° 1918 ] Recent Literature. 99 



The Migration of North American Birds. By Harry C. Oberholser. 

 Covers five species of swallows, and continues the work carried on in these 

 pages for several years by the late Prof. Cooke. 



Notes on the plumage of North American Birds. By Frank M. Chap- 

 man. — Completes the Swallows. An admirable plate by Fuertes accom- 

 panies the article. • 



The Educational Leaflet treats of the Pileated Woodpecker and the bulk 

 of the number is taken up with the annual report of the Audubon Societies. 



The Condor. XIX, No. 5. September-October, 1917. 



Notes on the Nesting Habits of the Clarke Nutcracker in Colorado. By 

 W. C. Bradbury. 



Red Letter Days in Southern California. By Florence Merriam Bailey. 



Botta's Visit to California. By T. S. Palmer. — An interesting historical 

 paper fixing more accurately the type localities of the first birds described 

 from California. 



Some Birds of the Davis Mountains, Texas. By Austin Paul Smith. — 

 An annotated list of 45 species. 



A New Race of Fox Sparrow, from the Vicinity of Mono Lake, California. 

 By Joseph Grinnell and Tracy I. Storer. — P. i. monoensis, with a slightly 

 smaller bill than P. i. megarhyncha of the western slope of the Sierra 

 Nevada. 



The Wilson Bulletin. XXIX, No. 3. September, 1917. 



The Birds of Denver. By W. H. Bergtold. — 187 species listed. 



Horned Larks in the Province of Quebec. By L. Mel. Terrill. 



Annotated List of the Water Birds, Game Birds and Birds of Prey, of 

 Sac County, Iowa. By J. A. Spurrell. 



The Oologist. XXXIV, No. 9. September, 1917. 



Some Interesting Birds of the Judith Basin, Montana. By P. M. 

 Silloway. 



Nesting of the Prairie Horned Lark [in Mass.]. By H. O. Green. 



Bendire's Crossbill [Nesting] in Kansas. By A. S. Hyde. 



The Oologist. XXXIV, No. 10. October, 1917. 



Bird Collecting in Eastern Colombia. By Paul G. Howes. — Continued 

 in November. 



The Ibis. X Series. V, No. 4. October, 1917. 



On a New South American Jay of the Genus Cyanolyca. By W. L. 

 Sclater. — C. viridicyanea cuzcoensis from Cuzco (p. 465). 



Notes on the Birds of Malta. By G. Despott. — Concluded, total num- 

 ber of species 341. 



Birds of the Ancre Valley [France]. By Lt. J. N. Kennedy. 



Birds of the Suez Canal Zone and Sinai Peninsula. By Capt. A. W. 

 Boyd. 



Further Notes on the Birds of the Province of Fohkien in Southeast 

 China. By J. D. D. La Touche. 



The Birds of Dirk Hartog Island and Peron Peninsula, Shark Bay, 

 Western Australia, 1916-17. By T. Carter; with Nomenclature and 



