ps site ob painagnaeal - 
Two mer s Eggs in est.— ve has near near 
Louth this yea The nest, eg ae a Pied Wactal (Marc lugubris), W 
o Cu 
a halk-pit, fee was frind by me to contain, on June 18th, tw ches (Cuenta 
canorus)’s eggs only, of which I took one. On June 22n a t again visited th 
and found it deserted, gee only the egg I had left. —E. LARDE <, = 
Mercer Row, Louth, June 23rd, 1891. 
Hooded Crow on B aca Ship.—On June 2nd, when the Orlando s.s. 
(Gothenburg . Hull) was a the coast of Denmark, . Bi oded Crow a 
e 
cornix) came ard. Finding it was too far for him to make to land > 
remained quit = contentedly on the ship till our arrival off th e Humber on June 4th. 
Occasionally, when either passenger or sailor approached him too curiousl ly. he 
would taco a short flight round the vessel, otherwise he did not appear to be at all 
embarrassed at his somewhat peculiar position. —E. T. BALDWIN, London, S.W., 
June 22nd, 1801. 
Turtle Dove Robin Hood’s we —Although the Turtle Dove ( 7zrtur 
esque cannot yi considered a rare visitor to East Yorkshire, it is sufficiently 
uncommon to make it hia that wall occurrences should be recorded. Walking 
R H the called on 
co) Cot hton : 1 
Mr. William Lickley, ng station-master - Peak, ett is an amateur taxi- 
ist. He told he h 
stan On the 2n : W 
out with his Se to shoot a pigeon. cents by a small fir plantation he saw 
wha to be two young pig , one of which he shot; the other 
has never obtained one.’—EpGar R. War 2, The ees um, Leeds , June 18th, 1891. 
Birds and Snow in May onan land).—Whilst_ on the moors near 
is cit 
h on 
and plaintive cries were plainly ais apparently from a great height. The 
Coase ( zap pat bi too, seemed very uneasy, and were constantly getting on 
the wing th ing d i iced they 
informant t e that price for them.—WiLL1aM HEWETT; 
12, erat Seen. Fulecd oat’ York, June r4th, 1891. Naturalist, 
