28 



THE OOLOGIST 



Purple Crackle. Six eggs. April 29, 

 1906. Pensauhen, Camden County, 

 N. J. (two sets); May 7, 1906. Frank- 

 ford, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Chipping Sparrow. Five eggs. May 

 19, 1906. Bustleton, Philadelphia, Pa. 

 (See Oologist, 1914, p. 231). 



Field Sparrow. Five eggs. May 20, 

 1909. Delair, Camden County, N J.. 

 June 3, 1912. Bustleton, Philadelphia, 

 Pa. (See Oologist, 1914, p. 231;. 



Indigo Bunting. Five eggs. June 8, 

 1906. Fratikford, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Cardinal. Four eggs. April 30, 1908. 

 Forresdale, Philadelphia, Pa. June 2, 

 1912. Bustleton, Philadelphia, Pa., 

 June 10, 1-916, Germantown, Philadel- 

 phia, May 25, 1915, Pensauhen, Cam- 

 den County, N. J., April 11, 1920, 

 Bustleton, Philadelphia 



Barn Swallow. Seven eggs. June 

 16, 1921. Center Square, Montgomery 

 County, Pa. I have seen but five sets 

 of six in the many nests examined 

 with sets. 



Rough-winged Swallow. Seven eggs 

 Have ten records of nests containing 

 this number of eggs in Pennsylvania 

 and New Jersey. 



Blue-winged Warbler. Six eggs. 

 May 29, 1912. Bethayres, Montgomery 

 County, Pa., and June 6, 1910, same 

 locality. 



Black-throated Blue Warbler. Five 

 eggs, June 17, 1917, Monroe County, 

 Pa. 



Magnolia Warbler. Five eggs. June 

 5, 1918. Pike County, Pa. These two 

 nests were found by my friend, R. C. 

 Harlow, and constituted our first 

 records of five eggs for these species. 

 Yellow-breasted Chat. Five eggs. 

 June 4, 1912. Chestnut Hill, Philadel- 

 phia, Pa., June 14, 1915, Bustleton, 

 Philadelphia, Pa. 



Cat bird. Five eggs. May 28, l9o7, 

 Torresdale, June 1, 1913, Bustleton, 

 May 19, 1906, Holmesburg, June 4, 

 1915, Bustleton, all in Philadelphia, 

 Pa., May 20, 1906, Pensauhen, Camden, 

 N. J. 



Brown Thrasher. Five eggs. May 

 16, 1897 Westmont; May 16, 1914, 

 Jordantown, May 8, 1915, Highland, all 

 in Camden County, N. J.; May 19, 1906, 

 Bustleton, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Carolina Wren. Six eggs. May 13, 

 1909. Maple Shade, Burlington Coun- 

 ty, N. J.. June 3, 1916. Germantown, 

 Philadelphia, Pa. 



House Wren. Eight eggs. May 22, 

 1905. Frankford, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Lone-billed Marsh Wren. Seven 

 eggs. June 19, 1913. Near Norwood, 

 Delaware County, Pa The only Marsh 

 Wren's nest I have ever examined con- 

 taining over six eggs or young out of 

 an examination of about a thousand 

 occupied nests. 



White-breasted Nuthatch. Nine 

 eggs. May 9, 1918, State College, Cen- 

 ter County, Pa. 



Carolina Chickadee. Eight eggs. 

 May 13, 1909, Jordantown, Camden 

 County, N. J. 



Robin. Seven eggs. May 11, 1904, 

 Holmesburg, Philadelphia, Pa. June 

 26, 1918, Gwynedd Valley, Montgom- 

 ery County, Pa. Five eggs, April, 17, 

 1902, Holmesburg, Philadelphia, Pa., 

 May 2, 1902, Wissinoming, Philadel- 

 phia; May 22, 1915, Frankford, Phila- 

 delphia, Pa., May 25, 1915 Pensau- 

 hen, Camden County, N. J. 



Richard F. Miller 

 2526 N. 2nd St., 

 Philadelphia, Pa. 



A CORRECTION 



Paul G. Howes advises us that the 

 word "Gulls" should supplant the 

 word "Terns" in his recent article on 

 "Results," in Volume XXXVIII, Page 

 138, of The Oologist. 



He also advises us that h6 sails fo; 

 three months in British Guiana, South 

 America, with William Beebe, ' Mrs. 

 Howes, and some others. — R. M. B 



