WOOD PEWEE FLYCATCHER. 
C3 
^nd widpni^ **' ’ " 3'ellowish white, the latter forked, 
Exactly lil towards the end ; bill, formed 
? pale delippf-n**^ 11 king bird; whole lower parts, 
hazel. Ti,' ya^l'*"’ ; legs and bill, wholly blade ; iris, 
L^^apt in Lp almost exactly like the male, 
soeeipo' y*?” , .'ha crest somewhat more brown. 
®ambers nf '^‘■om Canada to Florida; great 
and '“Rally wintering in the two Caro- 
Phoeby ^'’8'"'" I" New York, they are called the 
T)ei.i l’ accused of destroying bees. With 
as \f '** 'h® ®Ra"*''y> the arrival of the pewee 
it is , ahnaiiack, reminding them that 
'yi'enev„;'l‘i® "'"'’h should be done. 
Plant ’’T'* “PP®a''s.” says Mr Bartram, “ we 
“®‘*ns sm h^'Rs.ana heans in the open grounds, French 
®*®Ulcnt . '■‘W'ahes, onions, and almost every kind of 
h’osts • f 8“''"®“ seeds, without fear or danger fre— 
'heir although we have sometimes frosts afl 
•om 
— after 
Severe appearance for a night or two, yet not so 
to injure the young plants.”* 
78. 
'“esercara 
■Karax, winsox.- — m, viauxs, cinNiEDs. 
M'OOn I’EWEE FLYCATCHER, 
'PWEE i-LYCATCHER, 
X |i . . 
L? hiscriinTnIf ** name of wood pewee to this species, 
ao mucli**’** *h® preceding, which it resem- 
rvv 'higuisbnd r'” to.rio and plumage as scarcely to be 
^.hoth. Yet^™”’ I'yan accurate examination 
'SlS'^ation 1 , 1 *“ mode of building, period of 
Pev l 'he two species dilfer greatly, 
frellt- "*“”f 'h“.‘^y"'.hh-da that visit us in 
l®hes of Ijj ,, ’"8 o'coks, building in caves, and under 
ff'®*'ent accoin " I>ewee, the subject of our 
mrds, seldom „ 1 '? the latest of our summer 
tL>e''tin“tbri'‘'8hclore the 12th or 15th of May; 
is hio-h timbered woods, where 
orwood, and abundance of dead twigs 
• Travels, p. 288. 
1 
