. Bird lore . n, S. C. Tennessee.—Albert F. Ganier, Nashville, Tenn. Texas.—H. P. Attwater, Houston, Texas. Utah.—Prof. Marcus E. Jones, Salt Lake City, Utah. Vermont.—Prof. G. H. Perkins, Burlington, Vt. Virginia.—Dr. W. C. Rives, 1723 I Street, Washington, D. C. Washington.—Samuel F. Rathburn, Seattle, Wash. West Virginia.—Dr. W. C. Rives, 1723 I Street, Washington, D. C. Wisconsin.—H. L. Ward, Public Museum, Milwaukee, Wis. CANADA Alberta.—G. F. Dippie, Calgary, Alta. British Columbia.—Francis Kermode, Provincial Museum, Victoria, B. C. Manitoba.—Ernest Thompson Seton, Greenwich, Conn. Nova


. Bird lore . n, S. C. Tennessee.—Albert F. Ganier, Nashville, Tenn. Texas.—H. P. Attwater, Houston, Texas. Utah.—Prof. Marcus E. Jones, Salt Lake City, Utah. Vermont.—Prof. G. H. Perkins, Burlington, Vt. Virginia.—Dr. W. C. Rives, 1723 I Street, Washington, D. C. Washington.—Samuel F. Rathburn, Seattle, Wash. West Virginia.—Dr. W. C. Rives, 1723 I Street, Washington, D. C. Wisconsin.—H. L. Ward, Public Museum, Milwaukee, Wis. CANADA Alberta.—G. F. Dippie, Calgary, Alta. British Columbia.—Francis Kermode, Provincial Museum, Victoria, B. C. Manitoba.—Ernest Thompson Seton, Greenwich, Conn. Nova Scotia.—Harry Piers, Provincial Museum, Halifax, N. S. Ontario, Eastern.—James H. Fleming, 267 Rusholme Road, Toronto, Onf. Ontario, Western.—W. E. Saunders, London, Ont. Quebec.—W. H. Mousley, Hatley, Quebec. MEXICO E. W. Nelson, Biological Survey, Dept. of Agr., Washington, D. C. WEST INDIESC. B. Cory, Field Museum, Chicago, 111. GREAT BRITAINClinton G. Abbott, Rhinebeck, N. Bird-Lores Twentieth Christmas Census THE highest number of species recorded in this census in the northernand middle Atlantic States is forty-three by Orient, Long Island; inthe south, forty-five by St. Petersburg, Fla.; in the Mississippi Valley,forty-five by Nashville, and forty by Kansas City; on the Pacific Coast 109 bySanta Barbara. Despite the wintry conditions prevalent at Christmas time, the open fallexperienced by northeastern states is reflected in the presence of birds whichordinarily have moved south before this date. For instance, the Grackleoccurs on four reports from Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New York states(75 at New Haven, the others single birds); twenty-five Red-winged Black-birds are reported from New Haven, one from New York City; we have sixRusty Blackbirds (Norwalk, Conn.), and twenty-five (Fort Plain, N. Y.);and the Cowbird is reported from two localities on Long Island (37 and i).Rusty and Cowbird often migrate very late, and it will be mor


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