Geology and Mineralogy. 103 



Guide Books. — No. 5. Excursions in the Western Peninsula 

 of Ontario and Manitoulin Island. Pp. 108 ; with numerous illus- 

 trations. 



No. 8. Parts I, II and III. Transcontinental Excursion Cl. 

 Toronto to Victoria and return via Canadian Pacific and Cana- 

 dian Northern Railways. Pp. 101 ; 105-274 ; 277-386 ; with 

 illustrations. 1913. 



No. 9. Transcontinental Excursion C2. Toronto to Victoria 

 and return via Canadian Pacific, Grand Trunk Pacific, and 

 National Transcontinental Railways. Pp. 164, with illustrations. 



No. 10. Excursions in Northern British Columbia and Yukon 

 Territory and along the North Pacific Coast. Pp. 179. 1913. 



Memoirs. — No. 18 E. Bathurst District, New Brunswick ; by 

 G. A. Young. Pp. 96 ; 1 fig., 4 maps. 



No. 25. Report on the Clay and Shale Deposits of the West- 

 ern Provinces (Part II) : by Heinrich Ries and Joseph Keeler. 

 Pp. 99 ; 40 pis., 6 figs. 



No. 26. Geology and Mineral Deposits of the Tulameen Dis- 

 trict, B. C; by Charles Camsell. Pp. viii, 188 ; with 33 pis., 

 2 figs., 4 maps. 



No. 31. Wheaton District, Yukon Territory ; by D. D. 

 Cairnes. Pp. x, 153 ; 10 figs. 



No. 36. Geology of the Victoria and Saanich Map-areas, Van- 

 couver Island, B. C. ; by Charles H. Clapp, 1913. Pp. 143 ; 18 

 pis., 6 figs., 4 maps (not yet published). 



No. 44. Clay and Shale Deposits of New Brunswick ; by J. 

 Keele, 1914. Pp. 94 ; 16 pis., 7 figs., 1 map. 



No 48. Some myths and tales of the Ojibwa of Southeastern 

 Ontario ; collected by Paul Radin, 1914. Pp. 83. 



Also the following maps : 43A. — Sooke Sheet, Vancouver 

 Island, British Columbia. Topography. 98A. — Rainy Lake, 

 Rainy River district, Ontario. Geology. 



9. A New Geologic Map of the State of JVew Jersey. — It is 

 announced by the State Geologist, H. B. Kummel, that a new 

 geologic map of New Jersey has recently been issued ; the pre- 

 ceding one bore the date of 1888. The new map shows in 

 colors the location of the different varieties of rock, clay, sand, 

 etc., within the State and the various periods of geologic history 

 to which they belong. By means of eighteen different colors 

 and various patterns of dots and lines, fifty-seven different rock 

 formations are distinctly represented and their location shown ; 

 in the earlier map only twenty-four formations were indicated. 

 The scale is about 4 miles to an inch, sufficiently large to permit 

 considerable detail ; the size is 2X4 feet. The compilation has 

 been done by Prof. J. Volney Lewis, of Rutgers College, and the 

 State Geologist, from published folios and manuscript data in 

 the possession of the Survey. Copies can be obtained of the 

 State Geologist, Trenton, N. J., on payment of 50 cents. 



10. Bulletin of the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, Dr. T. 

 A. Jaggar, Jr., Director. — A weekly bulletin is now being issued 



