OF EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA. 33 1 



The eggs are a ujiiform light blue, and present 

 a similarity in tint to those of the Sialia sialis of 

 Baird. They measure, on an average, .84 of an 

 inch in length, and .65 in breadth. 



Euspiza townsendii, Bonap. 



This species which is commonly called Town- 

 send's Bunting, has never been observed by us in 

 Eastern Pennsylvania. Only a single specimen 

 of this apparently well-characterized species has 

 been observed. This bird was shot May 11, 1833 

 by J. K. Townsend, Esq., in an old field, overgrown 

 with cedar-bushes, near New Garden, Chester 

 Co., Penn. Dr. Coues" says: "It is a standing 

 puzzle to ornithologists in the uncertainty whether ^ 

 it is a good species, or merely an abnormal plurnage 

 of the last." Nothing is know of its history. 



Goniaphea ludoviciana, Bowditch. 



The Rose-breasted Grosbeak is a somewhat 

 rare and irregular visitor in Eastern Pennsylvania. 

 It arrives about the 15th of May, and is mainly a 

 denizen of high, opeji woods, where it delights in 

 the tallest tree-tops. We have never observed it 

 along water-courses, which has been the experience 

 of others. Few species are more shy and affect 

 greater fondness for places of retirement. While 

 gleaning amid the branches of the tallest oaks; 

 almost beyond the reach of effective gunshot, the 

 presence of a human being upon the scene, infuses 

 a feeling of dread, and leads to its hasty depart- 



