44 



THE OOLOGIST. 



plumage and very fat. I have never 

 before noted this species later than 

 the middle of October. 



A small number of Swamp .Spar- 

 rows have spent the past winter in 

 the Fresh Pond Marshes at Cam- 

 bridge. 



F. SEYMOUR HBRSEY. 



Records of Note. 



Editor, The Oologist. 



Dear Sir: — Is it the custom of The 

 Bob-white (Colinus virginanus), in 

 winter, to go into holes under rocks 

 or in the ground, at night? 



On three occasions I have caught 

 Bob-whites in unbaited steel traps, 

 which I had set in holes known to be 

 inhabited by Opossums or Skunks. 



On two of these occasions, when I 

 went to the trap the next morning 

 I found the ground strewn with feath- 

 ers, the 'bird having ibeen killed .and 

 eaten iby the Opossum or Skunk 

 which lived in the hole. It seems to 

 me that had the bird escaped ibeing 

 caught in the trap and had entered 

 the hole it would have met the same 

 fate. 



J. F. TAYLOR, 



The Editor has not had the per- 

 sonal experience with Bob-white to 

 intelligently answer this question. 



The fact that we have seen only 

 four specimens of this bird wild in 

 this locality in past eight years, will 

 explain. 



Will some one else answer? We 

 will gladly give space. — Ed. 



"Condor," Vol. XI, No, 1. 



Mr. Bowles, of Tacoma, chronicles 

 an interesting, unexplained and very 

 fatal epidemic of tape-worm in Pa- 

 cific Coast birds. 



Mr. Claude Cummings, of Pinole, 

 Calif., for many years a subscriber to 

 the Oologist, was accidentally killed 

 by the discharge of his gun while 

 cleaning it. 



The Editor has received reports of 

 the finding of Lomita Wren 'breeding 

 in Los Angeles County, Calif., in 

 1907, and the discovery of an adven- 

 titious egg of the Dwarf Cowbird in 

 Ventura County, Calif., the past sea- 

 son (1908). 



The records appear to be authen- 

 tic, and we believe them to be un- 

 usual. 



TO ALL INTERESTED. 

 REMEMBER. 



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 oranches of Natural History for study or 

 museum purposes at Special reduced rates. 

 Don't fail to write me. I will quote you on 

 your line of wants or I will furnish a general 

 assortment that will fit your purse and be 

 sure to please. 



ERNEST H. SHORT. 

 Box 173 Rochester, N. Y. 



NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS' EGGS 



By C. a. Reed. 



Cloth bound, 356 pp., profusely 

 illustrated. Gives a brief descrip- 

 tion of every North American bird 

 following the A, O. U. No's as 

 recognized by the American Orni- 

 thologist Union up to 1904. 



Habitat, nesting habits and eggs 

 are fully treated and a figure given 

 in black and white of nearly every 

 egg. 



Two colored plates and seventy 

 large plates of nests and eggs. 

 Cover in colors. Fully indexed. 

 Prepaid $2.50. Address 



ERNEST H. SHORT, 

 Box 173 Rochester, N. Y. 



