100 Catalogue of Canadian Birds. 



calls it a rare spring- migrant near Toronto, and the Ottawa 

 Club have met with but one example, though Dr. Wheaton 

 mentions it as a rare and irregular spring migrant (in Ohio), but 

 abundant and regular in the fall. Mr. Barnston took it on the 

 north shore of Lake Superior. Dr. Coues found it very abund- 

 ant in migrations at Pembina; and Thompson reports it as a rare 

 summer resident of Western Manitoba. Drexler took examples 

 at Moose Factory and Fort George, on Hudson's Bay, and Mr. 

 Ross met it at Great Slave Lake. It winters in Central America. 



Compsothlypis americana. 



rAKLLA WARI5LEK. 



Occurs from the I\L\ritime Provinces to Lake Huron, breed- 

 ing from about latitude 45° northward. Brewster found it 

 breeding on Anticosti. It winters in the West Indies and Cen- 

 tral America. 



Dendroica tigrina. 



CAPE MAY WARBLER. 



The only portions of Canada in which the Cape May appears 

 to be at all common are Manitoba and New Brunswick, though it 

 is not an abundant bird anywhere. Mr. Thompson reports tluit 

 it is " plentiful" along the Red River, and Mr. Boardman writes 

 that "though often rare, it is quite common during some seasons," 

 near St. Stephen, on the Maine border, and it has been taken in 

 several other parts of New Brunswick. 



The other notes of its occurrence that I have been enabled 

 to gather arc but few. Mr, McIlwraith has taken but six 

 examples in Ontario ; Messrs. Saunders and Morden report 

 one taken at Mitchell's Bay; the Ottawa F. N, Club report a 

 j)air captured near their headquarters ; Messrs. Dunlop and 

 WiNTLE consider it a rare, though regular, migrant in the vicinity 

 of Montreal, while Mr. Neilson knows of but one specimen that 



