116 



1892. Gould, James E. Note on nesting of Bald Eagle at English Lake 



Ind. O. and O., vol. XVII, p. 64. 

 1892. Kindle, E. M. Arrivals of some migratory birds of Johnson 



county Indiana* Ornithologist and Oologist, Vol. XVII, p. 44. 



1892. Bendire, Charles, Capt. U. S A. Life Histories of North 

 American Birds, Smithsonian Institution, United States National Mu- 

 seum ; Special Bulletin No. 1, 1892. 



1893. Butler, Amos W.- Further notes on the Evening Grosbeak. 

 The Auk, vol. X, 1893, pp. 155-157. 



1893. Cook, A. J. Birds of Michigan. Bull. 94 Mich. Agl. College, pp. 



1-148 1st Edition. 

 1893. Butler, Amos W. Range of the Crossbill (Loxia) in the Ohio 



valley with notes on their unusual occurrence in summer. Proc. Ind. 



Acad. Sci. 1892, pp. 63-72. 

 1893. Cook, A. J. Birds of Michigan. Bull. 94 Mich. Agl. College, pp. 



1-168, 2d Edition. 

 1893. Fisher, A. K., M. D. The Hawks and Owls of the United States 



in their relation to agriculture. Bull. No. 3, Div. Orn. and Mam. U. S. 



Dept. Agriculture. 1893, 210 pp. 

 1893. Cox, Ulysses O. A list of the birds of Randolph county, led. 



with some notes on the mammals of the same county. 0. and 0., vol. 



XVIII, 1893, p. 2-3. 



1893. McBride, Herbert "W. Letter. Notes on Rose-breasted Gros- 

 beak in Michigan and Indiana. O. and O., vol. XVIII, p. 47. 

 1893. Butler, Amos "W. On the migration of birds. Indiana Farmer, 



Oct. 21, 1893. 



The range of Crossbills in the Ohio valley with notes on their 



unusual occurrence in summer. The American Naturalist, vol XXVIII, 



1894,' pp. 136-146. 



NOTES ON INDIANA BIRDS. 

 BY A. W. BUTLER. 



The following observations are supplementary to the paper on the Birds 

 of Indiana published in the Transactipns of the Indiana Horticultural So- 

 ciety 1890: 

 Ammodramus leconteii (Aud.). -Le Conte's Sparrow. 



Mr. J. E. Beesley took a specimen of this species from a flock of three 

 or four sparrows, possibly of the same kind at Lebanon, Ind., March 30, 

 1892. This is the third record for the state. 



