COMPREHENSIVE LIST 



ing it, these were the first 

 he had seen outside that 

 state. 



Eskimo Curlew. 



No recent records. Pos- 

 sibly extinct in state. 



PLOVERS. 



Black-bellied Plover. T.V. 



A few non-breeding birds 

 are S. R. Fairly common 

 T. V. along the shores of 

 Lake Michigan and also, 

 sparingly, inland. 



Golden Plover. T.V. 



Once common; now scarce 

 and local. 



Small flocks and individual 

 birds visited the Lake 

 Michigan shore-front the 

 past season, twenty birds at 

 least, in two small flocks, 

 being seen by Hunt and the 

 writer on the Waveland 

 Ave. beach, Lincoln Park, 

 Chicago, the morning of 

 Oct. 2, 1921. 



tt *Killdeer. S.R., N.C.S. 



Common. 



Semipalmated Plover. T.V. 



A few remain S. R., and 

 may breed in N. 111. Fairly 

 common T. V. 



Piping Plover. S.R., N. 



Breeds locally. Not com- 

 mon. 



TURNSTONE. 



Ruddy Turnstone. T.V. 



And at times fairly com- 

 mon on shores of Lake 

 Michigan. 



BOB-WHITE, GROUSE, ETC. 

 t$ *Bob-white. P.R., N.C.S. 



Classed as common through- 

 out this state, but more 

 common south. 



48 



