166 BULLETIN OF THE 



4. Oreoscoptes montanus. Common. Called " Gray-Bird," and 

 also " Mocking-Bird." Very destructive to the fruit, even the peach not 

 escaping its rapacity. 



SAXICOLIDJ3. 



5. Sialia arctica. Common in spring and fall. 



CINCLID.E. 



6. Cinclus mexicanus. Common along the Ogden and Weber Rivers. 

 Shot fourteen in Ogden Canon in the course of an hour or two, October 

 2d, and saw several others. 



SYLVIIDJE. 



7. Regulus calendulus. Shot September 11th and later. Probably 

 not uncommon in fall and spring. 



PARIDJE. 



8. Paras atricapillus, var. septentrionalis. Abundant. 



TEOGLODYTID33. 



9. Salpinctes obsoletus. Abundant in the Wahsatch Mountains as 

 far down as the first " bench." About the first of October we saw them 

 several times on the shore of Salt Lake, near the mouth of the Weber 

 River, twelve or fifteen miles from the mountains. Its preference for rocks 

 even here was manifested by one which had chosen a heap of stones as a 

 temporary resting-place. 



10. Cistothorus stellaris. Abundant in the marshes everywhere. 



MOTACILLID.E. 



11. Anthus ludovicianus. Abundant after September 15th. 



SYLVICOLID^I. 



12. Geothlypis trichas. Common. 



13. Geothlypis Philadelphia, var. Macgillivrayi. Apparently not 

 uncommon. 



14. Icteria virens. Moderately common. 



15. Helminthophaga ruficapilla. One shot September 20th, and 

 others seen. Apparently common. 



1G. Helminthophaga celata. First seen September 11th. Common 

 later. 



17. Dendroeca Auduboni. Common after the 15th of September. 



18. Dendroeca Blackburniae. Not common. A few specimens ob- 

 tained. 



19 ? Dendroeca nigrescens. A bluish warbler was once or twice seen 

 which was probably (if this species. 



