376 FINCHES, SPARROWS, ETC. 
tail black; end half of the secondaries and their coverts white. Ad. 9.— 
Brownish gray, lighter on the underparts more or less tinged with yellow, 
especially on the nape; wings black, inner primaries white at the base, 
secondaries edged with white; tail black, the feathers tipped with white on 
the inner web; upper tail-coverts black Hepes with white. Ads. and Im. 
in winter.—Similar to ads. in summer. L., 8°00; W., 4°50; T., 3°50; B., °72. 
Range.—Cen. N. Am. Breeds in w. ieee winters in the interior of 
N. A. s. of the Sask. and e. of the Rocky Mts. and more or less irregularly 
s. to Mo., Ky., and Ohio, and e. to e. Pa., N. Y., n. N. J.. New England, 
and Que. 
Glen Ellyn, one record, Dec. 11, 1889. SE. Minn., common W. V., 
Oct. 17—May 19. Bers ; 
Nest, known from but few specimens, composed of small twigs, lined with 
bark, hair, or rootlets, placed within twenty feet of the ground. Eggs, 3-4, 
greenish, blotched with pale brown (see Davie). Date, Springerville, Ariz., 
June 5 (H.v. montana); Las Vigas, Vera Cruz, alt. 8,000 ft., Apl. 30, young 
on wing (H. v. mexicana). 
This distinguished inhabitant of the far Northwest is a common 
winter visitant in Manitoba and the contiguous parts of the bordering 
states. At irregular intervals it invades the northern Mississippi 
Valley in numbers, while still more rarely it extends its wanderings 
to the North Atlantic States. It travels in flocks of from six or eight 
to sixty individuals which by their tameness show their ignorance of 
man and his ways. They feed largely on the buds or seeds of trees— 
maple, elder, and box elder. Their notes are described by different 
observers as a shrill “cheepy-teet,” and a “frog-like peep,’ while one 
writer remarks that ‘the males have a single metallic cry like the note 
of a trumpet, and the females a loud chattering like the large Cherry 
Birds (Ampelis garrulus).” Their song is given as a wandering, 
jerky warble, beginning low, suddenly increasing in power, and as sud- 
denly ceasing, as though the singer were out of breath. 
During the winter and early spring of 1890 there was a phenomenal 
incursion of Evening Grosbeaks into the Northern States, accounts of 
which, by Amos W. Butler, will be found in The Auk, 1892, pp. 238-247; 
1893, pp. 155-157. In the winter of 1910-11 the birds again appeared 
in large numbers. Records of their occurrence will be found in The 
Auk and Bird-Lore for 1911. 
1910. Rossrts, T. S., Bull. Minn. Acad. Sci., IV, 406-414 (habits in 
Minn.).—1901. BIRTWELL, F. J., Auk, XVIII, 388-391 (nesting). 
515. Pinicola enucleator leucura (Miill.). Pine Grosspeax. (Fig. 
64a.) Ad. 7—Slaty gray, more or less strongly washed with rose-red, 
strongest on the crown, rump, upper tail-coverts, and breast; wings fuscous, 
their coverts edged with white; tail fuscous. This plumage is ‘acquired at the 
first postnuptial molt. Ad. 9 :“Slaty gray, crown, upper tail-coverts, and 
breast more or less strongly washed with olive-yellow: wings and tail as in 
ae ae ns op eae the 9, but is somewhat brighter. L., 9°08; W., 4°36; 
” Range. —E.N. Am. .Breeds in Boreal forests from nw. Mackenzie (Great 
Bear Lake), ee Keewstin, and n. Ungava to the White Mts. of N. H., 
Maine, cen. N. B., s. N. S., and Cape Breton Is.; winters s. to Iowa, Ind., 
EP, nu. N. J., and casually to D, C. and Ky.; w. to Man., Minn., and é. 
‘ans. 
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