ocean beach usually sea worn. 
Marginella apicina Menke. A few sea-worn specimens. 
Olivella mutica Say. Common on Bird Island beach. 
Olivella mutica Say var. nitidula Dillw. More plentiful than the 
typical. 
Oliva litterata Lam. Common. The specimens found here are 
longer and more cylindrical than those from the Gulf coast. 
GENERAL NOTES. 
ARION FOLIOLATUS GOULD, REDISCOVERED. You may announce 
in your Journal, if you wish, that Hemphill has sent one living 
Arion foliolatus Gld., from Olympia, Washington. One big fellow 
is over four inches long. It agrees perfectly with Gould’s descrip- 
tion and figures, though not quite so deep a red as the latter. It has 
the internal plate of Prolepis. The caudal mucus “ pit” is, very 
plainly seen. Jaw with over 22 ribs, wide, low, scarcely arcuate.— 
W. G. Bryney, Jn letter to Ed. 
Liwax Hewsronr Cooper 1x Los ANGELES County. In “ No- 
menclature and Cheek-list of North American Land Shells,” the 
Limax Hewstoni is not quoted south of San Francisco. I have 
often found a shelless snail at this place and these have been identi- 
fied by Dr. J. G. Cooper of California as the Limax (Amalia) 
Hewstoni—M. Burton, Williamson University, Los Angeles County, 
California. 
Kaysas Sueutrs. I have identified the following species of Land 
Shells from Sedgwick County, Kansas: Pupa contracta, corticaria, 
armifera, rupicola, fallax, Hyalina indentata and arborea; Helico- 
