c 
/m 
7L 
^CcT ^<>U, 
(/-<k^sO (K 
t><A- ^ ,^-r -%■ ' 
, ^4. ^ti. 
k^ — c,. /isl/-^44^ ^ ^7 
llM 
hLa^r7 - / y / 7 1 
v ' V l ^Sc&--*yiy++**+ 
'^ ^j £• 3 < 7 ^*~ f 
PiytsiAtuiA ^7 ^t /X^r*****^^ **- GsksCo^ZC ~< £J-«-«^y 
Q4 ^^* aA — <T , /?v <'<*-«~^^ <-*~*. ^x^c 
^~W? ^U^M^iZy <xAC Cv\A-~- 
/x^»-«-cy' **■ ^AAnAc Y7 c</Jov^/f 
cxJU^jT' 
A -writer in the Hartford Times 
states that he has seen Kingbirds eating 
Robin’s eggs, and classes them as an ene- 
my of that bird in consequence. Some 
years ago while riding on the train at full 
speed below Moosup, Conn., a Kingbird 
flew across a field and alighted on the rail- 
road fence with a robin’s egg in its mouth. 
o. <% O. Vll. Oct. 1882. p. /&3" 
Kingbird and Colorado Beetle. 
I have known the Kingbird to feed on the 
Colorado potato beetle. Have others noted it ? — 
Theo. tr. Lemmon. 
O.& O. XI. May. 1886. p. 67 
