26 Editorials. 



Mr. Frank S. Daggett is now in Chicago, and will probably remain 

 there for a year. Any of our members who may be in the city would 

 meet a welcome from him at 24:1-2 Rialto Building. 



Mr. Clarence F. Stone of Brockport, N. Y., has had remarkable suc- 

 cess in quest of the nests of the Cerulean, Canadian, Black-throated 

 Blue, and other rare warblers, and if he is blessed with the necessary 

 leisure hours, we may hope for an illustrated article on the subject. 



Mr. W. H. Brownson, who is news editor of the Portland, Maine, 

 Daily Advertiser, writes a very attractive bird column once a week for 

 that paper. In his long walks he sees and writes of many interesting 

 species. 



Mr. Harry B. McConnell, of Cadiz (Ohio) Republican, has occasional 

 interesting and instructive articles about the birds, giving special atten- 

 tion to the reasons why we should do ail in our power to protect them. 



Mr. Walter F. Webb, now in the nursery business, is just as much of 

 a bird enthusiastic as ever. He is planning to build a fine house with 

 plenty of room for cabinets for his collections. He would be greatly 

 pleased to meet any of our members who may find themselves in Roch- 

 ester, New York. 



Advance proof sheets of Gleanings From Nature No. Ill, The Haunts 

 of the Golden-winged Warbler, by J. Warren Jacobs, give promise of 

 another treat of this interesting series. The makeup is similar to the 

 Martin Colony booklet. There will be three full page plates showing 

 the haunts of the Golden-wing, three smaller plates with nests ixi natural 

 position, and two on one page showing series of eggs, with parents, 

 natural size. There will also be a color chart, and notes on migration, 

 nest building, song, food, young, eggs, etc., thirty pages in all. Mr. 

 Jacobs is a careful observer and knows how to record what he sees. 



