For Sale, Exchange and Want Column.— Any Cooper Club member is entitled to one 
advertising notice in each issue free. Notices of over ten lines will be charged for at the 
rate of 15 cents per line. For this department, address W. LEE ae Altadena, Los 
Los Angeles County, California. 
a eee 
WANTED, for cash or exchange—The Auk, 
vol. 3, no. 4, vol. 6, no. 1; A. O. U. Check- 
list N. A. Birds, 3rd ed.; The Osprey, vol. 1, 
nos. 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, vol. 2, no. 3, any after 9, 
vol. 3, any or all numbers, vol. 4, any after 
9, vol. 5, nos. 1, 8, vol. 6, any number ex- 
cept 2—J. E. Hatiinen, Cooperton, Okla- 
homa, 
THE GAME Birps oF CALIFORNIA, by Grin- 
nell, Bryant and Storer; large 8vo, pp. 
x+642, 16 colored plates, 94 figures. in 
text; cloth bound. A comprehensive work, 
including full information down to 1917, 
compiled with regard to the needs of the 
nature-lover, sportsman, and serious ornith- 
ologist; $6.00 net—O. M. Wasusurn, Mana- 
ger, University of California Press, Berke- 
ley, California. 
RaLpH W. JACKSON, Route No. 1, Cam- 
bridge, Maryland, desires sets of Raptores, 
either by exchange or will purchase for 
cash. Large list for exchange of species 
other than Raptores. 
FLorA OF RHODE ISLAND—To be issued in 
parts. First part, Memoir no. 1, FERN GEN- 
ERA, by J. Franklin Collins, formerly Asst. 
Professor of Botany, Brown University, now 
COOPER CLUB 
of California, 
ready ; 7 pp., illustrating all known Rhode 
Island genera; 35 cents, M. O. or checks 
payable to “HoueH PusBLIcATION Funp”, 
Park Museum, Providence, R. I. 
WANTED—Good bird skins as follows: 251, 
262, 280, 286, 296, 311, 321, 329, 391, 418, 
422, 525, 547a, 564, 571, 576, 578, 579, 581e, 
581r, 600a, (603), 633, 634, 653, 654a, 663a, 
682.1, 71 7b, 723, 740a, 739, 747, 757a— 
CHARLES L, Puinuies, 5 W. Weir St., Taun- 
ton, Mass. 
ASSISTANT CURATOR WANTED—A pplica- 
tions are invited for the position of Assist- 
ant Curator in the California Museum of 
Vertebrate Zoology. Candidate should have 
some knowledge of systematic ornithology 
and mammalogy; he should have a clear 
and accurate style of handwriting, so as to 
do labelling and cataloguing; he must be 
ready and willing to meet freely and explic- 
itly the desires of his employer in regard to 
methods of carrying on his work (yet he 
must be possessed of initiative and energy). 
The initial salary for a person of acceptable 
qualifications is twelve hundred dollars per 
year. Correspond with: THE DIRECTOR, 
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University 
Berkeley, California. 
PUBLICATIONS 
To be a from W. LEE CHAMBERS, Altadena, Los Angeles County, California 
PACIFIC COAST AVIFAUNA 
No. 5. A Bibliography of California Ornithology, by Joseph Grinnell. 
166 pp. Price $1.50 post paid. 
The titles listed are 1785 in number, and cover the period from 1797 to the 
end of the year 1907. These bibliographical entries are rounded out by a series 
- of indexes—to authors, to local lists by localities, to the serial publications cited, 
and to the bird names mentioned, both vernacular and systematic. According to 
one authority upon the subject: “It is safe to say that this is the most important 
contribution to the bibliography of North American ornithology since the Coues- 
ian contributions of 1878-1880 set the high standard here closely followed”. In- 
dispensable to a student of western birds. 
No. 7. Birds of the Pacific Slope of Southern California, by George Willett. 
1912. 122 pp. Price $1.50 post paid. 
Contains extensive and accurate accounts of the local distribution, nesting, 
and migration of the 377 species and subspecies of birds found on the Pacific 
slope of southern California, from San Luis Obispo County to the Mexican line. 
Anyone interested in the birds of southern California will have constant need of 
this publication, as a check upon his own observations. 
1909. 
