A Third Record for the Prairie Warbler in Canada. — On September 
5, 1905, while collecting on the east shore of Point Pelee, Essex County, 
Ontario, I took a young male Prairie Warbler ( Dendroica discolor). It 
is now No. 314 in my collection. This is the third record for Canada, the 
other two being taken at Toronto, Ont., in 1900. — N. B. Klugh, Mac- 
donald Institute, Guelph, Ont. Alik, XXlll, 'I ' , /«*<< 
Birds of Toronto, Canada, 
by James K. Fleming, 
Part II, Land Birds, 
Aulv , .’CXI 1 /, Jan. , 1 90V, p. g-y, 
259. Dendroica discolor. Prairie Warbler. — Two records, May 
10 and 11, 1900, both males, the first taken by Mr. J. Hughes Samuel, 1 the 
other by Mr. J. H. Ames. 2 
1 Auk, XVII, 1900, 391. 
2 Auk, XVIII, 1901, 106. 
Ci-rTtario- . 
The Prairie Warbler ( Dendroica discolor) in Northern Ontario. — On 
May 11 of this year, the writer, while paddling along the shore of Lake 
Dor£, near Eganville, Renfrew County, Ontario, noticed in the alder 
bushes, which then showed no sign of leafing out, a warbler that seemed 
somewhat out of place there. On taking it, it proved to be a female D. 
discolor, with which I am very familiar from Maryland. This is quite an 
extension of the hitherto known range of this southern warbler. In the 
‘Catalogue of Canadian Birds' by Macoun, there are only two records 
given for Canada as a whole, both from Toronto, Ontario, both of May 11, 
1900. Beside this, it has once been taken at Mt. Forest, Wellington 
County, Ontario. The capture of this more southerly species at this place 
and date was all the more remarkable, since the weather had so far been 
highly unfavorable to migration, especially warbler migration. It had 
been cold nearly every day in May. Of warblers I saw during the whole 
day only one Myrtle (Dendroica coronata) and one Black and White War- 
bler ( Mniotilta varia). The specimen is now in my collection. — G. Eifrig, 
Ottawa, Ont. 
Ank 20, Oct-l®Q®»P» S/3&-33. 
