iU AtTTHOHS' INDEX, 



" Do Pinnated Grouse Remain in Packs all the Season ?" He wonders 

 how any sportsman can doubt it. iii., 9, 131 — Woodcock and Wood- 

 cock shootings a sportsman's account, iii., 11, 163— Snipe and Snipe 

 shooting ; a sporisman's account. 



W ,G. Ai X., 6, 99— Spring arrivals at Dover, N. H. xii., 13, 333— 



Robins. Blue Birds and Black Ducks abundant at Dover, N. H., April 

 14, 1879. 



(White, Robt. B.) " Checkcord." ii , 6^ 86— Quail can withhold their 

 scent, iii., 19, 294 — "Plain Questions for Sportsmen." iv., 12, 185 

 — " Game Protection." 



Whitman, G. P. iv., 11, 167— A specimen of the Purple Gallinule (Por- 

 phyrio martinioa) shot at Rockport, Mass., April 12, 1875. 



W , T. B. v., 17, 260 — Remarkable success in training Woodcock. 



"Wild." xii^ 11, 216— Snipe at Red Bank, H. J., April 8, 1879. 



" Will." ix., 24, 451— " The WoodpefikCT as a Flycatcher." 



Williams, M. A. • v., 1, 3— " Southvyest Florida as a Q^me Country." 



Williams, W. H. ix., 19, 366— "An Interesting Question;" asks whether 

 sportsmen share his experience when shooting Ruffed Grouse in find- 

 ing they are usually males. 



W(illiams), W. H, ix., 23, 414— Unusual winter birds at Lakeville, Conn. 

 X., 6, 99 — Spring arrivals at Lakeville, Conn, x., 9, 156 — Habits of 

 Ruffed Grouse in Connecticut, x., 16, 305 — "An Interesting Cabi- 

 net and Curiosities of a Naturalist ;" account of the collection of Dr. 

 W. Wood, of East Windsor Hill, Conn., giving many interesting 

 notes on species found in Connecticut. 



Williams, W. H. x. , 30, 387— ' 'Letting Loose the Messina Quail" at Lake- 

 ville, 'Conn. 



W(illiams), W. H. xi., 1, 2— Nesting of the Migratory Quail at Lakeville, 

 Conn. , , ^ 



Williams, ^V. H. xii., 17, 331 — Migratory Quail; records the return of 

 some from the South May 3 and 7 at Lakeville, Conn, where some 

 were introduced. 



Willicott, W. viii. , 9, 129— ' ' What Becomes of Our Foreign Song Birds ?" 

 States that, some eight years since he he'ard several English Skylarks 

 singing near Brooklyn, N. Y., and lat^ saw some killed by a pot- 

 hunter ; none seen since then until last feummer (1876), when he saw 

 one and heard it sing. 



Williston, S. W. xi., 1, 2— " A Pond Foster Father ;" a male Cardinal rear- 

 ing Baltimore Orioles, xii., 16, 309— xii., 17, 335— xU., 19, 365— 

 xii., 30, 385 — " A List of Birds of Southern 'VVyoming," with notes 

 by Geo. Bird Grinnell. 



Wilson, E. K. iv., 35, 390-^Note on Mother Gary's Chicken and the Black 

 Albatross breeding on the Gallipagos Ijlands, South Pacific. 



Wilson, J. T. i., 23, 357— Albino Woodcock shot at Milton, Mass. 



Wilson, T. J. vii., 10, 148—" The Butcher Bird in New York ;" note on 

 •the Loggerhead and Great Northern Shrikes near Auburn, N. Y. 



Wilson, Thos. W, xii., 7, 136— Ivory-biUed Woodpeckers at Lentes Land- 

 ing, Fla.^ 



W , J. viii., 9, 139— "Crow Blackbirds Eat Fish;" observations in 



Florida. 



W , J. E. ii., 3, 36— "The Game , of North Carolina." v., 8, 133— 



Gunners' notes from Newberne, N. C. vii., 10, 149 — Gunners' notes 

 from Newberne, N. C. 



W-: , 1. E. xii., 10, 188— Note.on Wild Geese. 



Wood, A. H. iii., 3, 39— Concerning food tof the Ruffed Grouse. 



