770 MICHIGAN BIRD LIFE. 



Sager, Abraham. — 1. Report of Dr. Abraham Sager, Zoologist of Geolog- 

 ical Survey. House Documents of the State of Mich., An. Sess., 1839, 

 410-421. 



Sanderson, E. Dwight.- — 1. The Economic Value of the White-bellied 

 Nuthatch and Black-capped Chickadee. Auk, XV, 1898, 144-155. Record 

 of food of twenty-three nuthatches in winter and eleven in early spring, 

 and of nineteen chickadees in winter and nine in spring. 



Satterlee, James.- — 1. The Cherry Bird Condemned. Rep. State Horti- 

 cultural Society, 1886, 97. 2. Our Friends, the Birds. Report of Mich. 

 Pomological Society, 1887, 115. 



Saunders, WilUam. — 1. Condemns the Robin, Cherry Bird and English 

 Sparrow. Report of Mich. Horticultural Society, 1883, 164. 



Schoolcraft, Henry R.- — 1. A Supposed New Bird. Historical and 

 Scientific Sketches of Michigan, 1834. The Evening Grosbeak. 



Selous, Percy. — 1. Occasional Bird Notes in and Around Greenville. 

 Bull Mich. Orn. Club, I, 1897, 13. Notes on Pine Grosbeak, Northern 

 Shrike, and Bittern. 2. The Evening Grosbeak Again. Ibid, 25. 

 Records Evening Grosbeaks and Pine Grosbeaks March 21 and 24, at 

 Greenville, Mich. 3. Greenville Notes. Ibid, 45. Records Pine Siskins 

 at Greenville, May 25th; also capture of Black-belUed Plover, August 

 16, with notes on other species. 4. Occasional Bird Notes. Ibid, II, 

 1898, 20. Records White-winged Scoter on the river at Greenville, March 

 14, 1898, with other notes. 5. The Rapid Disappearance of our Birds of 

 Prey and the Result which must follow. Ibid, 32-33. 6. Greenville 

 Notes. Ibid, 37. Relate to Rough-legged Hawk, Hummingbird, Snow 

 Geese, Carolina Rail, Nighthawk, etc. 7. Long-tailed Duck at Greenville 

 Ibid, 40. One taken January 31. 8. Greenville Notes. Ibid, III, 1899, 

 7. Mentions Quail, Northern Shrike, Bohemian Waxwing, Old-squaw, 

 Great Blue Heron, Snow Goose, and others. 



Shuver, F. S.— 1. Van Buren County Notes. Bull. Mich. Orn. Club, 



II, 1898, 15-17. Valuable notes on the Raven, Cardinal, Wild Turkey, 

 Pileated Woodpecker, and more common birds. 2. Dickcissel in Van 

 Buren County. Ibid, III, 1899, 18. Said to be very common in suitable 

 localities. 



Slayton, C. M.— 1. Heronry in Kent County. Bull. Mich. Orn. Club, 



III, 1899, p. 18. 



Smith, Frank. — 1. An Unusual Flight of Sparrow Hawks in Michigan 

 in 1904. Bull. Mich. Orn. Club, V, 1904, 77-78. At Macatawa, Ottawa 

 Co., August 30, 1904. 2. A Migration Fhght of Purple Martins in Mich- 

 igan in the Summer of 1905. Wilson Bull., XX, 1908, 41-43. 



Smith, W. A.— 1. The Birds Our Friends. Report Mich. State Horti- 

 cultural Society, 1885, 249. 



Spicer, Samuel. Notes from Goodrich, Genesee County, Michigan. 

 Ornithologist and Oologist, XIV, 1889, 43. 



Steere, Dr. J. B. — 1. Migration of Birds. Report of State Pomological 

 Society, 1880, 115-124. Seven pages given to migration and habits, 

 followed by Hsts of birds of the state grouped under five heads, as follows: 

 List A, Birds Resident in Michigan— 33 species. List B, Birds nesting 

 in Michigan and Wintering to the South — 110 species. List C, Birds 

 Wintering to the South of Michigan and Nesting to the North, being only 

 known in the state as migrants — 68 species. List D, Winter Visitors 

 but not Summer Residents in Michigan — 18 species. List E — Probably 

 on the Great Lakes in Winter— 36 species. The total number of species 



