Vol. XVIin Cofiespondence. 4II 



1901 J 



1901, pp. S41-551, with I plate.) (7) Applied Photography. Application 

 Xo. 21.— To Oology. (The Photogram, June, 1901, pp. 154, 156) (S) 

 British and American Jays. (Pop. Sci. News, July, 1901, pp. 148-150.) 



Anales del Museo Nac. de Montevideo, IV, entr. xix, 1901. 



Annals, The, of Scottish Nat. Hist., No. 39, July, 1901. 



Australian Museum, Report of, for 1899. 



Bird-Lore, III, No. 4. July-August, 1901. 



Birds and Nature, X, Nos. 1, 2, June, Sept., 1901. 



Bulletin of the Bird Club of Princeton University, I, No. i, Sept., 1901. 



Bulletin of the British Orn. Club, XI, Nos. Ixxx and Ixxxi, May and 

 June, 1901 . 



Condor, The, III, Nos. 4 and 5, July-August, and Sept.-Oct., 1901. 



Forest and Stream, LVI, Nos. 25, 26, LVII, Nos. 1-12, 1901. 



Journal, The, of the Maine Orn. Soc, III, No. 3, July, 1901. 



Knowledge, XXVI, Nos. 18S-191, June-Sept., 1901. 



Notes on Rhode Island Ornithology, II, No. 3, July, 1901. 



Naturalist, The, A Month. Journ. of Nat. Hist, for North of England, 

 Nos. 534-536, July-Sept., 1901. 



Ornithologische Monatsberichte, IX, Nos. 7-9, July-Sept., 1901. 



Ornithologische Monatsschrift, XXVI, Nos. 5-8, May-August, 1901. 



Ornithologisches Jahrbuch, XII, Heft 2-5, March-Oct., 1901. 



Osprey, The, V, Nos. 5-7, May-July, 1901. 

 ■ Ottawa Naturalist, The, XV, Nos. 3-5, June and July, 1901. 



Our Animal Friends, XXVIII, Nos. 11, 12, XXIX, No. i, July-Sept., 



1901. 



Proceedings of the California Acad. Sci., (3) Zool., II, Nos. 7-10, III, 



No. I, 1901. 



Science, N. S., XIII, Nos. 33S, 339, XIII, Nos. 340-351- 1901. 

 Transactions of the Nat. Hist. Soc. Glasgow, VI, pt. i, 1899-1900. 

 Wilson Bulletin, N. S., VIII, Nos. 2 and 3, May and August, 1901. 

 Yearbook of the U. S. Depart. Agric. for 1900. 

 Zoologist, The, (4), V, Nos. 54-56, June-August, 1901. 



CORRESPONDENCE. 



Early Migration of Wild Geese. 



Editors of 'The Auk' : — 



Dear 5?>5; — Upon the 30th day of August, when in longitude 54° E. 

 and latitude 45" N. (approximately), upon S. S. ' Minneapolis ' bound from 

 London to New York, I saw and pointed out to several of my fellow- 

 passengers, three flocks of Geese flying due south, as near as could be 



