OUR OLD-GARDEN BIRDS. 



H5 



bird dare venture. When looking for insects in the 

 wrinkles of the bark of an old oak, it can be seen 

 with difficulty, and at such times looks something like 

 a little mouse until it spreads its wings and twitters 

 more gayly than ever a mouse could squeak. There 

 are two species of kinglets, the golden- and the ruby- 

 crowned, readily distinguished by the differences 

 indicated in the names. The golden-crowned is a 



Golden-crowned Kinglet. 



winter resident ; the ruby-crowned merely a passing 

 visitor, though now and then a representative remains 

 with us, and during the mild winter of 1888-89 tne y 

 were quite abundant. Mr. Cram says that the ruby- 

 crowned bird "has a song like a canary, only not 

 so loud." The golden-crowned can sing well on 

 occasion. I have heard them in June, in Northern 

 Pennsylvania, make the dark rhododendron-shaded 

 G k 13 



