16S 
BULLETIN OF THE NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 
1909. 
February 2 — (a) Stone Craft of the New Brunswick Indians; (6) Preliminary 
List of the Beetles of New Brunswick. — Mr. William 
McIntosh. 
March 2 — Early Spring Flowers of England and Eastern Canada. — G. U. 
Hay, D. Sc. 
April 6 — (a) Physical Evolution of Acadia; Continental Phase. (6) 
Phosphate Beds in South Carolina and New Brunswick. — 
G. F. Matthew, D. Sc. 
May 4 — (a) Mines and Mining; (6) History of Currie’s Mountain, 
(read by title) — L. A. Bailey, Ph. D. 
June 1 — Report of Delegate to Royal Society. Outline of Summer’s 
Work Discussed. 
The popular lectures, with the dates and subjects for the 
winter of 1909, were as follows : 
1909. 
January 12 — Some Impressions of a Visit to Europe. — L. W. Bailey, Ph. D. 
January 19 — French and English Colonization in North America. — W. 
Frank Hatheway, M. P. P. 
January 26 — The Mechanical and Vital Elements in the Intellectual Life. — 
Professor W. W. Andrews, LL. D. 
February 9 — Darwin Centenary. Introductory Paper by Mr. James A. 
Estey. Discussion. 
February 16 — The Credulity of Science. — Geo. G. Melvin, M. D. 
February 23 — Health and How to Preserve it. — Stewart Skinner, M. D. 
March 9 — The Relation of Mathematics to the Other Sciences. — Chan- 
cellor C. C. Jones, LL. D. 
March 16 — Vacat on Rambles in England and Scotland. — Rev. D. 
Hutchinson, M. A. 
March 23 — The Problem of Transportation. — Mr. W. S. Fisher. 
April 6 — The Approaching Return of Halley’s Comet. — Mr. W. F. 
Burditt. 
