60 
THE CONDOR 
Vol. XVII 
and thrusting of beaks, but yet unable to stand. At either visit no parent birds were 
seen. 
Spizella atrogularis. A nest was located at San Diego inside the city limits by a 
friend. May 9, 1912, it contained one egg. The full clutch of three was taken May 12. 
The eggs were bluish and unspotted. 
The nest was in an extremely open spot, it being easily seen for fifty yards in any 
direction, and was entirely built of grasses and placed about 18 inches above the ground 
in an upright fork of a slender chaparral. The bird was rather tame, allowing me to get 
within a few feet of her. But when she left the nest, it was a rapid downward flight 
into the nearest brush, and she would then return like a Bell Sparrow, hopping on the 
ground most of the way. 
Ammodramus savannarum bimaculatus. A set of this species was taken for me 
May 17, 1907, near San Diego. Several sets were taken about that time by the same 
boy. May 19, 1912, while collecting on the outskirts of San Diego, a Grasshopper Spar- 
row was flushed from a nest containing three pipped eggs and two newly hatched 
young. The nest was open, resembling a Horned Lark’s, and was situated at the base 
of a small bush. The bird acted rather shy, but on my staying around the nest she 
would approach very close. — Laurence M. Huey, San Diego, California. 
Yakutat Song Sparrow in Oregon. — A part of April of the present year was spent 
by the writer in the interests of the newly formed Department Museum of Zoology of 
the University of Oregon, in field work at Netarts Bay, on the north Oregon coast, a few 
miles south of Tillamook Bay. On April 14, while searching for shore-birds among the 
boulders at the breakers’ edge at “Short Beach”, three miles north of Netarts, I was 
surprised to see a Song Sparrow fly up from among the rocks, out of the way of a 
breaker, and alight on another boulder at the edge of the breaking surf. A shot se- 
cured the bird, which Mr. Grinnell has identified as Melospiza melodia caurina, with a 
note that it is the southernmost record for the species, save for the one taken a few 
years ago at Humboldt Bay. 
The following day, April 15, Mr. Stanley G. Jewett of the Oregon Fish and Game 
Commission, with whom the writer was working at the time, secured another specimen 
of this subspecies among the identical boulders in the edge of the surf at Short Beach. 
The first specimen, secured by the writer, is now Accession 390, Univ. of Ore., Mu- 
seum of Zoology, Eugene, Oregon. The second specimen, taken by Mr. Jewett, is Field 
No. 1810, S. G. J., Coll, of Fish and Game Comm., Portland, Oregon. — Alfred Shelton, 
University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon. 
New Years Day Bird Census at Palisades, Mesa County, Colorado.— January 1, 
1915; 2 p. m. to 4 p. m.; distance, about 5 miles along river bank and irrigation canal; 
day clear and bright; light southwest wind; temperature 35. Species: Killdeer 1; Cali- 
fornia Quail 15 (others heard); Pigeon Hawk 1; Rocky Mountain Hairy Woodpecker 
1; Red-shafted Flicker 5; Desert Horned Lark 150; Magpie 7; Western Raven 2; Pin- 
yon Jay 12; Brewer Blackbird 7; White-rumped Shrike 2; House Finch 15; English 
Sparrow 30; Gambel and White-crowned Sparrows 72; Mountain Song Sparrow 29; 
Goldfinch 1 (heard); Mountain Chickadee 1; Pink-sided Junco 55; Shufeldt Junco 2 
(male); Intermediate Junco 10; Western Robin 1. Total, 22 species and approxi- 
mately 419 individuals. 
Remarks: The surprise of the afternoon was the solitary Killdeer seen, as there 
was ice everywhere except for the narrow channel of the river and this was full of 
floating ice. Three species which should have been seen but were not, are: Western 
Redtail, Grey-headed Junco and some variety of Leucosticte; the last mentioned of 
these probably have not come down to lower levels yet this season, on account of there 
being so little snow on the surrounding mountains. — J. L. Sloanaker, Palisades, Colo- 
rado. 
First Specimens of Baird Sandpiper from the State of Washington. — Two speci- 
mens of the Baird Sandpiper ( Pisobia bairdi) are now in the Collection of Whitman Col- 
lege at Walla Walla, Washington. One of these has been compared with the series in 
the California Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, and proves to be still in the winter 
plumage. The specimens were taken by Storrs H. Lyman in the spring of 1908 on a 
farm about four miles from Dayton, Columbia County, Washington. Mr. Lyman has 
kindly furnished all available information about them. The sandpipers were taken in 
the early part of April, probably on either the 10th or 11th. A cold rain fell that day 
turning into a snow squall in the middle of the afternoon. The two birds were taken 
from a small flock feeding in a grain field. 
Baird Sandpipers are reported to have been seen at three localities in the state 
(Dawson and Bowles, Birds of Washington, 1910, p. 656), but no specimens have been 
obtained previously. — Lee R. Dice, Berkeley, California. 
