CEATEUOPODID.'E. 1S6 Miss Cockburn, writing from Kotagheny, says :—" The Yellow- browed Bulbiil is common on the less elevated slopes of the NiHiiris where it is often seen feeding upon guavas, loquots, pears, peaches, Ac. They lay generally in April and May. " Their nests are constructed very much like those of the common Bulbuls, except that, instead of being placed in the forked branches of trees', they are suspended between two twigs, and fastened to them by cobwebs, the inside being neatly lined with fine grass. Two nests of this bird were found, each containing two fresh eggs, of a pretty pinkish salmon colour, with a dark ring at the thick end ; but another nest had three nearly white eggs! The whole structure of the nests was slight and thin, and the eggs could be plainly seen through. The notes of the Yellow-browed Bulbul are loud and repeated often." Writing on the birds of Ceylon, Colonel Legge remarks:—"I once found the nest of this bird in the Pasdun-Korale forests in August; little or nothing, however, is known of its breeding-habits in Ceylon, so that it most likely commences earlier than that month to rear its brood. My nest was placed in the fork of a thin sapling about 8 feet from the ground. It was of large size for such a bird, the foundation being bulky and composed of small twigs, moss, and dead leaves, supporting a cup of about 2| inches in diameter, which was constructed of moss, lined with fine roots; the upper edge of the body of the nest was woven round the supporting branches. ......' The bottom of the nest was in the fork." The eggs of this species sent to me by Mr. "Wait from Coonoor are totally unlike any other egg of this family with which I am acquainted. They remind one more of the eggs of Stopavola welanops or one of the Niltavas than anything else. The eggs are moderately long and rather perfect ovals, almost devoid of gloss, and with a dull white or pinkish-white ground, speckled more or less thickly over the whole surface with rather pale brownish red or pink. The specklings becoming confluent at the large end, where they form a dull irregular mottled cap. Other specimens received from Miss Cockburn from Kotagherry exhibit the same general characters; but the majority of them are considerably elongated eggs, approaching, so far as shape is concerned, the Hypsipetes type. In some eggs only the faintest trace of pale pinkish mottling towards the large end is observable; in others, the whole surface of the egg is thickly freckled and mottled all over, but most densely at the large end, with salmon-pink or pale pinkish brown. In length the eggs vary from 0*9 to 1-03, and in breadth from 0*64 to 0-7 * * PYCNONOTUS ANALIS (Horsf.). The Yellow-vented Bulbul. Otocompsa analis (Horsf.!), Hume, Cat. no. 452 sex. Mr. J. Darling, Junior, writes :—" I found the nest of this Bulbul at Salary in the Malay peninsula, on the 14th February. The nest was built in a bush m secondary jungle, with a few trees scattered about. It was in a fork 6 feet from the ground. The foundation was of dried leaves, then fine twigs, and lined.