lilli LIOGRAl’II Y OF ECONOMIC RELATIONS OF RINDS 
153 
Forty thousand tern skins taken in Massachusetts sent dur- 
ing the past year to Liverpool for millinery purposes. Com- 
ment also on the destruction of woodpeckers and other small 
birds, which fall victims to the gunning craze. 
1884. Warren, Harry. Diurnal Rapacious Birds. (With 
special reference to Chester county, Pa.) Agriculture 
of Pennsylvania, 1883 (1884), pp. 90-112. 
A very important paper on the food of various hawks, with 
report of numerous examinations of the contents of stomachs. 
1884. Weed, Clarence M. Does the Crow Blackbird eat 
Crayfish? American Naturalist, v. XVI IT, p. 832. 
Part of a crayfish was found in the stomach of a young 
crow blackbird. 
1884. Weed, Clarence Moores. The Food of Young Birds. 
Report Michigan State Board of Agriculture, 1884. 
Also Report Michigan State Horticultural Society, 1884. 
Report on food of nestling catbirds, robins, bluebirds, and 
crow blackbirds, with discussion of economic relations. 
1885. Barnes, Gf. L. Kingbirds and Bees. Forest and 
Stream, v. XXY, Oct. 8, p. 205. 
1885. Bennett, Geo. B. The Lesson of a Market. Forest 
and Stream, v. XXIV, June 4, pp. 366, 367. 
An account of the small birds exposed for sale in the mar- 
ket at Norfolk, Va. 
1885. Brown, E. L. An Insectivorous Kite. The Natur- 
alist, v. I, No. 3, p. 125. 
1885. Butler, A. W. The Cuckoo. Indiana Farmer. April, 
1885, p. 14. 
1885. Dury, Ciias. Notes on the Food of Raptorial Birds. 
Journal of Cincinnati Society of Natural History, v. 
VIII, pp. 62-67. Also reprinted in Random Notes 
on Natural History, v. I, No. 8. 
Notes on the contents of stomachs of various species of 
hawks and owls. 
