THE. O & O. SEMI-ANNUAL. 4I 
Catbird, Galeoscoptes carolinensis. 
First one found May 3; next, May 4; common May 7. Favor- 
ite haunts are thickets and orchards. <A set of four incubated 
eges found June g. Measurements: .gtx.67; .gtx.68; .g1x.67 ; 
-93x.66. Color, a very deep bluish-green. Nest made of sticks, 
bark and leaves ; very roughly constructed, placed two feet from 
the ground, in a thick bush. Nesting of the Catbird is late in 
this locality. 
Wood Thrush, 7urdus mustelinus. 
First were seen May 5, two; next, May 6; common May 7. 
Found in low damp tickets, in the vicinity of streams. Junega 
set of incubated eggs measuying 1.00x.71; .g6x.71 3 .96x.71 ; 
1.00x.71. Nest composed of leaves and strips of bark from weed- 
stalks, straw with mud on the inside, rather shallow, placed upon 
a limb of a thorn three, four feet {rom the ground, near a stream. 
The usual complement of eggs appears to be three or four. 
Color, a light blue. 
Report or REUBEN M. STRONG, Wauwatosa, WIs. 
Robin. Very common breeder. Our most common summer 
resident excepting the English Sparrow. Arrives about the 
fifteenth of March. 
Wood Thrush is a common migrant and also breeds. 
Wilson’s Thrush. -Common migrant. I have found two sets, 
one of four eggs and the other of two. 
Catbird. Next to Robin in abundance. Arrives in April. 
Breeds. ; 
Brown Thrasher. Common summer resident. Breeds. Ar- 
rives the middle of April. 
Report or E. EUGENE FERNHOLZ, Jerrerson, Wis. 
Wood Thrush. Tolerably common summer resident. Breeds. 
Robin. Abundant summer resident. Breeds. 
Catbird. Common summer resident. Breeds. 
Brown Thrasher. Not very rare summer resident. Breeds. 
Nests are found in bushes and on the ground. 
