THE OOLOGIST 



119 



rare. Holmesburg, June 1, 1899, 7 

 eggs. 



fiUt, Cedar Waxwing! scarce and lo- 

 cal. I have never found a nest. Dr. 

 .J. P. Ball found several pair nesting 

 at Lawn dale several years ago. 



624, Red-eyed Vireo ; abundant. 

 Frankford, June 17, 1897, 4 eggs. 



627, Warbling Vireo; scarce. Frank- 

 ford, June 7, 1898, 3 eggs. 



628, Yellow-throated Vireo; rare. A 

 pair was watched gathering nesting 

 material on May 30, 1907, at Lawndale. 



631, White-eyed Vireo; not rare. 

 Sandiford, June 1, 1899; 3 eggs and a 

 nest was not found. Breeds sparing- 

 ly every yeiar along the Wissahichon 

 Creek, in Fairmount Park. 



639, Worm-eating Warbler; rare. 

 Breeds only on the wooded ridges 

 along the Wissahichon Creek, where 

 I have seen it in the summer of 1908 

 and 1909. 



641, Blue-winged Warbler; common 

 and increasing. Bustleton, May 30, 

 1909, 3 eggs. 



652, Yellow Warbler; common. Ara- 

 mingo. May 22, 1899, 3 eggs. 



674. Ovenbird; common. Frankford. 

 May 26, 1897, 5 eggs. 



676, Louisiana Water Thrush ; rare. 

 Occur every summer on the Wissahi- 

 chon Creek in Fairmount Park, the 

 only locality in the county where it 

 breeds, though I flushed one at Frank- 

 ford, May 27, 1897, from under the 

 roots of a tree along a small brook in 

 a wood, but failed to find the nest. I 

 saw two fledglings on the Willahi- 

 chou in 1908, on .Tune 17 and 24, re- 

 spectively. 



677, Kentucky Warbler; common 

 and increasing. Strange to say I have 

 never been able to find a nest, but 

 have seen several fledglings and nests 

 taken in this county. 



681, ^laryland Yellow-throat; com- 

 mon. Sandiford, May 24, 1900; 4 

 eggs. 



683, Yellow-crested Chat; common. 

 Frankford, May 26, 1897, 4 eggs. 



687, Redstart; rare, but appears to 

 be increasing on the Pennypack Creek 

 where seven pair were seen in 1908, 

 and 1909, and an unfinished nest found 

 on June 8, 1909, at Cercesville. 



704, Catbird, abundant. Holmesburg, 

 May 12, 1900, 4 eggs. 



705, Brown Thrasher; not common. 

 .Tonesdale. May 22, 1898, 4 eggs. 



718, Carolina Wren; common. 

 Holmesburg, June 14,1897,5 fledglings. 



721, House Wren; common. Frank- 

 ford, July 3, 1898, 3 eggs. 



724, Short-billed Marshwren; exceed- 

 ingly rare. Richmond, June 8, 1904, 

 4 eggs. 



725, Long-billed Marsh Wren; abun- 

 dant. Bridesburg, June 17, 1902, 3 

 eggs. 



727, White-breasted Nuthatch ; 

 scarce. Near Veresville, new nest 

 April 22, 1899. 



731, Tufted Titmouse; scarce. Never 

 found a nest, but have seen the birds 

 with their families on several occa- 

 sions, and eggs taken in the county. 



736, Carolina Chickadee: rare. A 

 nest containing 7 eggs found at 

 Holmesburg, before I kept a note book 

 was recorded in THE OOLOGIST for 

 March 1907; I have since seen the 

 birds on several occasions in summer. 



755, Wood Thrush; abundant but de- 

 creasing. Holmesburg, May 17, 1897, 



<j eggs. 



761, Robin; abundant. Holmesburg, 

 April 21, 1898, 3 eggs. 



766, Bluebird, common. Jonesdale, 

 .June 14, 1897, 5 eggs. 



RICHARD F. MILLER 



Coronado Florida Migrants. 

 The following notes were taken dur- 

 ing 1907, 1908 and 1909. Dates given 

 are those of earliest arrivals and latest 

 departures. 



