104 
SEC. 16. — Pigeons. 
SEC’S 17, 18. — Vultures, hawks, owls. 
SEC’S 19, 20. — Parrots, cockatoos, macaws. 
SEC. 21. — Cuckoos. 
SEC. 22. — Plantain-eaters, night-jars, rollers. 
SEC. 23. — Kingfishers, motmots, bee-eaters. 
SEC. 24.— Hornbills. 
SEC. 25. — Toucans, woodpeckers, swifts. 
SEC. 26. — Trogans, humming-birds, lyre birds. 
SEC. 27. — Broadbills, pittas,, tyrant fly-catchers, cotingas. 
SEC. 28. — Woodhewers, ant-birds. Old World fly-catchers, 
bulbuls, warblers, larks, wrens. 
SEC. 29. — Thrushes, cuckoo-shrikes, drongos. 
SEC. 30. — Waxwings, wood-swallows, shrikes, swallows, 
tits. Old World orioles. 
SEC’S 31, 32, 33. — Bower birds, birds of paradise. 
SEC. 34. — Crows, jays, magpies. 
SEC. 35. — Starlings, honey-birds, creepers, sunbirds. 
SEC. 36. — Tanagers, weaver-birds, American orioles, finch- 
CENTER CASES. 
CASE A. — A group illustrating the peculiar domestic ar- 
rangements of the rhinoceros hornbill during the breeding sea- 
son. 
CASE B.— ‘'A Surprised Mother,” representing a domestic 
hen as mother of a lot of ducklings that are represented as 
plunging into a basin of water. 
CASE C. — A group showing the nesting site and a pair of 
prairie chickens. 
CASE D. — A group of quail in various attitudes. 
CASE E. — A group of the American eider duck. 
CASE F. — A group of the American robin, showing the 
nest and eggs and the parent birds much excited by the ap- 
proach of a black snake. 
CASE G. — A group representing a section of a pond with 
the shore line fringed with grass. A group of ducks are shown ; 
some stand on the shore, and others are swimming about near 
