The Oologist. 



Vol. XXI. No. 7. 



Albion, N. Y., July, 1904. 



Whole No. 204 



The Oologist. 



A Monthly Publication Devoted to 



OOLOGY, ORNITHOLOGY AND 



TAXIDERMY. 



FRANK H. LATTIN, Publisher, 

 ALBION, N. Y. 



ERNEST H. SHORT, Editor and Manager. 



Correspondence and Items of Interest to the 

 etudent ol Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

 Jrom aU. 



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ERNEST H. SHORT, Editor and Manager. 

 Chili, Monroe Co., N. Y 



An Ornithological Iron-clad. 



Number One of the A. O. U. is 

 not such a very interesting bird from 

 the standpoint of the scientific orni- 



thologist but in the trite language of 

 my erstwhile friend Josh Billings, he 

 is "an amoosin' cuss." I have gotten 

 more downright hilarity out of watch- 

 ing the western Grebe than any other 

 bird in the catalogue. He always re- 

 minds me of an Iron-clad Monitor un- 

 der full steam, with nothing of him 

 but an elongated neck and a mere 

 speck of dark gray back sticking up 

 out of the water. Below the long rail- 

 road bridge crossing Lake Pen'd 

 Oreille (pronounced Pond deray) in 

 northern Idaho this bird is a constant 

 resident. They breed in the sedgy 

 marshes surrounding the lake and in 

 the winter season fish in the channel. 

 For the lake has a channel and a cur- 

 rent being only a widening of the 

 Clark's Fork of the Columbia. Any 

 day you may sit on the bridge and see 

 from fifty to one hundred of them dis- 

 porting themselves in the limpid wa- 

 ter. They are not gunned very much, 

 in fact it does very little good to gun 

 them for like Johnny's woodchuck, 

 they can get home faster than a gun 

 can shoot. This is a fact that I had 

 to acquire by stern experience. I want- 

 ed a few of them for mounting and 

 took out my Smith for that purpose. 

 After firing away about a ton of shot, 

 and every time the shot got there the 

 bird was over in another county, I 

 concluded that as far as Mr. L. C. 

 Smith and his justly famous gun was 

 concerned, I would go hungry for 

 Grebe a long time. I finally secured a 

 few however by laying for them with a 

 22 rifle. Its about the most amusing- 

 ly provoking thing in my experience 

 to see one of these fellows tip up at 

 the report of your gun and calmly dis- 

 appear beneath the water. It is all 



