CATALOGUE OF CANADIAN BIRDS. 631 
firs in partly cleared lands. (Dwight.) An abundant summer 
resident at St. John, N.B. (Chamberlain.) Quite common in the 
Restigouche valley, N.B. (Brittain G Cox.) Common spring 
migrant, but is rather rare in summer. Breeds at Scotch Lake, 
York co., N.B. (W.H. Moore.) A common resident on the Mag- 
dalen islands. (Bishop.) Common migrant at Quebec. A few 
may breed. (Dionne.) An abundant transient visitant at Montreal; 
observed here irom May 3rd to 19th, and from October 8th to roth. 
(Wintle.) 
An abundant migrant and possibly breeds. Has been seen all 
through the summer and probably breeds in the Mer Bleue. (Ottawa 
Naturalist, Vol. V.) Common in central Ontario during migration. 
A nest I found at Calabogie lake was built in a cedar, near the top, 
about ten feet from the ground, and contained four fresh eggs on 
May 29th; it was composed of twigs, roots, ete., lined with hair 
inside. It also breeds at Sharbot Lake, Ont., where it shows a prefer- 
ence for the neighborhood of water and nests in small cedars. (dev. 
C. J. Young.) Regular migrant at Toronto, Ont., not common in 
the spring but abundant in the fall. Fairly common in the spring 
in Parry Sound and Muskoka districts, Ont. (J. H. Fleming.) 
Rather common in summer in Algonquin park, Ont. Saw a pair 
building in the top of a hemlock tree near Cache lake. They failed 
to complete it and moved to another tree as they were seen there 
all summer. (Spreadborough.) Probably the first warbler to reach 
us in the spring and last to leave us in the fall. I found young birds 
just out of the nest on a small island in Belmont lake, near Have- 
lock, Peterborough county, Ont., June 28th, 1895. (J. Hughes- 
Samuel.) A migrant only, in Middlesex county, but has been 
observed in several localities in North Bruce in the month of June. 
(W. E. Saunders.) Usually abundant during migrations at Guelph, 
Ont., but almost entirely absent in the spring of 1903. Seen from 
about April 30th to May 12th and from September 6th to 8th. 
(A. B. Klugh.) 
One was seen in company with kinglets and chickadees in the 
spruce woods bordering Hill river, September 2nd, 1901. (E. A. 
Pyeble.) Not observed on the 49th parallel until about the middle 
of September, when during the fall migration it made its appear- 
ance in abundance along the Mouse (Souris) river in company with 
