656 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CANADA. 
p. 106.) On September 5th, 1905, I took a young male on the east 
shore of Point Pelee, Essex county, Ont. (A. B. Klugh.) Mr. 
W. E. Saunders took one specimen, a female, near Cameron lake, 
Bruce county, May 28th, 1905, and on May 30th heard several 
others. An account of their occurrence was published in The 
Ottawa Naturalist, Vol XIX., p. 206. 
CCLIV SBEIURUS Swainson. 1827. 
674. Oven Bird. Golden-crowned Thrush. 
Seturus aurocapilus (LINN.) SwAINs. 1827. 
A skin taken at Nanortalik, Greenland, in May, 1882, is in the 
museum at Copenhagen. (Wznge.) Stearns, p. 116, records this 
species as breeding in southern Labrador. (Packard.) Very 
abundant along the Moose river; seemed to prefer the hillsides 
of the river valley that have a heavy growth of birch and poplar; 
none observed as far north as Moose Factory in 1896. (Spread- 
borough.) Locally common as far north as Aillik in north-eastern 
Labrador. (Bigelow.) A summer migrant in Newfoundland, but 
not common. (Reeks.) A common summer resident of Halifax, 
N.S. (Downs.) A few observed at Baddeck, Cape Breton island, 
in’ June, 1890.° (Ff. (H: Allen.) “One .seen:on-Sablev island) Niw., 
May 25th, 1904. (J. Boutelver.) A common summer resident at 
Sydney, Cape Breton island. (C. R. Harte.) One was noted at 
Tignish, Prince Edward island, and a number at Souris in the hard- 
wood timber. (Dwight.) A common summer resident at St. John, 
N.B. (Chamberlain.) Common summer resident at Scotch Lake, 
York county, N.B. (W. H. Moore.) Tolerably common in the 
Restigouche valley, N.B. (Brittain & Cox.) Rather common on 
Grindstone island, Magdalen islands. (Bishop.) A single pair was 
observed at Ellis bay, Anticosti, July 24th. (Brewster.) With us 
this bird is a common summer resident around Quebec. (Dionne.) 
A common summer resident at Montreal. Breeds in Mount Royal 
park. Nests with eggs found June 5th and 13th and young fledged, 
June 21st. Observed here May 8th to September 15th. (Wdznile.) 
A common summer resident around Ottawa. (Ottawa Naturalist, 
Vol. V.) A very common species in eastern Ontario throughout 
the summer and heard in almost every large wood, especially where 
