vol. xxxvi] Recgnt Lilerature 139 



banding experiments have shown in several instances that of a banded pair 

 of nesting birds only one was found nesting at the same spot in the following 

 year, its mate being a different individual. 



A Return to the Dakota Lake Region. (Continued.) By Florence 

 Merriam Bailey. 



Some Oceanic Birds from the Coast of Washington and Vancouver 

 Island. By Stanton Warburton, Jr. 



Description of a New Subspecies of Cyanolcemus clemencioe. By Harry 

 C. Oberholser. — C. c. bessophilus (p. 181) Chiricahua Mts., Arizona, the 

 bird of the southwestern United States and Chihuahua, is separated from 

 true C. c. dementia 1 which is restricted to northeastern, central and southern 

 Mexico. 



Some Summer Birds of Alert Bay, British Columbia. By P. A. Taver- 

 ner. — An annotated list of forty species. 

 The Wilson Bulletin. XXX, No. 3. September, 1918. • 

 The Brown Pelican, — A Good Citizen. By Alfred M. Bailey. — A 

 timely refutation of the charges made against this bird. 



Notes on the February Bird-life of Southern Mississippi and Louisiana. 

 By Chreswell J. Hunt. 



A Vulture Census and Some Notes. By John Williams. — Valuable 

 statistics on the habits and abundance of the Black and Turkey Vultures 

 at St. Maries, Fla. 



Some Birds along the Trails of Glacier National Park. By P. E. Kretz- 

 mann. 



Birds about our Lighthouse. By John Williams. — September 22- 

 October 5, 1917 at the mouth of St. Johns River, Florida. 

 The Oologist. XV, No. 9. September 1, 1918. 



Pennsylvania and New Jersey Nesting Dates for 1915. By R. F. Miller. 

 South African Shrikes. By O. O. C. Nicholls. — In this article we notice 

 upward of thirty typographical errors. Unfortunately this fault is rather 

 frequent in ' The Oologist,' especially in the case of technical names. These 

 are always difficult for both compositor and proof-reader and in a popular 

 journal it would seem far better to omit them altogether than to continually 

 misspell them. A number of contributors we notice have adopted this 

 practice already. 



The Oologist. XXXV, No. 10. October 1, 1918. 

 Breeding Birds of the Pocono Mountains [Penna.] By A. D. McGrew. 

 The Oologist. XXXV, No. 11. November 1, 1918. 

 An Annotated List of Birds Observed from May to July in Central Logan 

 County, Illinois. By A. D. DuBois. 



Some Common Land Birds Found in the Immediate Vicinity of McKees- 

 port, Penna. By Thos. L. McConnell. 



The Ibis. X Series, VI, No. 4. October, 1918. 



The Reversed Under Wing-coverts of Birds and their Modifications, as 

 exemplified in the Birds of West Africa. By George L. Bates. — A very 



