iSSS.] General Notes. 20I 



xiv.) (2) Notes on specimens in the Hume Collection of Birds. No. 5. 

 On Syrninin maingayi. (Proc. London Zool. Soc, 1SS7, pp. 470-47S.) 



(3) On a Second Collection of Birds formed bv Mr. L.Wraj in the Moun- 

 tains of Perak, Malav Peninsula. (Ibid., pp. 431-443, pU. xxxvii-xxxviii. ) 



(4) Report on a Zoological Collection made by the Officers of H.M.S. 

 'Flying Fish' at Christmas Island, Indian Ocean. II. Birds. (Ibid., pp. 

 515, 516, pi. xliii.) (5) On a new species of Crt()'/^();«<K«rt. (Ibid., pp. 558.) 



Shufeldt, R. W. Audubonia'n Sketches. I, II. (Aud. Mag., Vol. I, 

 pp. -6S-271; Vol. II. pp. 1-6.) 



Agassiz Companion, II, No. 12, Dec, 1SS7. 



American Field, XXIX, Nos. i-ii, 1S8S. 



American Journ. Sci. XXIV, Jan. -Mch., 188S. 



American Naturalist, XXI, Dec, 1887, XXII, Jan. -Feb., 1888. 



Audubon Magazine, II, Jan. -Mch., 188S. 



Bay State Odlogist, I, No. 2, Feb., 1S88. 



Bird Call, II, Jan. -Mch., 1888. 



Canadian Record of Science, III, No. i, Jan., 18SS. 



Collectors' Illustrated Magazine, I. No. 2, Feb., 1S88. 



Hoosier Naturalist, III, No. 2, Mar., 1888. 



Journal Cincinnati Soc. Nat. Hist., X, No. 4. Jan., 188S. 



Naturalist, The, a Monthly Journ. Nat. Hist, for the North of England, 

 Nos. 150-152, Jan. -Mch., 1S88. 



Oologist's Exchange, I, No. i, Jan., 1S88. 



Ornithologist and Odlogist, XII. No. 12, 1887, Nos. 1-3, 1S88. 



Ottawa Naturalist, I, Nos. 11-13, Jan.-Mch., 1888. 



Proceedings Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1887, Pt. Ill, Sept. -Dec. 



Proceedings U. S. Nat. Mus., 1S87, pp. 449-496. 



Swiss Cross, III, Jan.-Mch., 1888. 



Zoologischen Anzeiger, Nos. 267-273. 



Zoologist, XII, Jan.-Mch., 18S8. 



GENERAL NOTES. 



iEchmophorus occidentalis in Kansas. — I wish to place on record the 

 capture on the Kansas River at this place, on Nov. 3, 18S7, of a young 

 male of the Western Grebe, .^chmophorus occidctitalts (Lawr). It was 

 shot by a colored man, who brought it to me as a curious bird. The 

 species has never before been taken farther east than Manitoba and the 

 Gila River in New Mexico. Its capture here extends its eastward range 

 more than a thousand miles. The following measurements were taken : 



