Oporonis agilis and palfmmrm palm a ru m at Shelburne, near 
Gorham, New Hampshire.— On September 14, 1884, while collecting near 
the ‘Dryad Camp’ on the side of Mt. Baldcap (altitude approximately 800 
feet), I secured a female Connecticut Warbler. When seen it was hopping 
about in a tangle of hobble bushes and low alders, which covered a small 
piece of swampy ground in high open woods. No others were seen 
although I looked carefully for them, and went to the same place several 
times hoping to find more. This adds the Connecticut Warbler to the 
birds of New Hampshire. 
Auk, 2, Jan., 1885. p. /o*f- 
Busuner Birds of PreaidentialRange, 
White Mte, A. P. Ohadbournt, 
[36. Geothlypis agilis, or G. Philadelphia. On July 7, 1886, I saw a 
bird in a damp thicket, by the side of the carriage road, at an elevation 
of 2640 feet, that was undoubtedly either a Connecticut or a Mourning 
Warbler. In its slow, listless motions and peculiar way of flirting its tail, 
it reminded me most of the former as seen in Massachusetts in autumn > 
hut the latter would seem to he far more likely to occur.] 
Attk, 4, April 1087. p. 10 : 
