NoTEs ON RHODE ISLAND ORNITHOLOGY. T 5 
AUTUMN. 





















Macrorrhamphus griseus, July 7 to Aug. 24 = 81 birds. 
Totanus flavipes, July 7 to Aug. 27 = 192 birds. 
Symphemia semipalmata, July 11 to Aug. 8 = 22 birds. 
Micropalama himantopus, July 14 to Aug. 13 = 9 birds. 
Gallinago delicata, Aug. 13 to Noy. 14 = 50 birds. 
Bartramia longicauda, Aug. 15 to 23 = 11 birds. 
Tringa canutus, Aug. 17 to 18 = 23 birds. 
Arenarta interpres, Aug. 18 = I bird. 
Porzana carolina, Aug. 18 to Oct. 6 = 31 birds. 
Totanus melanoleucus, Aug. 26 to Oct. 31 = 50 birds. 
Querquedula discors, Aug. 27 to Sept. 26 = 2 birds. 
Gallinula ? Sept. 28 = 4 birds. 
Philohela minor, Sept. 9 to 13 = 6 birds. ; 
Charadrius dominicus, Sept. 10 to Oct. 24. = 36 birds. 
fallus virgintanus, Sept. 14 = 1 bird. 
Tringa maculata, Sept. 22 to Oct. 18 = 43 birds. 
Anas obscura, Sept. 30 to Oct. 7 = 3 birds. 
Colinus virginianus, Oct. 10 = 24 birds. 
ELrismatura jamaicensis, Oct. 15 to Nov. 14 = 30 birds. 
Fulica americana, Oct. 24 to Nov. 14 = 16 birds. 
Nyroca maria, Oct. 31 = 1 bird. 
Nettion carolinense, Nov. 5 = 1 bird. 
“Ex sponsa, Nov. 11 = 1 bird. 

Total, 896 birds.” 
(To be continued.) 
GENERAL NOTES. 
Various Notes: Parasitic Jaegers in R. I.—Mr. Joel W. White shot 
_ three Stercorarius parastticus at Charlestown Beach, R. I. on Sept. 2, 
1897. : 
One of these was mounted and is now in the Charles H. Smith collec- 
tion at Roger Williams Park. The other two were given to friends and 
their disposition is unknown. They were all in the young plumage. 
Two Records of the Blue-winged Yellow Warbler.— While walking 
_ through an old orchard grown up to brush and briers in Hopkinton, R. I. 
June 7, 1901, my attention was attracted by an unusually queer song 
_ which I had not previously heard. After several attempts to discover 
the bird it alighted in a little oak sapling andI secured the specimen 
which proved to be a Blue-winged Yellow Warbler. (Helminthophila 
Pinus. From the nature of the location I was much inclined to believe 
