22 THE BIRD-LIFE OF A YEAR. 
Plate Plate 
No. No. 
77. Bob-white. 53. Purple Finch. 
17. Sharp-shinned Hawk. White-eyed Vireo. 
15, 98. Marsh Hawk. 59, 96. Red-eyed Vireo. 
22. Yellow-billed Cuckoo. Warbling Vireo, 
Black-billed Cuckoo. 59. Yellow-throated Vireo. 
24. Downy Woodpecker. 86. Purple Martin. 
Hairy Woodpecker. Rough-winged Swallow. 
28. Chimney Swift. 1. Cliff Swallow. 
30. Kingbird. Chestnut-sided Warbler. 
Least Flycatcher. Prairie Warbler. 
38, 91. Bobolink. 65. Yellow-breasted Chat. 
36. Orchard Oriole. 64, 98. Maryland Yellow- 
35. Baltimore Oriole. throat. 
Grasshopper Sparrow. 69. Long-billed Marsh Wren. 
83. Indigo Bunting. 
JUNE. 
After June 5 we may be reasonably sure that 
every bird seen has, or has had, a nest in our vicinity. 
Several of the birds which began nesting in April— 
for instance, the Phoebe, Song Sparrow, Robin, 
and Bluebird—will rear second broods in June, 
while the young of other April nesting birds, such 
as the Red-shouldered Hawk, Screech Owl, and 
Crow, may not leave the nest until June. All 
the birds that began nesting in May will still be 
occupied with household affairs in June; and when 
we add to these the late-breeding species which wait 
for June before settling their domestic arrange- 
ments, it will be seen that among birds June is the 
home month of the year. 
Nest-building, egg-laying, incubating, and the 
care of the young now make constant and excep- 
tional demands on birds, who, in response, exhibit 
