ML 
JiUH^r faMtr 
S ’™" r B^dB Of Presidential Range, 
White Mts. A.P.Ohadboone 
16. Perisoreus canadensis. Canada Jay. — Much more common than 
the Blue Jay, though nowhere plenty. Small flocks of half a dozen were 
seen on three or four occasions, but usually there was only one or at most 
two. We found them early in July from near the base of the mountain to 
the limit of the spruce and fir forest, a little above the Half-way House 
(altitude, 3850 feet). A short distance below it, at the limit of good sized 
spruce and fir trees, they were more plenty than anywhere else. 
*3**. 4 a Apin i 887| p 104 
1 1896 , 
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hu~ 
Breezy Point, Warren, N.EE. 
bOC |(ii afy Uw~t'7 A/ /(av^ 
^ $7 oka 
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