226 CONNECTICUT GEOL. AND NAT. HIST. SURVEY. [Bllll. 



1893. Large Eggs of the Field Sparrow. — 0. and 0., 

 xviii, 6, p. 95. 



Hayden, Randolph Lawrence. 



1901. Whip-poor-will. — Am. Ornith., i, 9, p. 186. 



Henshaw, Henry W. 



1910. Report of the Chief of the Biological Survey for 

 1910. — U. S. Dept. Agriculture. 



1912. Report of the Chief of the Biological Survey for 



1912. — U. S. Dept. Agriculture. 



191 3. Federal Law for the Protection of Migratory Birds. 



— U. S. Dept Agriculture, Biol. Surv. 



Hill, James H. 



1902. Connecticut Bird Notes. — Auk, xix, I, p. 93. 



Hoag, Benjamin. 



1897. Are Green Eggs of the Red-tailed Hawk Rare? — 

 Osprey, i, 6, p. 78. 



Hoffman, Ralph. 



1904. A Guide to the Birds of New England and Eastern 

 New York. 



Holbrook, Judge S. T. 



1881. Notes from Norwich, Conn. — O. and 0., vi, 5, pp. 



3°"3 2 - 



Honeywill, Alfred W., Jr. 



1907. Photograph of a Saw-whet Owl at New Haven. — 

 Bird-Lore, ix, 1, p. 37. 



1907. Prairie Horned Larks in Connecticut. — Bird-Lore, 



ix, 4, p. 174. 



1908. List of the Birds of the New Haven Region.— New 



Haven Bird Club, Bull. 1. 



Hornaday, William T, Sc.D. 



1913. Our Vanishing Wild Life. 



Howe, Reginald Heber, Jr. 



1899. The Hooded Warbler at Montville, Conn.— Auk, 



xvi, 4, p. 360. 



1900. Rough-winged Swallow Breeding in Connecticut, 



and other Notes. — Auk, xvii, 4, p. 389. 



