. The oist . it right athome by mail, in yonrspare time. GET OUR Book FREE It tells all about our school and how we teach thisfine business by mail—and the book is abso-lutely FREE, Malse big profits ia your spare your fine trophies. Decorate your iiome with beau-tiful specimens. You will be delighted with our beau-tiful book for it telis you alt about taxidermy. Send forthe free — today. Northwestern Schoof of Taxi*dermy, i^^ Rex Omaha. Nebraska. Back Nurrbers of the Oologist Wanted Vol 1, No. 1. 2, 2. 12, 1. 3, 4. 13, 5. 5. 5, 6. 14, 3, 5, 6, 4. 10, 11, 12. 7, 3. 15, 1, 7. •


. The oist . it right athome by mail, in yonrspare time. GET OUR Book FREE It tells all about our school and how we teach thisfine business by mail—and the book is abso-lutely FREE, Malse big profits ia your spare your fine trophies. Decorate your iiome with beau-tiful specimens. You will be delighted with our beau-tiful book for it telis you alt about taxidermy. Send forthe free — today. Northwestern Schoof of Taxi*dermy, i^^ Rex Omaha. Nebraska. Back Nurrbers of the Oologist Wanted Vol 1, No. 1. 2, 2. 12, 1. 3, 4. 13, 5. 5. 5, 6. 14, 3, 5, 6, 4. 10, 11, 12. 7, 3. 15, 1, 7. • 8, 4, 5, 8. 16, 4, 9. 10, 2, 3, 4 26, will buy a large number of each ofthe above back numbers for cash atthe rate they are listed at, as being forsale in this number of THE OOLO-GIST. Address, 30 Rowena St. Boston, Mass. R. M. BARNES Lacon, 111. The OoLOGiST. Vol. XXIX. No. 11. Albion, N. Y. Nov. 15, 1912. Whole No. 304 Oivned and Published Monthly, by R. M. Barnes, Albion, N. Y., and Lacon, III,. = 0- 5 I CO 370 THE OOLOGIST Early Solitary Sandpipers in Philadel-phia County, Pa. It is well known that the SolitarySandpiper breeds in the mountains ofPennsylvania, and like certain otherbirds of the Canadian fauna of thisstate, it is one of our earliest (if notour first) migrant to appear in thefall—late summer, rather, I shouldsay. Until four years ago I gave theWater Thrush first place, as our frstFall migrant with August 1stas my earliest date of its ap-pearance, but now the Solitary Sand-piper ururps this species, and is theearliest bird of any species occurringhere, to come in the Fall. On .July 10, 1908, while hunting fora Florida Gallinule uest in a cat-tailmarch at Port Richmond, PhiladelphiaCounty, Pennsylvania, I observed twoSolitary Sandpipers, which constitutemy earliest record. They were togeth-er on a small bar of mud in themarsh and as tame as all new arrivalsof this species, which is our tamentSandpiper, and excepting the SpottedSandpiper, the easiest


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