W001) warninnus. 349
tip, fourth feather with a smaller pateh; lower hreast and belly white; sides grayish. All. 9.7 Similar, hut the erown duller, the pateh on the sides of the head and thloat grayish instead of lilaek. L, 510; “2,2316, T.,1“.|~t; B. from N.,'21»t.
[thug/.2. liastern [inited States; breeds from lndiana and northern New Jersey north to Miehigan. southern Untario. and Vermont; south along the .\lle;_rhanies to South Carolina; winters in Central America.
\\'aslii113_rton, uueonnnon 'l'. \'., May 1 to 2»; Aug. Sing; Sing, rare 5. R., May 5 to Aug. '37). (,‘anihridge. not uneommon S. it. May 12 to Aug. :25.
J’s-t, mueh like that et‘ll. [Ii/um, on or near the ground, in second growths or hushy fields. [Lia/x, four to six. white. speckled and spotted, chietly about the larger end, with CilllltllllOH—ltl'U\\'Il, ehestnut, or timber,
'tl‘J X '50.
In thei ‘ actions and choice of haunts the Golden-winged resemble the l’due—winged Warhlers. Their song is of mueh the same quality, but the notes are all of the same kind and length, and the bird utters a rather lazy zee-zee-zer—3ee, at once distinguishable from the song of prints.
645. Helmmthophila, I'uficapilla. tll'f/-'.‘t. NAsm’iLLE “Um— “LEN. a’ltl." Top and sides of the head hluish gray. a partially eoneealed eluxln r1! [rule/1 in the eenter ot' the crown; hack and rump bright olive-green; wings and tail edged with the same and zr/tluwt white; under parts hright yellow. whiter on the belly. lilti#[~1'1tt‘l' parts dnll Hll\'t‘~}_"l‘t‘t'll. more or less washed with hrownish; rump hrighter: wines and tall as in the ad.: of the. head hrownish ashy. eye-wing white: under parts yellowish. hriuhter on the hr-ast; sides brownish. L, 4'77; \\’., 2~:;:;; T., 1‘51: B. from N, '25.
1.51qu.»—I‘Iastern North .\meriea: l~t‘e('<ls from northern Illinois and (‘onneeiieut northward to Lahrador and the tar countries; winters in the
sides
tropies.
Washington, nneommon 11"., May 5 to 20; Sept. 5 to 1‘0. Sing Sing, toleraltly eommon T. \'.. May 7 to 27; Aug. 11 to ()et. .1; may breed. Cam- bridge. rather eommon H. R. May 5 to t)et. 1. more common T. V.
Aim], of grasses and moss. lined with tiner grasses and fine. hairlike root- lets. on the ground. in partial elearings or tree-grown pastures. Iii/gs, tour to tire. white, thiekly speekled, ehietly at the larger end, with rut‘ous er ein—
namonrln-own. '61 x ‘45”.
This Warhler is an inhabitant of rather open woodland, young seeond growth. or tree-lmrdered fields. in addition to the usual drip. it. has a sharp. eharaeteristie eall-note. while its song is about. as likely to attract attention as that. of the (‘hestnubsided \Varhler. Minot writes it “imT-xee-NWT—see, u-it’-u—[villa-1017',” while Langille gives it as “ 1((‘—f.\'(’!’-1W-l‘.\‘(’(’—]{€-f.\'(‘l‘-(‘]l I'p-ee-rlz [p-erx-rh I'p-ee-rli 1'}).” and compares the first half to the penetrating notes of the lilaek and White Warbler, and the last half to the twitter of the Chipping Sparrow.