66 The Wilson Bulletin — No. 107 



unable to get a "draw" until the pipe was emptied of a peck or 

 more of straws, feathers, twigs, hair and snake skins. 



V. Five eggs were taken May 20, 1916, from an abandoned 

 hole formerly occupied by a Woodpecker. Hole ten feet up, in a 

 dead pine tree by the side of a road. Nothing unusual about this 

 site. 



VI. A pair reared young in one of my martin boxes, a nev/ 

 structure not occupied by P. sudis until the following year. 



VII. On May 7, 1919, an apparently completed nest, without 

 eggs, was seen in a stovepipe projecting upright through the roof 

 of an unoccupied dwelling in St. Marks. The nest was bulky, of 

 pine needles and cow's hair mainly, with some feathers and grasses 

 and a small piece of snake's skin. 



John Wflliams. 

 St. Marks, Fla. 



