THE. AUSTRALIAN NATURALIST. : 91 
OUR ROLL OF HONOR. 
Amongst the names of the heroes who have fallen in 
the field of battle, fighting for us and for the cause of 
righteousness and justice, occurs that of Sergeant Oscar 
A. Rainbow, second son of our friend and colleague, Mr. 
W. J. Rainbow and Mrs. Rainbow, who was killed in action 
at the Dardanelles on May 24th. 
Our deepest sympathy goes out to the stricken parents, 
and we offer our tribute of gratitude, admiration, and 
respect to the memory of their brave son. 
As announced by the President at last meeting, our 
fellow member, Sergeant Laseron, and a son of Mr C. 
J. White have been wounded at the front. All of us 
wish them a speedy recovery and return to the scene of 
action. 
THE LATE MR, F. MAUSON BAILEY. 
Just as we go to press we note with regret the death 
of Mr. F. Mauson Bailey, the veteran Queensland botan- 
ist, in his 89th year. 
NOTES AND COMMENTS. 
Tue RANGE Or A SEA Birp.—One of our members (Mr. 
HK. J. Bickford), during a voyage from Brisbane, caught a 
Petrel, which flew on board the ship, and sent it to me 
for identification. It proved to be Wilson’s Storm Petrel 
(Oceanites oceanicus). This handsome little bird, no lar- 
ger than a swift, has wings wonderfully adapted for 
flight. It is called in Lucas and le Souef’s ‘‘Birds of Aus- 
tralia’’ the Yellow-Webbed Storm Petrel, and its range is 
given as over the Southern and Pacific Oceans to the coast 
of Labrador, in the Atlantic. Mr. Bassett-Hull, to whom I 
gave the specimen, informs me that members of the Maw- 
son Antarctic Expedition found it breeding in Adelie 
Land. 
—Walter W. Froggatt. 
