42 
THE CONDOR 
Von. XII 
Canachites canadensis osgoodi. Alaska Spruce Grouse. Four adults (nos. 4523, 
4.521, 4516, 4520), Russian Mission, lower Yukon, October 12, 26 and 28, 1894; 
adult (no. 4522), Nulato, October 2, 1894; C. R. Hall. 
Bonasa umbellus umbelloides. Gray Ruft Grouse. Adult male (no. 4514), 
Russian Mission, lower Yukon, October 11, 1894; two adult males (nos. 4507, 4510), 
Fort Yukon, September 24, 1895; C. R. Hall. 
Buteo borealis calurus. Western Red-tailed Hawk. Two, two-thirds-grown 
juvenals (nos. 4966, 4967), Yukon River, Alaska, 60 miles below Forty-mile, Y. T., 
July 28, 1894; C. R. Hall. This appears to be the first record of this race from 
Alaska, and the first known occurrence of any Red-tail in Alaska north of Glacier Bay. 
Aquila chrysaetos. Golden Eagle. Adult male (no. 4502), Russian Mission, 
lower Yukon, April 19, 1895; C. R. Hall. “Red squirrel in crop.” 
Falco gyrfalco rusticolus. Gyrfalcon. Immature(?) male (no. 4963), Russian 
Mission, lower Yukon, April 18, 1895; C. R. Hall. 
Asio flammeus. Short-eared Owl. Male (no. 4940), St. Michael, October 12, 
1895, C. R. Hall; female (no. 7084), Anklin River, Yakutat Bay region, Septem- 
ber 29, 1908, A. Hasselborg. The former is pale, the latter very dark. 
Bubo virginianus algistus. St. Michael Horned Owl. Adult female (no. 4969), 
St. Michael, November 20, 1895; C. R. Hall. 
Bubo virginianus subarcticus. Arctic Horned Owl. Adult male (no. 4968), Rus- 
sian Mission, lower Yukon, December 20, 1894, C. R. Hall; adult female (no. 7085), 
Yakutat Bay, May 15, 1908, J. Dixon. The latter I forwarded to Washington 
where Mr. H. C. Oberhblser named it subarcticus ! But this subspecies, as restrict- 
ed, does not belong in Alaska, much less in the Yakutat region in May ! The other 
specimen is to me indistinguishable from it, and the two constitute the first records 
of subarcticus for Alaska (unless they be light “phases” of some other form!). 
Bubo virginianus lagophonus. Ruddy Horned Owl. Adult male (no. 7113), 
Kenai, August 5, 1906; A. Seale. 
Surnia ulula caparoch. Hawk Owl. Adult female (no. 4949), Russian Mission, 
lower Yukon, April 22, 1895; C. R. Hall. 
Dryobates pubescens nelsoni. Nelson Downy Woodpecker. Three adults (nos. 
4647-4649), Russian Mission, lower Yukon, October 23 and November 9, 1894; 
C. R. Hall. 
Picoides arcticus. Arctic Three-toed Woodpecker. Adult female (no. 6461), 
“Yukon, Alaska”, (no date); J. H. Turner. This probably means somewhere on 
the Yukon River, not necessarily Fort Yukon. 
Picoides americanus americanus. Alaska Three-toed Woodpecker. Juvenal 
male (no. 4709), Rapids, Yukon River, July 21, 1894; adult female (no. 4710), 
Russian Mission, lower Yukon, October 21, 1894; C. R. Hall. 
Perisoreus canadensis fumifrons Ridgway. Alaska Jay. Adult female (no. 
7109), Rake Skilak, Kenai Peninsula, August 10, 1906, A. Seale; juvenal male (no. 
4546), Russian Mission, lower Yukon, May 30, 1895, C. R. Hall; three adults (nos. 
4544, 4545, 4547), Russian Mission, Andreiefski Post, and Fort Yukon, April 21, 
1895, November 14, 1894, and August 23, 1894; C. R. Hall. 
Euphagus carolinus. Rusty Blackbird. Adult male (no. 4552), Russian Mis- 
sion, lower Yukon, May 5, 1895, C. R. Hall; immature male (no. 7075), Anklin 
River, Yakutat Bay district, October 15, 1908, A. Hasselborg. 
Pinicola enucleator flammula. Kadiak Pine Grosbeak. Adult males (nos. 7073, 
7074), Anklin River, Yakutat Bay district, October 12 and 13, 1908; A. Hasselborg. 
Pinicola enucleator alascensis. Alaska Pine Grosbeak. Seven adults (nos. 
