762 MICHIGAN BIRD LIFE. 
Ann. N. Y. Lye. Nat. Hist., I, Pt. 2, 1825, 219-222. This is the 
original description of the Evening Grosheak, from the specimen taken 
by Schoolcraft at Sault Ste. Marie in April, 1823. 
Coues, Dr. E.—1. Comments on Notes by B. Walker, Detroit, Mich. 
American Naturalist, 1871, 437, 488. Refers to Evening Grosbeak and 
Shore Lark. 
Covert, Adolph B.—1. Albino Specimens of Robin and Song Sparrow. 
Forest and Stream, VI, 52. 2. A Letter of Promise. Ibid, 52. 3. Birds 
of Lower Michigan. Ibid, 99, 132, 168, 214, 266, 318, 354, 402; VIJ, 
147, 164. An annotated list from observations made at Ann Arbor. Two 
hundred forty-four species mentioned. 4. The Labrador Duck. Ibid, 
VI, 18, 197. Said to have been taken at Delhi Mills, Mich., April 17, 
1872. 5. Additions to the List of Birds of Lower Michigan. Ibid, VII, 
18, 276. Ten species added. 6. Short-eared and Snowy Owls. Ibid, 
22, 342. 7. Nesting of the Rose-breasted Grosbeak. Ibid, VIII, 10, 
145. 8. Albino Specimens of Bluejay and White-bellied Nuthatch. 
Ibid, IX, 19, 366. 9. Nesting of the Solitary or Wood Tattler. Oologist, 
II, 1876. 10. That Hybrid Owl. Oologist, III, 1877, 97. Bubo virgin- 
ianus and Bubo virginianus arcticus, both from Michigan, the latter from 
“North woods.” 11. Nesting of the Large-billed Wa‘er Thrush. The 
Oologist, IV, 1878, 10, 11. 12. Natural History. History of Washtenaw 
Co., Mich., 173-194. Chicago, 1881. An annotated list of the Birds 
and Mammals of Washtenaw Co. 13. The Enemies of Game Birds. 
Chicago Field, XVII, Dec. 8, 1881. 14. Capture of the Wheatear in 
Michigan. The Nidiologist, II, 1894, 42. Specimen said to have been 
taken near Ann Arbor, Oct. 4, 1894. 15. Recent Occurrence of the 
Wild Pigeon and Cardinal at Ann Arbor. Bull. Mich. Orn. Club, I, 
1898, 37. <A flock estimated at two hundred pigeons reported as feed- 
ing in a buckwheat field at Salem, Washtenaw Co., in October, 1898. 
(Subsequently determined to be Mourning Doves). 16. A Remarkable 
Plumage of our Common Quail. Ibid, 87. 17. Whistling Swan in Wash- 
tenaw Co. Ibid, IV, 1903, 27. 18. Remarks on the Recent Capture of 
a Kirtland s Warbler in Mich. Ibid, 47-49. Virtual discovery of nest- 
ing grounds indicated by capture of male in Oscoda Co., June 15, 1903. 
19. The Prothonotary Warbler in Michigan. Ibid, 60. 20. Our present 
ae of the Distribution of the Yellow-breasted Chat in Mich. 
Ibid, 60. 
Craven, Jesse T.—1. Cory’s Least Bittern at the St. Clair Flats. Bull. 
Mich. Orn. Club, V, 1904, 68. The second Michigan specimen known. 
Daggett, Frank 8.—1. Birds’ Eggs on Isle Royale, Lake Superior. 
Ornithologist and Oologist, XV, 1890, 99, 100. 
Davidson, W. A.—1. Nesting of the Cardinal Grosbeak and Cerulean 
Warbler, Near Detroit. Ornithologist and Oologist, XVII, 1892, 11, 137. 
2. Vireonidae of Wayne County, Mich. Bull. Mich. Orn. Club, I, 1897, 6. 
Nesting habits of the Red-eyed, Yellow-throated and Warbling Vireos. 
3. Swainson’s Hawks and Black Guillemots. Ibid, 8. Notes several of 
the hawks killed in Wayne Co. and two “Black Guillemots” at St. Clair 
Flats. (The latter proved to be Brunnich’s Murres.) 4. Large Sets of 
Red-shouldered Hawk. Ibid, 24. 5. Notes from Wayne County. Ibid, 
45. Records nesting of Cerulean Warbler near Detroit; eggs June 6th. 
6. Notes from Detroit. Ibid, III, 1899, 8. Nesting of Yellow-breasted 
Chat. 7. Pied-billed Grebe in Michigan. Ibid, 9. Nesting habits and 
experiments with the young. 
