774 
Rhipidura sauli Bourns & Worcester. (PI. V.) 
Three specimens of Saul’s fantailed flycatcher. 
Zeocephus rufus (Gray). 
Two pairs of the rufous flycatcher. 
Artamides mindorensis Stecre. 
Four specimens. 
Lalage niger (Forster). 
One specimen, 
lole cinereiceps Bourns & Worcester, 
Twenty-one specimens of this fine species from Badajos, August 15 
to September 29. 
Pycnonotus goiavier (Scop.). 
A male. 
Copsychus mindanensis ((Gm.). 
An adult male from Badajos, September 4; two full-fledged young 
from the same locality, September 8. The adult male has bill and tail 
considerably longer than a male from Quisao, Luzon. The young differs 
from the adult as follows: 
Head, neck, and back dull black; chin, throat, and forebreast dull black with 
a whitish spot on each feather; a few glossy, blue-black feathers of the adult 
plumage on breast, back, and rump. 
A set of three eggs from Badajos, August 15, have the following 
characteristics : 
Pale green, very heavily blotched with dark lavender and olive-brown; spots 
crowded about the larger end and nearly covering the ground color. Measure- 
ments in inches: 0.92 by 0.70; 0.92 by 0.70; 0.94 by 0.70, 
Megalurus ruficeps ‘Tweed. 
Three specimens. 
Acanthipnewate borealis (Blas.). 
One specimen from Badajos, September 13. 
Artamus leucorhynchus (Linn.). 
A female. 
Otomela lucionensis (Linn. ). 
Four specimens of the Luzon shrike from Badajos. This and previous 
records of O. luctonensis made by me are not satisfactory, as many of 
the specimens are, without doubt, something else. Birds with the upper 
parts earthy brown and the frontal half of the head grayish white, may 
be referred with confidence to O. /ucionensis. However, there are other 
specimens with no white frontal band and with the upper parts strongly 
cinnamon-brown or even rufous, these can not be named without com- 
parison with well-determined material. Specimens from the following 
localities are believed. to be true O. lucionensis: 
Lamao, Bataan Province, and Manila, Luzon, Cuyo, Mindoro, Lubang, and 
Cagayancillo. 
