MACHLOLOPHUS, 37 tinge, and sparingly sprinkled with lilac spots or specks, and having a well-defined lilac ring at the larger end." From Nynee Tal, Colonel G-. P. L. Marshall writes :—" This species makes a beautifully neat nest of fine moss and lichens, globular, with side entrance, and thickly lined with soft feathers. A nest found on Cheena, above Nynee Tal, on the 24th May, 1873, at an elevation of about 7000 feet, was wedged into a fork at the end of a bough of a cypress tree, about 10 feet from the ground, the entrance turned inwards towards the trunk of the tree. It con- tained one tiny egg, white, with a dark cloudy zone round the larger end. "About the 10th of May, at Naini Tal, I was watching one of these little birds, which kept hanging about a small rhododendron stump about 2 feet high, with very few leaves on it, but I could see no nest. A few days later I saw the bird carry a big cater- pillar to the same stump and come away shortly without it; so I looked more closely and found the nest, containing nearly full- fledged young, so beautifully wedged into the stump that it ap- peared to be part of it, and nothing but the tiny circular entrance revealed that the nest was there. It was the best-concealed nest for that style of position that I have ever seen." These tiny eggs, almost smaller than those of any European bird that I know, are broad ovals, sometimes almost globular, but generally somewhat compressed towards one end, so as to assume something of a pyriform shape. They are almost entirely glossless, have a pinkish or at times creamy-white ground, and exhibit a conspicuous reddish or purple zone towards the large end, com- posed of multitudes of minute spots almost confluent, and inter- spaced with a purplish cloud. Paint traces of similar excessively minute purple or red points extend more or less above and below the zone. The eggs vary from 0*53 to 0$58 in length, and from 0-43 to 0-46 in breadth; but the average of twenty-five is 0*56 nearly by 0*45 nearly. 41. MacMolopkus spilonotus (BL). The Blade-spotted Yellow Tit, Machlolophus spilonotus (Bl), Jerd. B. Ind. ii, p. 281. Mr. Mandelli found a nest of this species at Lebong in Sikhim on the 15th June in a hole in a dead tree, about 5 feet from the ground. The nest was a mere pad of the soft fur of some animal, in which a little of the brown silky down from fern-stems and a little moss was intermingled. It contained three hard-set eggs. One of these eggs is a very regular oval, scarcely, if at all, pointed towards the lesser end; the ground-colour is a pure dead white, and the markings, spots, and specks of pale reddish brown, and underlying spots of pale purple, are evenly scattered all over the egg; it measures 0-78 by 0'55.