226 LAND-BIRDS AND GAME-BIRDS 



almost the only ones who ever seek the neighborhood of man, 

 the Snow-birds are certainly entitled to onr affections ; and 

 their liveliness cannot but afford pleasure, when brought di- 

 rectly in contrast at our very doors, so to speak, with the cold 

 and storms of midwinter. 



Note. — According to Mr. William Brewster (Bulletin, Nutt- 

 all Ornithological Club, April, 1876, Vol. I, No. 1) a female 

 Oregon Snow-bird (Junco Oregonus) was " shot in Watertown, 

 Mass., March 2oth, 1874." $ black ; ? browner. Lower 

 breast, etc., white. Back and wing-edgings, " dull reddish- 

 brown ;" sides paler. 



XVIII. PIPILO 



(A) ERYTHROPTHALMus. Towliee Buntbig . ^^Towhee." '■''Che- 

 wbik." ^'•Ground Rohin." '■'•Marsh Rohin." ^'- Swamp Rohin."^^ 



(A common summer-resident in Massachusetts, but not com- 

 mon to the northward of this State.) 



Fig. 10. Towhee Bunting (^). 



(a). 8-8^ inches long. (Iris, in the summer-season red, 

 except in tlie young ; otherwise, white or nearly so.) $ , black ; 

 lower breast, belly, and nearly the whole of the outermost tail- 

 feathers, white. A conspicuous patch on the side of the breast, 

 chestnut (with paler traces of it behind). Wings and tail 



"This name has been applied indiecriminately to several different birds. 



