. Il bollettino di Wilson . Daniel, Lynchburg, Va. Lou J. Eppinger, 516 Chene St., Detroit, Michea E. W. Fisher. 1502 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pad. Honon. Junius Henderson, Boulder, Colon. W. P. Lyons, 10-11, 41 E. Fourth St., Cincinnati, O. Miss Rebecca Morehead Leete, North East, Pad. Herbert H. Marble, Box 14, Somerset, Mass. Harold E. Porter. 101 West 85th St., New York City. Dr. W. E. Rotzeli, Narberth, Pen. Orpheus Schantz, Morton Park, 111. George H. Selleck, 110 High St., Exeter, N. H. John E. Thayer, Box 98, Lancaster, Mass. Miss Adelaide Tutter, Clerk U. S. Circuit Court, Kansas City, M.
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. The Wilson bulletin . M. Daniel, Lynchburg, Va. Lou J. Eppinger, 516 Chene St., Detroit, Mich. Miss E. W. Fisher. 1502 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Hon. Junius Henderson, Boulder, Colo. W. P. Lyons, 10-11, 41 E. Fourth St., Cincinnati, O. Miss Rebecca Morehead Leete, North East, Pa. Herbert H. Marble, Box 14, Somerset, Mass. Harold E. Porter. 101 West 85th St., New York City. Dr. W. E. Rotzeli, Narberth, Penn. Orpheus Schantz, Morton Park, 111. George H. Selleck, 110 High St., Exeter, N. H. John E. Thayer, Box 98, Lancaster, Mass. Miss Adelaide Utter, Clerk U. S. Circuit Court, Kansas City, Mo. Warner W. Van Norden, 751 Fifth Ave., New York City. Millard Van Wagner, 47 Leonard St., New York City. Alick Wetmore, North Freedom, Wis. Burtis H. Wilson, 1102 17th St., Rock Island, 111. The following persons have been received into Associate mem-bership: J. L. Floyd, Ada, O. Harry S. Hathaway, Box 498, Providence, R. I.Miss Isabella L. Sand, Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y.Rev. George F. Weld, Lincoln St., Hingham, Mass.. NEST OF THE ORCHARD ORIOLE (/. spurius.) Collected and photographed by the author. THE WILSON BULLETIN No. 43 A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OFORNITHOLOGY Vol. X. JUNE, 1903. No. 3. THE NEST OF THE ORCHARD ORIOLE. (Icterus spurtJis) BY DR. R. W. SHUFELDT. During the past thirty years, at different times I haveexamined a number of nests of the Orchard Oriole [IcterusspJiriiis), and these have been collected from the latitudeof Washington, D. C, to that of southern New England. Itis truly remarkable how much they vary, not only in thematter of form, but in the materials selected by the birdsfor their construction, and in the places chosen by them fortheir building. These variations and circumstances aredoubtless responsible for the great differences we meet within the descriptions and figures published by ornithologicalwriters, no two of which ever seem to agree in their essen-tial particulars. Among the descriptions left us by theearlier authors, we meet that of Audubon,