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 igo Bird -Lore obtain food during the breeding season on the river-beds would more than compensate them for any slight inconvenience they may experience during the winter. The whole bird is so entirely adapted to a life on the shingle that it seems quite probable that the winter migration is a recent develop- ment, and that at one time the bird stayed on the river-bed all the year. The bird, as I have said, is getting very rare. The reason for this is not plain, as its natural enemies, the Hawk* and the big Gull t are, at any rate no more numerous than they used to be ; floods, we may say, are no more frequent ; while its natural haunts are left practically unmolested. And yet it is dying out, and I fear that in the near future it will, together with many other of the native birds, become as extinct as the gigantic Moa. t Larus dominicanus, a large black-backed Gull which would doubtless eat any young Wry-bills it came across. Our Garden Mockingbird By MRS. F. W. ROE* DURING the past four or five winters, one of my greatest pleasures has been watching the Mockingbirds in our grounds at Port Orange, Florida. Their graceful way of running over the lawn, every now and then stopping to uplift their wings, and their striking poses on trees and fences, was a never-ceasing joy to me. Their great pluck in attacking birds twice their size, including the strong-billed Woodpeckers, won my admira- tion, too. As is well known, this bird of wonderful song takes possession of a certain territory, usually where fruits and other foods can easily be obtained, and there he will make his home year after year, jealously guard- ing it from all intruders. Sometimes this territory will adjoin that of his friends, but quite as often it will be a long distance from any of his species. Over five years ago, a Mockingbird — we call him "Sir Roger de Coverley" — took possession of the grounds in front of our cottage, and ever since has laid claim to every tree, shrub, insect and worm that grows or lives there. We have often wondered at his choice of a home, for we are on the banks of the Halifax river, and the tree he makes his nightly home in is exposed to east and northeast winds direct from the ocean, which are often both cold and severe. In the back part of the grounds another Mocking- bird lives, that has been named "Pirate" by a neighbor, whose white pansies he devours by the dozen, and these two birds have a boundary line that is never disregarded by either; that is, if one enters the territory of the other, there is a fight at once, unless the proprietor happens to be from home. birds in the number for December, 1904.
 * Circus go uldi, the only Hawk frequenting the river-beds.
 * Readers of Bird-Lore will recall Mrs. Roe's admirably illustrated article on Florida