The Oologist. 



VOL. XVI. NO. 6-7 ALBION, N. Y., JUNE JULY, 1899. Whole No. 155-6 



The Oologist. 



A Monthly Publication Devoted to 



OOLOGY, ORNITHOLOGY AND 

 TAXIDERMY. 



PRANK H. LATTIN, Editor and Publisher, 

 ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and Items of Interest to the 

 student of Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

 from all. 



T ERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION : 



Single subscription 50c per annum 



Sample copies 5c each 



The above rates Include payment of postage. 



Each subscriber Is given a card good for a 

 Want, Exchange or B'or Sal« Notice. (This card 

 Is redeemable at any time within one year from 

 date thereon.) 



Subscriptions can begin with any number. 

 Back numbers of the OoLOGisr can be furnished 

 at reasonable rates. Sena stamp for descrip- 

 tions and prices. 



l»~Kemember that the publisher must be noil 

 fled by letter when a subscriber wishes his paper 

 stopped, an*! all arrearages must be paid. 



ADVERTISING RATES: 



5 cents per nonpareil line each insertion. 



12 lines in every Inch. Seven Inches in a col- 

 lunn, and two columns to the page. 



Nothing Inserted for less than 2 5 cents. No 

 "special rates," 6 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; loo lines, $5.00; 1000 lines, 

 $50.00. "Trade" (other than cash) advertise- 

 ments will be accepted by special arrangement 

 only and at rates from double to five times cash 

 rates. Due Bills and Cards payable in advertis- 

 ing will be honored only at regular rates In force 

 at the date ol issuance of said bill or card. 



Remittances should be made by Draft, Express 

 or PostolQce Money Order, Registered Letter or 

 Postal Note. Unused U. S . Postage Stamps of 

 any denomination will be accepted for sums un- 

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 payable and address all subscriptions and com- 

 munications to FRANK H. LATTIN. 



Albion, Orleans Co., N. Y. 



' THC *0«T OTFH C AT ALftKMl, 



Aa •COO«(>-CcASS MATTEH. 



We want some new Mss. to use in the 

 05LOGIST— illustrated articles of from 

 500 to 1,000 words preferred. For the 

 best article received by August 20th we 

 will give H new copy of Davie's "Art in 

 the Methods of Taxidermy." In addi- 

 tion an Emeu's egg — a beautiful select- 



ed specimen— will be presented the 

 writer of eack accepted article. 



An apology may be due our readers 

 for the intrusion of the halftone in this 

 month's issue — make up one to suit 

 yourself and we'll O. K. it. One of the 

 following, however, may suggest itself 

 as appropriately titling the case: — 

 Hypertr )phied condition of the origi- 

 nal's bump of egotism; Just for "auld 

 acquaintance" sake — in many cases ex- 

 tending from the early 80's; A resurrec- 

 tion — after a lapse of nearly four years, 

 passed in oblivion or "innoccuous des- 

 uetude'' as far as the just demands of 

 the Oologist and its subscribers were 

 concerned. "Pay your money [for a 

 year's subscription lo the Oologist] and 

 take your choice," it's immaterial to us 

 —as long as we get the subscription. 



In the future the Oologist will be 

 sort of a "Review of Reviews" of mat- 

 ters Ornithological and will contain an 

 Index Ornithologicus of all articles 

 published during the preceeding month. 

 The scheme begins with this issue and 

 all bonks relating to Ornithology and 

 the Natural Sciences are briefly men- 

 tioned. An extended notice of the 

 more important ones will be made in 

 August issue. The "Index" of all Or- 

 nithological articles appearing in Amer- 

 ican periodicals since January 1 is also 

 printed in this issue — this index, how- 

 ever, is incomplete, owing to the fact 

 that our files are broken in some in- 

 stances and that two or three important 

 publications are not indexed at all — 

 these discrepancies we hope to remedy 

 in our next issue. This new feature is 

 really an exceedingly valuable one, and 

 one which we trust will be appreciated 

 by t he readers of the Oologist. 



