494 Recent Literature. [.July 



Deals with Falco peregrinus. Numerous plates of feathers. 



Falco. XIV. No. 2. ' Schluss-nummer' for 1918. (April, 1919.) 

 [In German.] 



Ornis Germanica. Ill, April, 1919. Supplement to 'Falco.' [In 

 German.] 



A list of German birds with names according to the peculiar ideas of 

 the author, O. Kleinschmidt. 



Ornithological Articles in other Journals' 



L. Mel. Terrill. Fall Migrants. (Canadian Field Naturalist, Janu- 

 ary, 1920.) — A review of the autumn migration at Quebec. 



Criddle, Norman. Notes on the Nesting Habits and Food of the 

 Prairie Horned Larks in Manitoba. (Ibid.) 



Laing, Hamilton M. Lake Shore Bird Migration at Beamsville, 

 Ontario. (Ibid. February, 1920.) — -An annotated list covering the sum- 

 mer and autumn of 1918. 



Morris, Frank. Belated Guests. (Ibid.) — Midwinter records of 

 Brown Thrasher, Towhee and Goldfinch at Peterborough, Ontario. 



Nichols, J. T. Wintering Snipe and Rainfall. (Forest and Stream, 

 May, 1920.) — "Heavy precipitation the last half of the year is favorable 

 to the presence of Snipe on Long Island at its close." 



Anderson, R. M. The Brant of the Atlantic Coast. —A leaflet of 

 the Canadian Geological Survey in the interests of the protection of these 

 birds under the Migratory Bird Treaty. 



Nelson, E. W. Federal and State Game Preserves. (Bulletin Amer. 

 Game Protective Asso., April, 1920.) 



Lawyer, George A. Results from the Migratory Birds Treaty Act. 

 (Ibid.) 



Allen, Arthur A. A Day with the Ducks on Lake Cayuga. (Ameri- 

 can Forestry, April, 1920.) With photographs of Canvas-backs and 

 duck-shooting. 



Burroughs, John. Bird Photographs of Unusual Distinction. With 

 extracts from the writings of John Burroughs (Natural History, December, 

 1919.) — -Following a review of his 'Field and Study.' 



Allan Brooks Birds and a Wilderness. (Ibid.) — In France. 



Nelson, E. W. Region too Alkaline for Crops. (Ibid.) — A further 

 illustration of the folly of draining the Klamath Lake region, which is 

 resulting in the ruination of the famous bird reservation. 



1 Some of these jonrnals are received in exchange others are examined in the 

 library of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. The Editor is under 

 obligations to Mr. J. A. G. Rehn for a list of ornithological articles contained in 

 the accessions to the library from week to week. 



