OBJECTIVE SEASONAL LESSONS. 9 
Yellow-bellied Wood- 
er. 
Olive-sided Flycatcher.* 
Yellow-bellied Fly- 
catcher. 
Traill’s Flycatcher.* 
Rusty Blackbird. 
Bronzed Grackle. 
Nelson Sharp-tailed Spar- 
row.* 
Acadian Sharp-tailed 
Sparrow.* 
White-crowned Spar- 
row.* 
Lincoln's Sparrow.* 
Fox Sparrow. 
Philadelphia Vireo.* 
Blue-headed Vireo. 
Nashville Warbler. 
Tennessee Warbler. 
Cape May Warbler.* 
Black-throated Blue War- 
bler. 
Myrtle Warbler. 
Magnolia Warbler. 
Bay-breasted Warbler.* 
Black-poll Warbler. 
Bluckburnian Warbler. 
Black-throated Green War- 
bler. 
Yellow Palm Warbler. 
Small-billed Water Thrush, 
Connecticut Warbler.* 
Mourning Warbler.* 
Wilson’s Warbler. 
Canadian Warbler. 
Titlark. 
Ruby-crowned Kinglet. 
Gray-cheeked Thrush.* 
Bicknell’s Thrush.* 
Swainson’s Thrush. 
Hermit Thrush. 
SUMMER RESIDENTS. 
The term Summer Resident is applied to those 
species which come to us from the south in the 
spring, rear their young, and return to the south 
in the fall. Summer Residents, therefore, are pres- 
ent not only during the summer months, but may 
arrive in late February or early March, and remain 
until late November or early December. 
As a rule, the first species to come in the spring 
are the last ‘to leave in the fall, while the later 
arrivals are among the first departures. 
Species that come in March or early April are 
* Not common. 
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