Kendall: Fishes of Maine. 33 
1912 incl.) ; St. Croix system and Grand Lake (Rathbun & 
Wakeham, 1897); Presumpscot River (Kendall coll., 1898) ; 
Sebago Lake, Presumpscot River, Thomas Pond and a tribu- 
tary of Cobbosseecontee Lake (Kendall coll., 1899a); Sebago 
Lake, Thomas and Panther Ponds, and Presumpscot River 
(Smith, 1900); Lake Auburn (Merrill coll., 1899) ; Cobbos- 
seecontee Lake (Smith, 1901); Sebec Lake (Smith, 1902) ; 
Songo and Presumpscot Rivers, and Sebago Lake (Kendall 
coll., 1901a); Cross Lake Thoroughfare (Kendall & Gould 
coll., 1901); Presumpscot River (Kendall coll., 1902 and 
1903); Lunkasoos Lake (Kendall & Gould coll., 1902) ; 
Sebago Lake, Presumpscot River, Green Lake, Branch Pond, 
Floods Pond, Square Lake, Cross Lake and Eagle Lake Thor- 
oughfares, Oquossuc Lake, Rangeley and Kennebago Streams 
(Kendall coll., 1903); many lakes (Atkins coll., 1903) ; 
Moose Pond and Sebasticook River (Bowman coll., 1904) ; 
Pierce Pond (Kendall coll., 1904); Eagle Lakes (Evermann, 
1905); Umbagog Lake (Kendall coll., 1905). 
50. Salvelinus namayeush ( Walbauwm). “ToGur”; 
“LAKE TROUT’; “LAKER”’; “SALMON Trout’; “TOuULADI’. 
Range.—Widely distributed, being recorded from Great 
Lakes, northern New York, New Hampshire and Maine, the 
head waters of Columbia and Frazer Rivers, streams of Van- 
couver Island and north to the Arctic Circle. 
MAINE.—In all our larger lakes and ponds ( Williamson, 
1832, and Hamlin, 1853 [?] and 1903); Maine (Perley, 1852, 
Me. F. C. Report, 1869, 1875, 1878, 1905, 1909, 1911 and 
1913, and Kendall, 1904 and 1908); many lakes of Maine, 
Eagle Lakes at head of Fish River, St. Croix Grand Lake and 
Tunk Lakes (Holmes, 1862); Thompson’s Pond [?] (Put- 
nam, 1866a); Grand Lake (Suckley, 1873): Tunk Lakes, 
Thompson’s Pond, Lakes of the Upper Kennebec, Penobscot 
and St. John Rivers and the St. Croix system, and Wilton 
3 
