102 
JOUKNAL OF MAMMALOGY 
Hamlyn, John D. Fate of the Addo elephants. Hamlyn’s Menagerie Mag., 
vol. 5, no. 4, pp. 28-30. August, 1919. (Tells of plans being made for the 
extermination of the last remaining herd of South African elephants, 150 to 
200 in number. The October number of Hamlyn’s Magazine gives further 
details of methods used in the killing of these animals.) 
Hamlyn, John D. The Addo Bush elephants. Hamlyn’s Menagerie Mag., vol. 
5, no. 7, pp. 51-55, figs. 1-4. November, 1919. (Protests against the exter- 
mination of this last herd of South African elephants.) 
Harmer, S. F. Subant arctic whales and whaling. Abstract, Weekly Evening 
Meeting (May 16, 1919), Roy. Inst. Great Britain, pp. 1-5. 1919. 
Hinton, Martin A. C. Notes on the genus Cricetomys, with descriptions of 
four new forms. Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 9, vol. 4, pp. 282-289. October, 
1919. (C. gambianus of authors said to include at least four good species; 
new forms described from Sudan, Belgian Congo, Zanzibar, and Nigeria.) 
Hollister, N. Report on the National Zoological Park. Appendix, Rep. Secy. 
Smithsonian Inst., 1919, pp. 68-81. December, 1919. (On June 30, 1919, the 
collection contained 528 mammals, of 156 species. Among the more unusual 
species for zoological park collections are the Apache grizzly, glacier bear, 
brown hyena, African cheetah. Rocky Mountain and Arizona mountain 
sheep, African and Sumatran elephants.) 
Hornaday, W. T. Rational use of game animals. Reprinted from Wild Life; 
its Conservation and Protection, of the Commission of Conservation, Canada, 
pp. 1-11. 1919. (On the necessity for protection of game in the north, 
with special reference to the great game of Alaska; with suggestions for 
legislation.) 
Howell, A. Brazier. A new cotton rat from Arizona. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- 
ington, vol. 32, pp. 161-162. September 30, 1919. (Describes Sigmodon 
hispidus cienegce from Pima County.) 
Kloss, C. Boden. See Robinson, Herbert C., and C. Boden Kloss. 
Kollmann, Max. Sur la presence de Pos planum chez les L^murines. Bull. 
Mus d’Hist. nat., 1919, no. 5, pp. 1-3. 1919. 
Lomen, Carl J. The camel of the frozen desert. Nat. Geog. Mag., vol. 36, 
pp. 539-556, with 19 illustrations. December, 1919. (An account of the 
introduced reindeer in Alaska. The selection of such a misleading and 
inappropriate title for this article is unfortunate.) 
Lonnberg, Einar. Remarks on some South American Canidae. Arkiv for 
Zoologi, vol. 12, no. 13, pp. 1-18; figs. 1-4. 1919. (On the affinities of Pseuda- 
lopex lycoides Philippi and the dog of the Yaghan Indians, Tierra del Fuego.) 
Lord, Clive E. See Scott, H. H., and Clive E. Lord. 
Miller, Gerrit S., Jr. Bibliography, 1888-1918. Report VII of the Class of 
Harvard 1894, pp. 588-599. 1919. (Complete list of published papers, the 
majority of which relate to mammals.) 
Mills, Enos A. The grizzly, our greatest wild animal. 289 pp., 10 plates. 
Houghton, Mifflin and Co., Boston and N. Y., the Riverside Press, Cam- 
bridge. September, 1919. 
Nelson, E. W. Report of chief of Bureau of Biological Survey. Pp. 1-24. 
November, 1919. (For year ending June 30, 1919. The federal big game 
reservations in charge of the bureau contained on this date 368 bison, 274 elk, 
54 antelopes, and 21 deer.) 
