. The oist . ller and Naturalist. No. 3. TheNaturalist. Vol. 1. No. 8-9. Published atAustin. Texas. The Naturalist published atOregon, Vol. 1. No. 12; Vol. 2. No. 1. TheOregon Naturalist. Vol. 2. No. 2-3-6-8: Vol. 4,No. 9. The American Magazine of NaturalSciences Vol. 2, No. 1-3-6-8-9. E. L. HALEY,Rangeley, Maine. <*1) IV THB OOLOGIST TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS We are trying to make THE OOLOGISTwhat it should be. A representative of allOrnithologists and Oologists of America. This can only be done by keeping up thestandard. The standard can only be kept upby spending money for paper, ink, wa


. The oist . ller and Naturalist. No. 3. TheNaturalist. Vol. 1. No. 8-9. Published atAustin. Texas. The Naturalist published atOregon, Vol. 1. No. 12; Vol. 2. No. 1. TheOregon Naturalist. Vol. 2. No. 2-3-6-8: Vol. 4,No. 9. The American Magazine of NaturalSciences Vol. 2, No. 1-3-6-8-9. E. L. HALEY,Rangeley, Maine. <*1) IV THB OOLOGIST TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS We are trying to make THE OOLOGISTwhat it should be. A representative of allOrnithologists and Oologists of America. This can only be done by keeping up thestandard. The standard can only be kept upby spending money for paper, ink, wages andhalf tones. Money can only be secured from subscrip-tions and advertising. If each one of youcould send us one one new subscription thisspring this would put THE OOLOGIST whereit belongs. Try it. Buy your bird goods ofour advertisers. THE OOLOGIST, Lacon, IN. The OoLOGiST. Vou XXIX. No. 4. Albion, N. Y. Apr. 15, 1912. Whole No. 297 Published Monthly, by R. M. Barnes, Albion, N. Y., and Lacon, Evening Grosbeaks in New York —Photo by Ottomar Reinecke 255 THE OOLOGIST Evening Grosbeaks. Reappearance After Twenty-one Years Absence. Having occasionally seen Notes inthe OOLOGIST, the last in the Febru-ary Number of 1912, I wish to contri-bute this article and the illustrationsof the Grosbeak to The Oologist. Some time ago the Rochester Her-ald announced that several speci-mens of the Evening Grosbeak hadbeen seen in Summer Park and alsoin Highland and Seneca Parks atRochester. This item recalled to methe following: In the latter part of December, 1889,Dave Trenton and Dr. Bergtold (thefirst died years ago and the latter nowlives in Denver, Nebraska) shot anevening Grosbeak in Deleware was brought to my attention. Iat once got in communication withfriends near Ridgeway, across theriver and gave them a description ofthe bird. Within a week I receivedabout thirty of these rare birds, malesand females. I mounted them. Sev-eral I gave to the Buffalo Society o


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