FAM. XIII. FINCHES, SPARROWS, ETC. 



131 



can readily be induced to eat out of our hands. Such song as 

 it has is an insect-like Repetition of its common name of chippy. 

 (Chippy ; Hair-bird.) 



Length, 5| ; wing, 2| (2|-2 J) ; tail, 2| ; tarsus, f ; culmen, f . Eastern 

 United States,; breeding from the Gulf States to Great Slave Lake, and 

 wintering from the Gulf States to Mexico. 



33. Clay-colored Sparrow (561. Spiz^lla pdllida). — A small, 

 western, pale-colored sparrow, with much gray in its plumage, 

 giving it its common name. Back 

 brownish-gray ; under parts white 

 soiled with gray ; sides of head 

 brown, with irregular black and 

 whitish markings ; crown with a 

 pale medium stripe ; rump broAvn- 

 ish-gray and not slaty-gray. In 

 habits it is like the chipping 

 sparroAv but not so confiding and 

 trustful. 



V. 



Length, 5^ ; wing, 2f (21-2^) ; tail, 

 2| ; culmen, nearly |. 



Clay-colored Sparro^f 



Interior North America from the Kocky Moun- 

 tains to Illinois; breeding from 

 Iowa northward, and winter- 

 ing from southern Texas into 

 Mexico. 



34. Field Sparrow (563. 

 Spiz^lla pusUla). A buffy- 

 breasted, reddish -billed, 

 streaky - backed sparrow, 

 with a dull-chestnut crown 

 and gray line over the eye. 

 The back is brightly 

 marked with black, red- 

 dish - brown, and ashy, 

 the breast unspotted buff; 

 wings with two white bars. -This bird is not an inhabitant 

 of the open fields, but seeks bushy pastures. It is a fine 



Field Sparrow 



