THE OOLOGIST. 



107 



Of course the epjgs look like other 

 Crow's epgs, but much smaller, ncd at 

 times a small American Crow and .-i 

 large fish Crow will look just alike, 

 and measurement alone will not identify 

 them. 



The last egg laid is sometimes beauti- 

 fully marked. 



American Osfrey— This well known 

 bird is fast decreasing in South Jersey, 

 especially around the brackish waters. 

 I see no accountable cause for this, ex- 

 cepting every year several old dead 

 limbs break off with the nests. 



Every set a collector gets of this bird 

 he well earns First, he generally has 

 a hard tree to climb, then a dead limb 

 to go out on, and when that point is 

 reached he strains every nerve to reach 

 over the nests, which are sometimes five 

 feet high. About that time out comes a 

 farmer and cries ' ut, ' come down out' 

 of that tree and leave them Hawks 

 alone." 



I have never known the old birds to 

 strike, but they have come very near 

 my head. 



They lay from two to four eggs. 

 Three is the usual number and four I 

 consider very rare. I have collected 

 eggs for eleven years and have only 

 found three sets with four. A series of 

 these eggs are the prettiest specimens 

 in a collector's cabinet. I can say right 

 here that I never saw the eggs in the 

 same set of like appearance. One egg 

 I have in my collection is nearly un- 

 spotted with a cream ground. 



Wm. B. Crispen, 

 Salem, N. J. 



New Books. 



Mr. Chupes and Miss Jenny. The 

 Life Story of Two Robins. By Effie 

 Bignell, the Baker & Taylor Co., 250p, 

 12mo. cloth, illustrated, 8 full page 

 photo engraving plates, $1 00. 



1 he captive history of two robins who 

 became at first the involuntary com- 



panions of human kind. Later love 

 and sympathy made them unwilling to 

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 reac'er can scaicely believe the inci- 

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"No sweeter, more sympathetic story 

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 tle book Rudyard Kipling .-.nd Seton- 

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 Mrs. Bignell's is a worthy companion 

 of the masterpieces of these famous 

 authors." — Dr. David Murray. 



Taxidermy. Comprising the Skin- 

 ning, Stuffing and Mountiugr of Birds, 

 Mammals and Fish. Paul N. Hasluck, 

 Crts-iell & Company, New York and 

 London. l6mo, cloth, illustrated with 

 108 tig, 40c. 



In these 160 pages is included clear 

 and succinct directions in the art of pre- 

 paring and preserving the .'■kins of 

 birds, mammals and fish, and of stuff- 

 ing and mounting them so as to impart 

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 insects, a chapter on polishing and 

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 A large amount of valuable informa- 

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 and over 100 illustrations give addition- 

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 published. 



With the Wild Flowers. From 

 Pussy-willow to Thistle-down. A rural 

 ch onicle of our fiower friends and foes, 

 describing them under thfir familiar 

 English names Netv and revised edi- 

 tion By Maud Going (E M Hardinge), 

 The Baker and Taylor Compuny, New 

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 illustrations, $1 00 



A delightful vo ume giving flower 

 facts, rather than mere names and 

 classifications. It is written by a true 



