124 
General Notes. 
A Spotted Egg of Empidonax minimus. — [The following note, 
communicated to me by Mr. Hayward, seems of sufficient interest to merit 
publication. I have examined the egg in question, and there is apparently 
no reason to doubt its correct identification. Save for the reddish-brown 
dotting it is quite typical of E. minimus, and not for a moment to be com- 
pared with the eggs of either E. traillii or acadicus. I have never seen a 
spotted egg of the Least Flycatcher before. — W. Brewster.] 
Last spring, during the month of May, while collecting eggs at Milton, 
Mass., I found a nest of this species in the forks of an apple-tree about 
fifteen feet from the ground, containing four eggs, three of which were of 
the usual color, but the fourth, of the same ground-color, was minutely 
marked with fine dots of reddish-brown. The spots are irregularly dis- 
persed over the surface of the egg, and while numerous on one side are 
few on the other. The egg measures .63 x .50 of an inch. The nest was 
like others of this species, and the bird had the well-known note of 
chebe'c. — R. Hayward, Boston , Mass. 
Additional Captures of the Curlew Sandpiper in New 
England. — The three specimens of this rare straggler, which have pre- 
viously been recorded as occurring in New England, have all been col- 
lected in Massachusetts, and I am enabled to add two more instances, 
both of which have also been taken in this State. 
Mr. John Fottler, Jr., writes me that he has in his possession a fine 
spring specimen which was shot on Cape Cod about the 10th of May, 
1878. Another specimen is in the collection made by Mr. Baldwin 
Coolidge (now in possession of the city of Lawrence, Mass.), which was 
taken on Nahant Beach some ten years ago, and at that time was preserved 
by Mr. N. Vickery, of Lynn. — Ruthven Deane, Cambridge , Mass. 
A Second Specimen of the Yellow-crowned Night Heron 
( Nyctiardea violacea ) in Massachusetts. — Since the Yellow-crowned 
Night Heron was added to our New England birds by Mr. Allen’s record * 
of an individual shot by Mr. Vickery in Lynn, Mass., in October, 1862, no 
additional specimens have been brought to light by the numerous enter- 
prising observers that arc so thoroughly working up our bird Fauna. It is 
therefore with great pleasure that I am enabled to announce the occurrence 
of a second Massachusetts example, which is now in my possession. The 
history of this wanderer, so far as it is known, is briefly as follows : On 
the afternoon of July 30, 1878, Mr. George Cunningham — who resides in 
a rather densely populated part of Somerville, just beyond the line sep- 
arating that city from Cambridge — was attracted by a commotion among 
the Robins and other small birds in the orchard behind the house. Upon 
investigating the cause of this unusual excitement a large bird was seen to 
take flight and disappear over the adjoining fence. Shortly after this 
there was another alarm from the orchard, and it was found that the 
* Am. Nat.,' Ill, 637, February, 1870. 
