Kendall: Fishes of Maine. 187 
1905. Wi~naRp, Capt. BENJAMIN J. 
Captain Ben’s Book. A Record of the things which Hap- 
pened to Captain Benjamin J. Willard, Pilot and Stevedore, 
During some Sixty Years on Sea and Land, As Related by 
Himself. 
Portland, Me., Lakeside Press, 1905. 
Contains numerous notes and two illustrations on fisbing 
for sport and for profit, at points between Boon Island and 
Mt. Desert, with remarks and descriptions of methods. 
The fishes mentioned are “Blue Shark” [Jswrus punctatus], 
“Dusky or Man-eater Shark” [ Carcharinus obscurus], “Trout” 
[Salvelinus fontinalis], “Swordfish” [Xiphias gladius], “Sun- 
fish” [Mola mola], and ‘Codfish” [ Gadus callarias]. 
The capture of the dusky shark (taken outside of Cod 
Ledge during the summer of 1864) is fully given at pages 
97-99. Willard states that it was identified by Mr. Charles 
[B.] Fuller, cabinet keeper of the Portland Society of Nat- 
ural History, and that the shark was given to that Society 
to be mounted, where it was destroyed “at the time of the 
big fire,” which occurred July 4, 1866. 
1906-1912. Kendall, W. C. 
Collection made in the Presumpscot River or Sebago Lake 
basin. 
Additional species to preceding lists were Cowestus plumbens 
again, Pungitius pungitius, Cottus aractlis. 
1906. Norton, A. H. 
Collected on Old Orchard beach a specimen in the post- 
larval stage of Leptocephalus conger. 
1907. Bowdoin College. 
Echeneis naucrates. A specimen taken in a herring weir 
at Slen’s Island, Seal Harbor, St. George (Knox Co., Me.), 
