138 Proceedings of Indiana Academy of Science. 
part of Montgomery County. Reported also by Joel Hadley of Indianapolis 
in same place as late as May 8, 1920. 
WHITE-WINGED CROSSBILL. Loxia leucaptera. November 1, 1919, 
a single bird taken near Helmsburg. Brown County, Indiana, by Philip 
Baker, and sent to me for identification. It, with a small flock of American 
Crossbills, was feeding in a group of spruce trees. All except one flew 
away when the observer approached. That was the specimen of this species 
which I have. November 20, 1920, Mr. Baker saw a single white-winged 
Crossbill with eight American Crossbills in the same spruce trees. They 
were eating spruce seeds and were very tame. These may have been the 
same birds seen November 1, which remained in the neighborhood. Fall 
records of this species are very scarce. Two White-Winged Crossbills col- 
lected by L. L. Walters, November 9, 1919, between Mineral Springs and 
Dune Park, Indiana. 
REDPOLL. Acanthis linaria linaria. Thirty to forty observed between 
Mineral Springs and Dune Park, Indiana, December 7, 1919. Ten to twenty 
seen between Gary and Dune Park, Indiana, December 21, 1919. 
PINE SISKIN. Spinus pinus pinus (Wils.). Mineral Springs, Indiana, 
October 9, 1919. Many thousand Pine Siskins feeding on the weed patches 
near the swamp and resting on the tamaracks in the sun, out of the wind. 
A few goldfinches among them. By far the greatest number of Siskins I 
ever saw in the Dunes. October 6, 1919, still present by hundreds though 
not nearly so abundant as October 9. October 26, 1919, Pine Siskins still 
present. November 2, 1919, a few. December 7, 1919, a few. 
SNOW BUNTING. Plectrophanes nivalis nivalis (Linn.). Dune Park, 
Porter County, Indiana, March 2, 1919. About 50. Three flocks of 40 to 
50 each, between Millers and Dune Park, Indiana, November 2, 1919. About 
40 seen between Mineral Springs and Dune Park, Indiana, November 9, 
1919. 
HARRIS SPARROW. Zonotrichia querula. (Nutt.). An immature male 
was taken at Millers, Lake County, Indiana, October 3, 1920, by H. L. 
Stoddard. One was seen April 24, 1920, near Fort Wayne, Indiana, by H. C. 
Miller. This bird was carefully studied and the observers are confident of 
its identification. Miss Margaret Hanna and Mr. Sihler also observed a 
bird of this species, possibly the same one, a few days later. 
BOHEMIAN WAXWING. Bombycilla garrula (Linn.). Over a hundred 
observed between Gary and Dune Park, Indiana, December 21, 1919. About 
forty were seen and six collected April 15, 1920, between Dune Park and 
Millers, Indiana. 
PROTHONOTARY WARBLER. Protonotaria citrea (Bodd.). Millers, 
Lake County, Indiana. Fairly common along the Calumet River, August 
16, 1919. H. C. Miller reports seeing one near Fort Wayne. Indiana, May 
1, 1920, and another May 9, 1920. Mrs. Donaldson Bodine reports seeing 
four on May 7, 1920, at Crawfordsville. Rare. 
PRAIRIE WARBLER. Dendroica discolor (Vieill.). Philip Baker in the 
