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MINNESOTA STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



There is also one other bird that remains — the only one I 

 see on your Minneapolis streets when I come here in the winter, 

 and I am always glad to meet him. I do not fhention his name 

 for fear some one will cry "Johnny, get your gun !" 



Appended, for reference, is a list of eighty-five kinds of birds 

 observed at St. Paul and Prescott, kindly furnished me by Miss 

 Alice Candace McCray, of St. Paul. The most of the hawks, 

 owls and water fowl are omitted. The common and scientific 

 names are given in parallel columns, the latter being in accord 

 with "Notes on the Birds of Minnesota," by Dr. P. L. Hatch, a 

 publication of the Minnesota Geol. and Nat. Hist. Survey, issued 

 under the supervision of Prof. H. F. Nachtrieb. 



Scientific Names — 



Merula Migratoria. 



Sialia sialis. 



Harporhynchus rufus. 



Turdus mustelinus. 



Turdus aonalaschkae 

 pallasuo. 



Turdus fuscessens. 



Icterus galbula. 



Icterus Spurino. 



luiscalus luiscula. 



Scoeocophagus carolinus. 



Cornis Americanus. 



Agelains phenaeceus. 



Dolichonyx oryzivorus. 



Molothrus Ater. 



Galeoscoptes carolinensis. 



Sturnella Magna. 



Cyanocitta cristata. 



Chordeiles virginianus. 



Antrostomus vociferus. 



Zenaidura nacroura. 



Bonasa umbellus. 



Colinus virginianus. 



Progne subis. 



Chelidon erythrogaster. 



Clivicola riparia. 



Petrochelidon lunifrons. 



Parns atricapillus. 



Sitta Carolinensis. 



Citta Canadensis. 



Junco hyemalis. 



Tyrannus tyrannus. 



Sayornis phoebe. 



Cantopus virens. 



Empidonax minimus. 



Ampelis Cedrorum, 



Lanius hedoricianus. 



Lanins borealis. 



