.--'The Auk' has already published (vol. 52, p. 191, 1935) my record of our first Hylocichlafuscescens saicicola, a young female at Princeton, September 10, 1934. On August 12, 1936, I found another fresh specimen killed against the same building (Ouyot Hall, which houses the P.M. Z.). This was a male, with unossified skull and some juvenal wing feathers; scattered body feathers were still partly sheathed. Like the first specimen, this one is very small: wing (chord) 95 ram., one millimeter under Ridgway's minimum for salicicola males and 3.5 min. below the minimum for males of H. f. fuscescens (see 'Birds of North and Middle America,' 4: 65, 68, 1907). In comparison with the 1934 skin, it is an even 'better' salicicola in the slightly darker, less bright-tawny shade of its upper parts, but the spots on the chest are not so dark; the flanks are lighter and grayer, less olive.---CrtRLs H. RooRs, Princeton Museum of ZoOlogy, Princeton, New Jersey.