;58 PROCEEDINGS OF THE 



Duck Hawk. 



Mourning Warbler. 



Long-eared Owl/ 



Mocking-bird. 



Short-eared Owl. 



Bewick's Wren. 



Great-Horned Owl.' 



Red-bellied Nuthatch.* 



Barred Owl. 



Golden-crowned Kinglet. 



Saw-whet Owl. 



Gnatcatcher.* 







The thanks of the Club are due to Dr. Henry Skinner for an 

 admirable photograph of the statuette of Alexander Wilson in 

 the Academy of Natural Sciences, and to the librarian of the 

 Academy, Dr. Edward J. Nolan, for permission to publish it in 

 Cassinia. 



*** 



The Club lost three members by death during the past year. 



Elmer Onderdonk, elected an Associate Member in 1903, died 

 on September 4, 1913. He was for a number of years a regular 

 attendant at the meetings, and a valuable contributor to our 

 migration records. For some time past, however, he has been 

 an invalid and confined to his room. 



Henry Hales, one of our original correspondents, died on 

 November 6, 1913, at an advanced age. Mr. Hales had long 

 resided at Ridgewood, N. J., where he was a constant student of 

 the local bird life and a frequent contributor to numerous jour- 

 nals dealing with nature study. 



William B. Crispin, recently elected a correspondent, was 

 well known as a collector of birds' eggs. He resided at Salem, 

 N. J., and was thoroughly familiar with the breeding habits of 

 the birds of that neighborhood. His death, which occurred on 

 May 9, 1913, was tragic. He had visited the Nocka Mixon 

 Cliffs on the Delaware River below Easton, in search of the nest 

 of the Duck Hawk, which annually breeds there. In some way 

 he fell from the top of the cliff, and his body was later discov- 

 ered on the ground below. Mr. Crispin was a frequent con- 

 tributor to The Odlogist, and furnished much valuable data to 

 Stone's " Birds of New Jersey", published by the New Jersey 

 State Museum. He was thirty-two years of age. 



