250 _ : THE CONDOR _— 
Golden-crowned, 84 
House, 94 
Lark, 63 
Lincoln, 84 
Merrill Song, 145-153 
Modoc Song, 75, 205 
Mono Fox, 41 
Nevada Sage, 205 
Nevada Savannah, 75, 205 
Nuttall, 30, 36, 212 
Rufous-crowned, 29 
San Diego Song, 68, 212 
San Lucas Marsh, 41 
Slate-colored Fox, 206 
Song, 84 
Vesper, 56, 63 
Western Chipping, 205 
Western Lark, 125, 205 
Western Savannah, 23 
Western Vesper, 205 
White-crowned, 63, 84, 223, 224 
White-throated, 172 
Yolla Bolly Fox, 42 
Yosemite Fox, 76 
Spatula clypeata, 198 
Speotyto cunicularia hypogaea, 204 
Sphyrapicus ruber, 83 
ruber ruber, 172 
thyroideus, 204 
varius, 42 
Spinus pinus, 84 
Spizella breweri, 205, 222 
passerina, 84 
passerina arizonae, 205 
socialis socialis, 223 
Spoonbill, 64, 122, 129, 198 
Sprague, Isaac, reminiscences of, 167 
Squatarola squatarola, 86 
Stearns, R. E. C., reminiscences of, 107 
Steganopus tricolor, 201 
Stelgidopteryx serripennis, 84 
Stephens, Frank, unusual occurrences of 
Bendire Thrasher, Forked-tailed Pe- 
trel and Western Goshawk, 87; ran- 
dom notes, 123-124; review of his “an 
annotated list of the birds of San Di- 
ego County, California”, 132 
Sterna antillarum, 67 
caspia, 73, 196 
elegans, 230-234 
eurygnatha, 234 
forsteri, 196 
paradisaea, 125 
Stilt, Black-necked, 202 
Stone, Dr. Witmer, portrait of, 43; notice 
concerning, 174 
Storer, Tracy I. the fly-catching habit 
among birds, 125; the California Jay 
as a bird killer, 214 
Sturnella neglecta, 205 
Swallow, Bank, 10, 159, 206 
Barn, 4, 10, 63, 206 
Cliff, 68, 172, 206 
Rough-winged, 63, 84 
Tree, 84, 88, 206 
Violet-green, 84 
“Vol. XXI 
Swan, Trumpeter, 95, 124 
Whistling, 124, 126, 127 
Swarth, H. S., review of Taverner’s “the 
hawks of the Canadian prairie pro- 
vinces in their relation to agricul- 
ture’, 46; notice concerning, 175; a 
California specimen of the Sandhill 
Crane, 212-213 
Swift, Black, 83 
Vaux, 74, 83 
White-throated, 235 
rt 
Tachycineta thalassina, 84 
Tanager, Summer, 129 
Western, 84, 206 
Taverner, P. A., review of his “the hawks of 
the Canadian prairie -provinces in their 
relation to agriculture”, 46; the sum- 
mer birds of Hazelton, British Colum- 
bia, 80-86 
Teal, Blue-winged, 4, 9, 122, 189, 190, 198, 
227 
Cinnamon, 122, 198 
Green-winged, 122, 129, 198 
Telmatodytes palustris aestuarinus, 42 
palustris plesius, 206, 214 
Tern, Arctic, 125 
Black, 4, 10, 112; 113, 1595 297 
Caspian, 73, 196 
Common, 233 § 
Elegant, 230-234 
Forster, 196, 233 
Least, 67 
Royal, 232, 233 
Thalassogeron culminatus, 41, 45 
Thrasher, Bendire, 87, 123 
California, 68 
Sage, 76, 206 
Thrush, Alaska Hermit, 23, 125, 172 
Hermit, 70, 85 
Missel, 94 
Olive-backed, 85 
Russet-backed, 23, 68 
Sierra Hermit, 77 
Varied, 85 
White Mountains Hermit, 42 
Thryomanes bewicki charienturus, 68. 
bewicki eremophilus, 214 
Tiaris bicolor, 170 
Tinnunculus columbarius, 89 
Titmouse, Gray, 206 
Plain, 29 
Torrey, Bradford, reference to, 69; reminis- 
cences of, 168 
Totanus flavipes, 202 
melanoleucus, 202 
Towhee, Anthony, 26, 68 
California Brown, 36 
Green-tailed, 64, 76, 206 
Mountain, 42 
Nevada, 206 
San Diego, 68 
Toxostoma bendirei, 87, 123 . 
longirostre sennetti, 238 
redivivum pasadenense, 68 
rufum, 238 
