JCCj J< //- 
1 
/l 
<^■1. <2- ^CA_ ^V-\aXX 'H'C-O. 
cO n 
d- oXX-*—. , XX 
/iuXo^i 't-'— «_A— ~Y(X /l «-*~C-~ < t <-^<-<_«_^ y a~^_ 
X *~ *'J ' C * S ~^ f^-^X jX_^_ 
~t\ 
PI-IaX) /' i /tt>«..vc^ 1 <i \ ^yi/^oCj / 
/m 
Xt'-~‘.f </- fi. 
£d 
ec, 
^kA)~xC^X <v^X 3 
^y£: ^ 
<^<-< r ^ - f YY l, J fh^^ ^ ^ — YXYYX. 
_x/y»_^7 A / oC y 7 t >~ — «^ 
^X\aJ ckX- ^ 0 ’ , y^ 
Winter Birds of Webster N.H.'byT’alco. 
Pine Grosbeak, ( Pinicola enudeator). 
O.&O. X. Jan. 1885. p/y 
Summer Birds of Presidential Range, 
White Mts. A.P.Chadbomne 
18. Pinicola enucleator. Pine Grosbeak. — Two specimens seen, both 
of them in the low spruce and fir timber opposite the Half-way House 
(altitude, 3800 feet). One was a fine adult male in full song, seen July 12, 
1884; the other an immature bird, seen July 13, 1886. 
A *k« 4, April 1887,. p.104 
Bird Notes, Central N.H. Winter ’91-92 
J„ H. Johnson 
Pine Grosbeaks, quite common. 
0.&O.Yol.l7,May 1892 p. 72 
