Page:Condor16(1).djvu/43

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

42 THE CONDOR Vol. XVI THE CONDOR A l?lagazlne of Western Ornithology Published Bi=bionthly by the Cooper Ornltholo$1cM Club J. GRINNELL. Editor. Berkeley. C?lifornia HARRY S. SWARTH. Associate Editor J. EUGENE LAW t Business M?nagers W. LEE CHAMBEKS Hollywood, California: Published Januar 1914 ,?UBSCI?IPTION RATE5 One Bollar and Fifty Cents per Year in the United States, anada, Mexico and U.S. olonies, payabte in advance Thirty Cenls the single copy. One Dollar ?nd Seventy-five Cents per Year in all other ?countries in the International Pos?l Union. Claims for missing or imperfect numbers should be made within thirty days of date of issue. Subscriptions and Exchanges should be sent to the Business Manager. M,,nuscripts for publigation. and Books and P?,pers for review. should be sent to the Editor. Advertising Rates on application. EDITORIAL NOTES AND NEWS The friends of Mr. Joseph Dixon are relieved to learn that be with his party is safely housed for the winter on the Arctic shore of Alaska, near Demarcation Point. Letters were brought overland by sledge to Circle City during Oc- tober and November. The latest letter was dated October 16, and reports everyone well and steps already under way towards carrying cn winter collecting. Mr. P. B. Peabody, of Blue Rapids, Kan- sas, is putting the finishing touches on his bird-book entitled "Nesting Ways".. There re- 11?ai?l, however, several western birds concern- ing which additional facts are needed, to bring the accounts to a uniform and satisfactory state of completeness. The author will be grateful for facts relative to any of these: Black Swift, Peale Falcon, Nevada Cowbird, Suisun Song. Sparrow, Gray Titmouse, Califor- nia Sage Sparrow, Monterey Hermit Thrush, and Salt Marsh Yellowthroat. Southeastern Alaska received 'an unusual amount of ornithological attention the past year. That most remote of the southeasterr, fringe of islands, Forrester Island, was stud- ied for three months by Dr. Harold Heath, of Stanford University. While Mr. George Wil- lett explored several of the islands in the vi- cinity of Sitka. Reports from each of these field-observers are promised for future pub- lication in T?: CONDOR. On the afternoofi of November 6, 1913, the Museum of History, Science, and Art, in Exposition Park, Los Angeles, was formally opened to the public, the culmination of a series. of events which have been followed with closest interest by the Southern Divi- sion of the Cooper Ornithological Club. This dedication formed part of a two days' general celebration by the city of Los Ange- les,' marking the completion of the Owens River aqueduct, the exercises of the second day centering at Exposition Park. The other structures in the park, the State Exposition Building and the Armory, were also dedi- cated during the afternoon, though their up finished condition precludes their immediate use by the public; and the site of the great memorial fountain which it is proposed to erect, was the scene of additional exercises. After the ceremonies the Museum was thrown open for two hours, during which time it was inspected by about 4500 visitors. A reception was held by the Board of Gov- ernors in the evening, attended by about a thousand invited guests. Although this date marks the formal dedi- cation of the institution, two of the three wings, dealing with the natural sciences and with history, respectively, had been inform- ally receiving visitors for nine months pre- viously. The steadily augmenting numbers of these visitors, ranging from 300 to 1000 on Sundays, with a sudden jump to nearly 7000 on the Fourth of July, is sufficient indication of the place the institution is occupying in the life of the city. The added att.ractions of the art gallery have produced a marked increase in the attendance since the opening; akogether the number of people visiting the building, despite its location so far from the center of town, is encouraging evidence of its appreciation by the general public. The Southern Division has not been slow to avail itself of the advantag. es afforded by the Cooper Club's connection with the Museum. Most of the Division's meetings are held in the building, and several of the members have placed their collections here as an eminently secure place of deposit; on the other hand, a number of the exhibition cases have been filled with gifts received from various of our members. The city of Los Angeles owes a. debt of gratitude to Mr. W. M. Bowen, president of the Museum's board of governors, as it is largely to his untiring labors for some years past that not only the Museum, but the en- tire Exposition Park, with everything in- cluded therein, was preserved to the people. The Cooper Club is under no less a debt to Mr. Howard Robertson, our representative on the Museum's governing ?board, who ably seconded Mr. Bowen in his labors, and who clearly perceived the many ways in which the Museum and the Club could be mutually helpful and beneficial.--H. S.S. COMMUNICATION A COLLECTOR IN SOUTH AMERICA EDITOR THE CONDOR: I dropped' you a line or two from Lake Junta, Peru, some few weeks since. Am now