Bulletin No. if. 



7i 



39 



Song Sparrow. 



58- 



40 



Towhee. 



59 



4i 



Rose-breasted Grosbeak. 



60 



42 



Indigo Bunting. 



61. 



43 



Scarlet Tanager. 



62 



44 



Purple Martin. 



63. 



45 



Barn Swallow. 



64 



46 



Cedar Waxwing. 



65- 



47 



Loggerhead Shrike. 



66. 



48 



Red-eyed Vireo. 



67. 



49 



Warbling Vireo. 



68. 



50 



Blue-winged Warbler. 



69. 



5i 



Yellow Warbler. 



70. 



52 



Black-throated Blue Warbler. 



7i- 



53 



Myrtle Warbler. 



72. 



54 



Cerulean Warbler. 



73- 



55 



Chestnut-sided Warbler. 



74- 



56 



Bay-breasted Warbler. 



75- 



57 



Black-poll Warbler. 



76. 



Blackburnian Warbler. 

 Black-throated Green Warbler. 

 Palm Warbler. 

 Oven-bird. 

 Water Thrush. 

 Mourning Warbler. 

 Maryland Yellow-throat. 

 Yellow-breasted Chat. 

 Canadian Warbler. 

 American Redstart. 

 Catbird. 

 House Wren. 

 White-breasted Nuthatch. 

 Tufted Titmouse. 

 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. 

 Wood Thrush. 

 Olive-backed Thrush. 

 Robin. 

 Bluebird. 

 W. L. Dawson, Obcrlin, Ohio. 



GENERAL NOTES. 



Nest of Mourning Dove, Zenaidnra rnacroiira, Containing Three 

 EciGS. — An instance similar to that noted by Mr. A. S. Pearse in the last 

 number of the Bulletin, came under my observation last spring. On 

 May 11, I flushed a Mourning Dove from her nest in the crotch of an 

 apple tree in an orchard. Stepping under the tree, where I could see 

 into the nest, I was surprised to find that it contained three eggs. Pre- 

 paring to capture a "freak" set I produced my note book, but just then 

 I heard a familiar " fiift-jhif>" which told of finishing incubation. Two 

 of the eggs were pipped, a young dove's beak protruding through the 

 opening in the side of one of the eggs. The third was perfectly fresh, 

 and to all appearances fertile. Two weeks later I was in the orchard 

 and observed the two young Doves huddled close together on a branch of 

 a neighboring tree. 



J. Warren Jacobs, Waynesbrtrg, Pa 



Sparrow Notes. — During the months of May and June, I took 123 



