The Oologist. 



VOL. XVII. NO. 6. 



ALBION, N. Y., JUNE, 1900. 



Whole No. 167 



The Oologist. 



A Monthly Publication Devoted to 



OOLOGY, ORNITHOLOGY AND 

 TAXIDERMY. 



FRANK H. LATTIN, Editor and Publisher, 

 ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and Items of Interest to the 

 student of Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

 Irom all. 



TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: 



Single subscription 50c p6r annum 



Sample copies 5c each 



The above rates Include payment of postage. 



Each subscriber Is given a card good for a 

 Want, Exchange or For Sale Notice. (This card 

 Is redeemable at any time within one year from 

 date thereon.) 



Subscriptions can begin with any number. 

 Back numbers of the Oologist can be furnished 

 at reasonable rates. Send stamp for descrip- 

 tions and prices. 



^?"Remember that the publisher must be notl 

 fled by letter when a subscriber wishes his paper 

 stopped, and all arrearages must be paid. 



ADVERTISING RATES : 



6 cents per nonpareil line each Insertion. 



12 lines In every inch. Seven Inches in a col- 

 tunn, and two columns to the page. 



Nothing inserted for less than 25 cents. No 

 "special rates," 5 cents per line is "net," "rock 

 bottom," "inside," "spot cash" rate from which 

 there is no deviation and no commission to 

 agents. If you wish to use 5 lines or less space 

 it will cost you 25 cents; 100 lines, $5.00; lOOO lines, 

 $60.00. "Trade" (other than cash) advertise- 

 ments wUl be accepted by special arrangement 

 only and at rates from double to Ave times cash 

 rates. Due Bills and Cards payable in advertis- 

 ing win be honored only at regular rates in force 

 at the date of issuance of said bill or card. 



Remittances should be made by Draft, Express 

 or Postofflce Money Order, Registered Letter or 

 Postal Note. Unused U. S . Postage Stamps of 

 any denomination wUl be accepted for sums un- 

 der one dallar. Make Money Orders and Drafts 

 payable and address all subscriptions and com- 

 munications to FRANK H. LATTIN, 



Albion, Orleans Co., N. Y. 



-^^ FtTfT Srr-Kt. »T MBTTsa, 



M efCO«0-<^JW;'t HATTTIl. 



Nesting- Materials. 



Continued from last month. 



The ProthonotaryWarbler is an excep- 

 tion to the family by building in a cav- 

 ity in a stump, and generally near or 

 more often over the water. This is a 



strange exception, and a radical change 

 from the Warbler ways, but we will find 

 that there are many variations in habit 

 in all the families of birds, and it may 

 be added that these variations lend a 

 charm to the study. There are no hum- 

 drum features in the study of nature. 

 There are constant features of change, 

 and surprises await us constantly as we 

 wander on in our researches. Most of 

 the Warblers make their nests of tine 

 materials, grass, rootlets, strippiogs 

 from wood stalks and bark, and lining 

 with soft cottony substances Some, as 

 the Redstart and Blackburnan Warb- 

 lers construct durable homes in the 

 crotches of trees, the latter sometimes 

 placing its nest as much as fifty feet 

 from the ground. Others, as the Gold- 

 en-wing Warbler.construct loosely built 

 nests and on or near the ground in 

 shoots or grass. It is almost a rule that 

 these nests which are placed on the 

 ground are poor in comparison with 

 those which are situated in the branches. 

 This is simply a matter of requirement. 

 Many of the Sparrows employ grass 

 in the construction of their nests and I 

 know several that rarely use anything 

 else. Others, and more particularly the 

 larger ones, use twigs, roots and other 

 materials in combination, as I have 

 found the nest of the Rose-breasted 

 Grosbeak, though this species frequent- 

 ly constructs such a thin affair that the 

 eggs may be seen and counted through 

 the bottom of the nest. The Chipping 

 Sparrow is a well known specialist in 

 its use of the long hair from horse tails, 

 and so well known in this habit that the 

 little bird is called the Hair bird. This 

 Sparrow makes its home near to the 

 abode of man, and thus has the power 

 to gratify its penchant for horse hair, 

 and in all of my trips I have only met 



