THE OOLOGIST 



121 



Bartraniian Sandpiper. 



Spotted Sandpiper. 



Killdeer. 



Bob-white. 



Mourning Dove. 



Marsh Hawk. 



Cooper's Hawk. 



Red-tailed Hawk. 



Sparrow Hawk in Shiloali Park In 



heart of the city. 

 Yellow-billed Cuckoo? 

 Black-billed Cuckoo. 

 Belted Kingfisher. 

 Downy Woodpecker. 

 Red-headed Woodpecker. 

 Flicker. 

 Whip-])Oor-will. 

 Night Hawk. 



Ruby-throated Flummiiigbird. 

 Kingbird. 



Crested Flycatcher. 

 Phoebe. 

 Wood Pewee. 

 Prairie Horned Lark. 

 Bobolink. 

 Cowbird. 



Red-winged Blackbird. 

 Meadowlark. 

 Baltimore Oriole. 

 American Goldfinch. 

 Vesi)er Sparrow. 

 Chipping Sparrow. 

 Field Sparrow. 

 Song Sparrow. 

 Red-eyed Towhee. 

 Indigo Bunting. 

 Scarlet Tanager. 

 Purple Martin. 

 Red-eyed Vireo. 

 Yellow Warbler. 

 Oven Bird. 

 Catbird. 



Brown Thrasher. 

 House Wren. 

 Short-billed Marsh Wren. 

 Long-billed Marsh Wren. 

 White Breasted Nuthatch. 

 American Robin. 

 Eastern Bluebird. 



Resident: — 



Pinnated Grouse. 



Ruffed Grouse. 



Screech Owl. 



Blue Jay. 



American Crow. 



Black-capped Chickadee. 



American Woodcock. 



Sharp-shinned Hawk? 

 Birds Seen: — 



Hairy Woodpecker. 



Chimney Swift? 



Orchard Oriole. 



Bronzed Crackle. 



Purple Grackle. 



White-throated S])arrow. 



Slate-colored Junco. 



Rose-breasted Grosbeak. 



Cliff Swallow? 



Cedar Waxwing. 



White-rumped Shrike. 



American Redstart? 



2 or 3 species of Gulls on Lake Mich- 

 igan not near enough to deter- 

 mine. 



Making in all seventy-eight species, 

 and several others too far out on 

 Lake Michigan to be able to decide 

 what they were. 



Since Dr. Dowie's death, the rifle 

 and air gun have done a deal of mis- 

 chief among the animals and birds, 

 and the city is not what it once was 

 for the birds, animals, flowers, trees 

 and shrubs. 



GEORGE W. H. VOS BURGH. 



Notes on August Birds at Bloomfield 

 In Northern New Jersey. 

 On August 7, 1910, 1 found a pair of 

 Blue-winged Yellow Warblers, short- 

 ly after sunrise, in a Wild Honey- 

 suckle thicket at Bloomfield. They 

 were in company with a female Red- 

 start. The trio were found at least 

 a dozen times throughout the day 

 near where discovered. They were 

 again found on the 8th and then dis- 



