BOSTON PUBLIC GARDEN 39 



twenty-nine species; forty-five of them 

 were warblers of sixteen different species. 

 Again the conditions of weather were fa- 

 vorable for a notable flight, as they had 

 been on the occasion twelve days previous. 

 The list for the day was: one nighthawk, 

 one hummingbird, two wood pewees, one 

 yellow-bellied flycatcher, two least flycatch- 

 ers, one American goldfinch, two red-eyed 

 vireos, one male scarlet tanager, one Ten- 

 nessee warbler, one northern parula war- 

 bler, four yellow warblers, one male black- 

 throated blue warbler, one female myrtle 

 warbler, three magnolia warblers, one male 

 chestnut-sided warbler, four black-poll 

 warblers, two Blackburnian warblers, male 

 and female, one male black-throated green 

 warbler, one oven-bird, six Maryland yel- 

 low-throats, three northern water-thrushes, 

 four Wilson's warblers, six Canadian war- 

 blers, six redstarts, three catbirds, two Wil- 

 son's thrushes, two gray-cheeked thrushes, 

 and one olive-backed thrush. It will be 

 observed that no member of the sparrow 

 family was present except a roaming gold- 



