133 



THE OOLOGIST. 



The Oologist. 



A Monthly Magazine Devoted to 



OOLOGY AND ORNITHOLOGY. 



FRANK H. LATTIN, Editor and Publisher, 

 ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and items of Interest to tne 

 student ol Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

 from all. 



TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. 



Single Subscription - - T5c per annum 

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 The ahove rates include payment of postage hy us. 



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 when presented with an order of $1.25 or over. 



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 tions and prices. 



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 per stopped, and all arrearages must be paid. 



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Remittances should be made by Draft, Express 

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 payable and address all subscriptions and com- 

 munications to FRANK fl. LATTIN, 



Albion, Orleans Co., N. Y. 



*»* Articles, Items of Interest and Queries 

 tor publication should be forwarded as early La 

 the month as possible. 



sitter almost invariably occupies a po- 

 sition presenting toward the water. 

 Shore birds, as the Sandpipers, rest on 

 their nests in a position to best view the 

 stream or pond. Rails and Gallinules 

 face the water, the latter nsuiUy build- 

 ing so that they can plunge from their 

 homes directly into their favorite chan- 

 nels. 



The Loon, which builds or rather 

 forms its nest away out from shore in a 

 mass of vegetable matter, usually the 

 foundation of an old muskrat's house, 

 invariably faces the open deep water. 

 From that pbsition it can slide into the 

 lake at a second's notice. Any one can 

 prove this position of the Loon by ex- 

 amining the premises when the owner 

 is away. The nest proper is a trough- 

 like depression, evidently formed by 

 the bird's efforts at hollowing rather 

 than in building up the sides. This ob- 

 long depression is one and a half feet 

 long and over ten inches wide, and the 

 eggs are always placed from three-fifths 

 to two-thirds of the distance from the 

 front end. "S.", 



Pittsfield, Me, 



eXTERED 



r THE POST OFFICE AT ALBION, N. Y., AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER. 



MAY CONTEST. 

 Forty- seven Judges- 



Owing to various causes, unnecessary 

 to occupy space and time in explaining 

 at length, the June Oologist has been 

 unavoidably delayed, and in order to 

 "catch up" we mail and bind the June 

 and July issues together. August is- 

 sue will be out August 16th and "treats" 

 in the engraving line anticipated for 

 this issue will appear therein. 



Nests of "Water Birds. 



With all birds, so far, as I am able to 

 learn, the exit is a point of observation 

 for the sitter, from which it can get a 

 view of friends and foes. The Owls 

 and Hawks from an elevated position 

 can command a fine view of the sur- 

 roundings. With all aquatic birds the 



1. Owls and their Nests, 310. 

 3. The Spotted Sandpiper, 166. 



3. Roderick Dhu, 131. 



4. The Mountain Partridge in Cap- 

 tivity, 109. 



5. Notes on Nidification and the 

 White-breasted Nuthatch, 73. 



The following Judges named the win- 

 ning articles in their exact order and 

 among them the Judges prize was 

 equally divided: 



Otto Grady, Ludlow, Ky. 



Dana C. Gillett, Barre Centre, N. Y. 



C. R. Stockard, Columbus, Miss. 



Hervey L. Smith,Smith's .rerry,Mass. 



B. A. Garrett, Ballston Spa, N. Y. 



Frank E. Baxter, Montclair, N. J. 



Geo. S. Greene, Los Angles, Cal. 



Albert L. Blanchard, No. Yarmouth, 

 Me. 



Hervey M.Hoskins, Newberg,Oregon. 



All prizes were mailed on July 10th. 



