CATALOGUE OF CANADIAN BIRDS. 561 
mon summer resident at Guelph, Ont. Arrives about May 2gth, 
and leaves about Sept. 26th. (4. &. Klugh.) A common and breed- 
ing summer resident at Penetanguishene, Ont. (4 .F. Young.) 
Recorded by Baird from Moose Factory, at the foo: of James 
Bay, where it was collected by Drexler on Aug. 26th, 1860. 
Walton Hayden took specimens at the same place in 1881. (Z. 
zl: Prebles.) 
Not seen at Pembina, but found at various other points along 
the 49th parallel, and ascertained to be particularly abundant in 
the Rocky Mountains. (Cowes.) A common summer resident of 
woodlands in Manitoba. On July 22nd, 1884, at Portage la 
Prairie, found a nest of a cedar bird in the woods near the river. 
It was placed on the branch of a low oak, and was much the same 
as a specimen taken in the eastern provinces. It contained two 
fresh eggs, from which I infer that the species is a very late 
nester here. (Zhompson-Seton.) Three individuals were seen at 
Indian Head, Assa., on June 2nd, and later they became common, 
they breed here; apparently breeding at Old Wives’ Creek in 
June, 1895; seen in numbers at Waterton Lake the same year; 
quite common along Peace River, Lat. 569, in July, 1903; com- 
mon from Edmonton to Athabasca Pass in June 1898; ob- 
served a number of individuals at Jumping Pound Creek, near 
Calgary, June 27th, 1897; common at Crow’s Nest Pass the 
Same year; a common breeding species at Banff, Rocky 
Mountains, in June, 1891; abundant at Deer Park and Robson, on 
the Columbia, in June 1890, only commencing to breed on 
June 20th ; common at Agassiz after May 24th, also at Spence’s 
Bridge; one pair seen at Kamloops, June 18th, 1889; seen in 
flocks in the fall feeding on the fruit of black elder and thorn at 
Huntington, on the International Boundary, B.C., 1901; during 
the summer of 1893 not more than a dozen specimens of this 
species were seen on Vancouver Island, these were at Victoria 
and Comox. (Spreadborougn.) 
Not uncommon asa summer resident near Prince Albert, Sask, 
Have seen them in my garden in July. (Couwbeawx.) Abundant 
and nesting at Chemawawin and Grand Rapids of the Saskat- 
chewan. Nest well made of rather coarse twigs. (Vuéting.) First 
‘seen near Gros Roche Portage, Clearwater River, Lat. 56° 30’. 
Common from there to Methye Portage, and on the portage, of 
ten miles, itself. Common in places between Methye Lake and 
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