Fae 
22 Wricut, Orange-crowned Warbler in Massachusetts. vant 
among the flowers of the latter plant” (Auk, Vol. VII, January, 
1890, p. 96). And Mr. Ellison A. Smyth, Jr., in an article on 
‘Birds Observed in Montgomery County, Virginia,’ furnishes a 
second record, that of a specimen obtained by him on October 2, 
at Blacksburg, a “town west of the Blue Ridge Mountains and 
near the summit of the Alleghany” (Auk, Vol. XXIX, Oct., 1912, 
p- 523). I find no other records published in the issues of ‘The 
Auk’ for these States. 
But Dr. Witmer Stone in his ‘ Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania 
and New Jersey,’ published in 1894, gives five records for that 
region, namely, one in February, 1860, on Rancocas Creek, N. J. 
(Turnbull); two in March: one about 1876 at West Philadelphia 
(McIlvaine) and one on March 22, 1883, at Haddonfield, N. J. 
(S. N. Rhoads); one on October 6, 1889, at Anglesea, N. J. (P. 
Laurent); and one on November 2, 1867, in Bucks Co., Pa. (C. 
D. Wood). These records are supplemented in Dr. Stone’s ‘ Birds 
of New Jersey’ in the Report of the New Jersey State Museum 
for 1908, p. 271, by two more records, namely, one at Hoboken, 
May, 1865, by C.S. Galbraith and one at Haddonfield on February 
25, 1909, by R. T. Moore (Auk, Vol. XXVIII, Jan., 1910, p. 85). 
It is further recorded in the Report “John Krider states that he 
got one in New Jersey in December, when the ground was covered 
with snow.” Here are furnished three distinct winter records for 
New Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania, two in February and one 
in December, while the two March records suggest birds wintering 
rather than in their spring migration. Dr. Stone terms the Orange- 
crowned Warbler in New Jersey a “very rare transient visitant, 
February, March, and October, possibly winter resident in the 
southernmost counties.”’ 
To these records Mr. Richard C. Harlow adds a spring record, 
namely, “During the spring of 1909 it was my good fortune to be 
able to establish the occurrence of this bird [Ornage-crowned 
Warbler] at State College, Center County, Pennsylvania. During 
a late flight of warblers on May 16 I observed several which I took 
to be Tennessee Warblers, but on collecting a pair of them they 
were found to be of this species. There were probably six or seven 
in the flock, and another taken was too mutilated for preservation. 
When seen the birds were in willows along a small stream in com- 
