BULLETIN OF THE NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 
1G6 
Lectures (G. U. Hay, Chairman.) 
Seven regular meetings were held in the first part of 1908. 
The following are the dates of the meetings and subjects: 
1908. 
January 7 — (a) The Indian as a Potter. — Mr. William McIntosh. 
(6) Physiographic Evolution of the Upper St. John and Resti- 
gouche Basins. — Professor W. F. Ganong, Ph. D. 
January 21 — Annual Meeting. President’s Address. Report of Council 
Election of Officers. 
February 4— Enemies Protected and Friends Abused. — Mr. A. Gordon 
Leavitt. 
March 3 — Some Glimpses of England. — Dr. L. W. Bailey. 
April 7— Those Other Worlds — Are They Inhabited? — Mr. W. F. 
Burditt. 
May 5 — (a) When Birds Arrive; with Character Sketches. — Mr. J. W. 
Banks. 
(b) Natural History Notes about Prince Albert, Sask. — H. F 
Perkins, Ph. B. 
June 2 — Report of Delegates to Royal Society. Plans for Field Meetings 
Discussed. 
A course of Popular Lectures was given on Tuesday even- 
ings not occupied by the regular meetings of the Society. The 
dates of the meetings and subjects were as follows: 
1908. 
January 14 — With Drummond and His People. — Mr. E. A. Smith. 
January 28 — Theories of Medical Science. — Mr. H. A. Powell, K. C. 
February 11 — Sleeping Life. — Judge Willrich. 
February 18 — The Function of the Circulation in Tissue Metabolism. — Dr 
T. D. Walker. 
February 25 — The Life and Times of Haliburton. — Mr. Geo. A. Henderson. 
March 10 — Among English Hedgerows. — Dr. G. U. Hay. 
March 17 — The Nervous System. — Dr. Stewart Skinner. 
24 — The Real Northwest. — W. A. Hickson. 
March 
