56 THE NIDOLOGIST 
THE NIDOLOGIST. 
AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY MAGAZINE 
DEVOTED TO THE STUDY OF 
ORNITHOLOGY, 
With Special Reference to the 
NIDIFICATION OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 
H. R. TAYLOR, Editor and Publisher, 
Associated with Dr. R. W. SHUFELDT. 
WE EXPOSE FRAUDS. 
Official Organ Cooper Ornithological Club of the Pacific Coast. 
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Tue NrIpoLocist has h~4 its 7 knocked out, but re- 
covers with a smiling face from the effects of the 
blow. 
YOUR paper is a beauty, and your premium offers 
very generous. CLIFFORD E. WHITE. 
Springfield, Ill. 
THE NipoLocisr deserves the support of every 
bird-loving naturalist of this country. 
Madison, Minn. ALBERT LANO. 
I AM astonished at the wonderful improvement you 
have made in your journal during the past six months, 
and shall be more than pleased to be one of its read- 
ers for 1896. FREDERICK HILL. 
Lyme, Conn. 
THE excellent photographs we published in the Sep- 
tember number of young Killdeer, Burrowing Owl, 
and Barred Owl with their nests and eggs, were taken 
by Mr. E. S. Cheney, of South Dakota, and not by 
Otto Emerson, from whom, however, we secured them 
for THE NIboOLoGisT. 
THE publishers of the Waturalist and Collector, of 
Abington, Ill., request us to announce their suspen- 
sion, caused by lack of sufficient support. Publishing 
a natural history paper is an alluring buc difficult 
task, requiring a boundless amount of money, faith, 
and good humor, together with some ability. Because 
a paper is a good thing it does not follow that it will 
grow and succeed. The good often die young. 
REGARDING a recent shipment of handsome eggs of 
the Terns, Shearwaters, Yellow-billed Tropic Birds, 
and others, which we have received for our premium 
department, Captain D. P. Ingraham writes: ‘‘ I think 
you will be pleased with my selection, as I never have 
before sent out as fine a lot of eggs.” 
Mr. ALBERT LANO’s address is Madison, Minn., not 
Wisconsin, as we erroneously published it. 
You publish an excellent magazine. It was worth 
the $1.50. J. Y. STANTON, 
PLATE of Water Ouzel’s nest just received. It is an 
interesting picture and a fine premium. 
Mingen, O. L. B. GILMORE. 
YouR paper is worth the amount without any 
premium. ALFRED MIERS. 
Walkerville, Ontario. 
I HAVE been much pleased with your magazine 
during the year. E. G. ELuior. 
Bradford, Mass. 
D. D. Stone, of Lansingburg, N. Y., left early in 
December for Florida, where he will spend several 
months in collecting. 
A SALE has recently been made of Mr. William 
Dutcher’s specimen of the Labrador Duck, we are in- 
formed, to Rothschild, the price being $1,000. 
I AM sure you would have no difficulty in holding 
your present subscribers at the price you ask without 
any premium. F. L. Burns. 
Berwyn, Pa. 
Mr. RicHarp C. McGREGOR has gone to Panama on 
a collecting trip with Dr. Gilbert and several students 
of Stanford University. The party will be gone 
three months. 
Dr. A.G. PRILL, of Sodaville, Ore., has presented 
his collections of birds, nests, and eggs to the Park 
Museum, of San Francisco, of which Mr. C. P. Wil- 
comb is Curator. 
J. WARREN JAcoBs, of Waynesburg, Pa., writes of 
THE Nipo.ocist: ‘* Each number is received and read 
with pleasure, keeping up my enthusiasm and desire 
to study Nature’s free lessons.” 
W. W. Price's collection of 2,740 bird skins has 
been sold to the California Academy of Sciences, sup- 
plying very much needed material from the southern 
border of Arizona and New Mexico. 
To get a dollar from me is the easiest thing in the 
world. All you have to do is to drop me a postal 
that my subscription has expired and you will get one 
every time E. HousEeMAN. 
Calgary, Canada. 
GEORGE W. Farco, Jr., of Kaukauna, Wis., writes 
us that he has noticed the decrease in the number of 
Bluebirds in his vicinity during several years past. 
No nests had been discovered in the last four years. 
A pair of Bluebirds were seen in the spring of 1893, 
but none in 1895. 
“THREE BrirRDS, ONE STONE.”—Introduce THE 
NIDOLOGIST to some friend and you accomplish three 
things: first, you do him a favor; second, you help 
yourself as a reader in assisting us to increase the sup- 
port of the magazine and improve it; third, you do 
us a favor, and thereby show that you appreciate our 
efforts in the interests of Ornithology and Odlogy. 
