A can tli is 1 inaria 
Concord, Mass. 
1899. On the 6th, 8th, 9th & 11th I heard the flight calls of Red- 
No v. 1-11 . polls at Ball's Hill, on each occasion in the early morning. 
Also 21, 
22 & 26. On the morning of the 7th a flock of four birds alighted near 
me for a moment in the top of a gray birch. As none of our 
other local observers met with this species during the present 
autumn I conclude that the flight which I noted at Concord 
must have been inconsiderable and of short duration (Four or 
five Redpolls were seen Jan. 21st, 1900 at Ipswich, Mass, by 
Dr . C . '.Y . To wn send and Dr . Jo s . Go o da 1 e . They sho t one wh i ch 
proved to be a typical 1 i nar ia J . 
lo 
