324 Miscellaneous Intelligence. 
. Arranged by his own 
unaided hands, it bears throughout the impress of his untiring 
and conscientious labor, scrupulous accuracy, and orderly and 
sagacious mind. 
We cannot here undertake to recount his written contributions 
to science. ey are mainly contained in the Journal and Pro- 
than they are must be attributed, partly to the insidious disease 
nated his most use and honorable career. He leaves two . 
daughters, children of his first wife, and a youthful son by his ‘ 
second wife, who did not long survive the birth. A. G : 
Third Report of the Meteorological Office of the Dominion of Canada, for the 2 
fiscal year ending June 30th, 1873; by G. T. Kin ton, M. A., Superintendent. ae 
for the determinatio Astronomical Coordinates of t Sta- 
tions at Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory, and Colorado Springs, Colorado Territory, 
made during the years 1872 and 1873: Geographical and Geological Explorations 
and Surveys west of the Hundredth Meridi n; First Lieut. G. M. WHEELER, Corps 
of Engineers, in charge. Dr. J. Kampr and J. H. CLARK, civilian, astronomical 
i 1874 
pp. 4te. Wai gton, : 
Psyche. Organ of the Cambridge Entomological Club. Vol. i, No.1. 4 pages 
8vo. Cambridge, Mass., May, 1874. B. Pickmann Mann, Editor.—This first num- 
ber of Psyche contains a prospectus, a list of the English names of butterflies, 
the titles of a few recent works, a brief note on the discovery of a specimen of 
Herti, and another announcing that Hentz’s papers on spiders are to 
See rome by the Boston Society of Natural History, and 
