° 1915 ] Sage, Thirty-third 'Stated Meeting of the A. 0. U. 493 



' History of the Bohemian Waxwing in Northern British Colum- 

 bia,' by Ernest M. Anderson. 



Resolutions were adopted thanking the Young Women's Chris- 

 tian Association and the Eiler Musical Company for the use of their 

 auditoriums for a place of meeting, and for other courtesies extended; 

 to Mr. J. Eugene Law and other members of the Southern Division 

 of the Cooper Ornithological Club for generous hospitality and 

 courtesies extended to the eastern members of the Union and their 

 friends, during their stay in Los Angeles; to the Local Committee 

 of the A. O. U., and the members of the Northern Division of the 

 Cooper Ornithological Club for generous hospitality and many 

 courtesies extended to the Union during its Thirty-third Stated 

 Meeting; and to the United States Bureau of Fisheries for the use 

 of the steamer "Albatross" for a trip about San Francisco Bay and 

 around the Golden Gate. 



The Stated Meeting just closed was the first regular meeting 

 ever held on the Pacific Coast, and it will be remembered by those 

 in attendance as one of the most successful in the history of the 

 Union. 



On Friday, May 21, after adjournment of the Union, some 

 seventy-five members of the California Academy of Sciences, the 

 Cooper Ornithological Club, and the A. O. U., enjoyed a trip about 

 San Francisco Bay and around the Golden Gate on the U. S. Fish 

 Commission Steamer "Albatross." Dr. Barton W. Evermann, 

 Director of the California Academy of Sciences, acted as host. The 

 same day other members of the Union visited Mt. Tamalpais and 

 the Muir woods. 



Later in the month many of the eastern members were entertained 

 by Dr. and Mrs. C. Hart Merriam at their attractive summer home 

 in Lagunitas. 



The next meeting of the Union will be held in Philadelphia in 

 1916, the date to be determined by the local committee. 



John H. Sage, 

 / Secretary. 



