78 IOWA ACADEMY OF SCIENCE Vol. XXV. 1918 



27. No. 2297. January 25, 1918, female from Alton, Iowa. 



28. No. 2299. January 25, 1918, male from Remsen, Iowa. 



29. Field. February 1, 1918, two killed at Smithland, Iowa. 



30. No. 3008. February 1, 1918, male from Kenneth, Minnesota. 



31. No. 3017. February 11, 1918, female from West Point, Ne- 

 braska. 



32. No February 16, 1918, maje from Oakes, North Dakota. 



(Spoiled.) 



33. No. 3036. February 19, 1918, male from Hornick, Iowa. 



34. No. 3037. February 19, 1918, from Schaller, Iowa. 



35. No. 3041. February 20, 1918, male from Renville, Minnesota. 



36. No. 3042. February 21, 1918, female from Zeeland, North Da- 

 kota. 



37. No. 3063. March 5, 1918, male from Bridgewater, South Da- 

 kota. 



38. No. 3065. March 13, 1918, female from Hinton, Iowa. 



39. No March 13, 1918, male from Hinton, Iowa. (Spoiled.) 



40. No. 3096. March 28, 1918, female from Remsen, Iowa. 



24. Hairj^ Woodpecker. Dryohates viUosus. Recorded in 

 about the usual numbers. Specimens obtained do not measure 

 up to leucomelas. 



25. Downy Woodpecker. Dryohates puhescens. Subspecies 

 media)). us. Recorded in about the usual numbers. 



26. Northern Flicker. Colaptes auraUis, subspecies hiteiis. 

 Noted with frequency and regularity throughout the Avinter; as 

 many as thirteen individuals were noted on December ZJiy ^Iv. 

 Allen. 



27. Prairie Horned Lark. Otocoris alpestris, subspecies 

 praticola. Latest fall record was November 5; was next re- 

 ported by Mr. Allen, who saw a flock numbering between sev- 

 enty-five and a hundred on the hills north of Sioux City on 

 February 3, 1918. 



28. ]\Iagpie. Pica pica, subspecies Imdsonia. One individ- 

 ual was observed about a mile east of ^Forningside on Februai-y 

 10, 1918, by Mr. Paul Jones. 



29. Bluejay. (Ujavocitta cristata: Notied wijth ifrequen.ey 

 throughout the winter. 



30. Crow. Corvxs hrachip-iiiDichos. Noted in small num- 

 bers throughout the winter. An albino crow came into Mr. 

 Anderson's haiids through the Sioux City Robe and Tanning 

 Company in the latter part of December (having been killed 

 at Allen, Nebraska), but it Avas too far gone to mount. 



