BIBLIOGRAPHY [615] 



JEWETT, STANLEY GORDON (see also GABRIELSON and JEWETT, and GABRIELSON, JEWETT, and 



BRALY) Continued . 



i93zb. From field and study. The White-cheeked Goose in Oregon. Condor 34: 136. 

 193x0. From field and study. Winter occurrence of the Townsend Warbler at Portland, 



Oregon. Condor 34: 190. 



1933. General notes. White-tailed Kite in Oregon. Murrelet 14: 79. 

 i934a. The season. Portland (Oregon) region. Bird-Lore 36: 12.0-12.1, 188-189, 1 -5 I ~ 



152., 315-316, 377-378. 



19340. Nesting of the Orange-crowned Warbler in Oregon. Condor 36: 2.42.. 

 19340. The Anthony Green Heron again in northern Oregon. Condor 36: 2.46. 

 i934d. General notes. The mystery of the Marbled Murrelet deepens. Murrelet 15: 2.4. 

 19346. General notes. Two Oregon stragglers. Murrelet 15: 51. 

 i935a. General notes. A Red Phalarope disaster. Murrelet 16: 15-16. 

 i935b. General notes. The Prairie Falcon at Portland, Oregon. Murrelet 16: 16. 

 19350. The season. Portland (Oregon) region. Bird-Lore 37: 146-147, 130. 

 i935d. The Man-o'- war-bird oft the Oregon coast. Condor 37: ziz-z^. 

 i936a. Bird notes from Harney County, Oregon, during May 1934. Murrelet 17: 41-47. 

 i936b. Malheur Lake Greatest of wildfowl refuges. Outdoor America NS (No. u) i: 



6-7. 



i937a. The Western Mockingbird in Oregon. Condor 39: 91-92. 

 i937b. A northern record for the Gray Titmouse in Oregon. Condor 39: 115. 

 i939a. Additional notes on the Black Pigeon Hawk. Condor 41: 84-85. 

 i939b. A Pacific Kittiwake comes inland. Condor 41: 170. 



, and GABRIELSON, IRA NOEL. 

 1919. Birds of the Portland area, Oregon. Cooper Orn. Club, Pacific Coast Avifauna 



19, 54 pp., illus. Berkeley, Calif. 

 1933. General notes. The New Zealand Shearwater, Thyellodroma bulleri (Salvin) off 



the Columbia River, Oregon. Auk 50: 91. 

 JOHNSON, HENRY C. 



1900. In the breeding home of Clarke's Nutcracker (Nucifraga columbianus}. Condor z: 



49-52., illus. 

 JOHNSON, O. B. 



1880. List of the birds of the Willamette Valley, Oregon. Amer. Nat. 14: 485-491, 



635-641. 

 JOHNSON, ROBERT ANTHONY. 



1917. The Ruffed Grouse in winter. Auk 44: 319-3x1, illus. 

 JONES, LYNDS (see also HENNINGER and JONES). 



1900. The horizons. Wilson Bull. (n.s. 7, No. 4) 12. (No. 33): 10-38 (see 19-10). 

 1907. Birds from a car window again. Wilson Bull. (n.s. 14) 19: 109-113. 

 JUDD, SYLVESTER DWIGHT. 



19013. The food of nestling birds. U. S. Dept. Agr. Yearbook Separate 194, pp. 411-436, 



illus. 

 i9oib. The relation of sparrows to agriculture. U. S. Dept. Agr., Biol. Surv. Bull. 15, 



98 pp., illus. 

 i9o5a. The bobwhite and other quails of the United States in their economic relations. 



U. S. Dept. Agr., Biol. Surv. Bull. 2.1, 66 pp., illus. 

 1905 b. The grouse and wild turkeys of the United States and their economic value. U. S. 



Dept. Agr., Biol. Surv. Bull. 14, 55 pp., illus. 

 K. 



1895. In eastern Oregon. Forest and Stream 44: 393. 

 KAEDING, HENRY BARROILHET. 



1899. The genus Junco in California. Bull. Cooper Orn. Club i : 79-81 (see 80). 

 KALMBACH, EDWIN RICHARD. 



1914. Birds in relation to the alfalfa weevil. U. S. Dept. Agr. Bull. 107, 64 pp., illus. 



1918. The crow and its relation to man. U. S. Dept. Agr. Bull. 62.1, 92. pp., illus. 

 1910. The crow in its relation to agriculture. U. S. Dept. Agr. Farmers' Bull. 1101, zo 



pp., illus. 

 192.7. The magpie in relation to agriculture. U.S. Dept. Agr. Tech. Bull. 2.4, 30 pp., illus. 



