35G Recenthj published Ormtholoijicai Works. 



grisea, jNIr. W. Shore Baily on Pyromelana taha and Pen- 

 thetria ardens, and Dr. L. Lovell-Keays on Zosterops virens 

 and Panurus biarmicus. The last-named also continues his 

 story of his journey through California, which seems to 

 have been somewhat severely commented on by a critic in 

 the ' Condor/ 



Other articles of interest are by the Marquis of Tavistock 

 on his attempts at aviculture without the restraints of 

 caging or the cutting of wings ; while among Indian corre- 

 spondents Major Perreau continues his Bird-notes from 

 Baklot in the Punjab, and Mr. Whistler on the Birds of 

 the Jhelum District in India. 



The Condor. 



[The Condor. A Magazine of Western Oi'nitliologT. Vol. xvn. for 

 1915, 6 nos] 



'The Condor' is the organ of the Cooper Ornithological 

 Club which, divided into two sections, meets monthly at 

 Berkeley near San Francisco in the north of the State of 

 California and at Los Angelos in the south, and the papers 

 in the magazine have in most cases been read at the Club 

 meetings. As would naturally be the case the greater 

 number of the articles are of local interest, but their 

 value is nearly always enhanced by the numerous photo- 

 graphs with which they are embellished. 



Of the faunal articles we have Mr. Harold Heath on the 

 Birds of the Forrester Islands on the south-eastern boundary 

 line of Alaska ; though so far north, these islands are well 

 clothed with forest and have an abundant population of land- 

 birds, as they are on the line of the north and south migration. 

 They have recently been proclaimed a reservation, and the 

 exploration was carried out under the joint auspices of 

 the U.S. Fish Commission and the National Association 

 of the Audubon Societies. Other faunal articles are by 

 Mr. A. P. Smith on the Birds of the Boston Mountains 

 of Arkansas ; Mr. M. F. French on the Birds of Sacaton, 

 Arizona ; Mr. A. A. Saunders on those of Flathead Lake, 



