195. Bartramia longicauda. Field Plover. —Breeds in dry fields 
bordering the Adirondacks, on both sides of the mountains. 
Bua N. 0*0# 7, Got* X882, p, 256 f 
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884. Upland Plover in Minnesota. By W. L. Tiffany. Ibid., May 8, ^ 
pp. 284-285.— Detailed and interesting account of its habits. & Stream. ^" i *-** 
817. The Upland Plover. By Mont Clare (of Claremont, N. H.). 
Ibid., Jan. 12, pp. 35-37. — On the habits of the bird. i^JaaWiO&& fi-^Ado 
Babtbam’s Sandpipeb in Somebsetshibe. — In the collection of birds 
belonging to Dr. Woodforde, of Amberd House, near Taunton, and chiefly nitr4 
obtained in the county of Somerset, is a very perfect example of Bartram’s 
Sandpiper, which was shot at least thirty years ago on the banks of the 
River Parret, in the parish of Combwitch. It was shot in one of the 
winter months, and appears to be in complete winter plumage, being more 
ashy in its coloration than any other example of this Sandpiper which 
I have seen. So far as I am aware, this specimen has not hitherto been 
recorded. — Mubbay A. Mathew (Bishop’s Lydeard, Taunton). 
