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fltfit h- <7Vr» M( e . 
' ~ ^ Idsf <A>t^T 4i_ CV /$'&“?- S^f tt^TO^S wf 
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A single flock of Cedarbirds (about twenty in number) appeared on 
February 6. 
y 1 ' 
Auk, 71. July, 1889. p. £#/• 
Summer Birds Tim Pond Me. byF.H. C» 
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*S~' 
Cedar Waxwing, ( Amphelis cedorum). Com- 
monest bird about tlie camps. 
O.&O. XI. Feb. 1886. p. 34' 
Birds of Dead River Region, Me. F. H. 0. 
38. Ampelis cedrorum, (Cedar Waxwing). One 
of the most abundant birds of the forests, being 
found about Seven Ponds in numbers, and were 
far more common in the wilderness than in the 
cultivated districts. No nests were found, but 
they undoubtedly breed, as Mr. Freeborn has 
many sets, collected in his vicinity. I was absent 
from the region during their usual period of nest- 
ing, which may account for my failure to record 
their nidification. 
O.&O. XI. Oct. 1886. p. 146 
Fall Birds of Northern Maine. 
F. H. Carpenter. 
Cedar Waxwing ( Ampelis cedrorum). I have 
always met this bird in every section of Maine, j 
and this trip was no exception. 
°* & °‘ ^ Nov. 1887 p. J88 
— ' Cedai ' bi «l. Common at Boothbay. 
O.mdO, 15a Nov, 1800, p, 
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30 
