\,$v erMi.-z-i (3^) 
CONCORD. 
■ 3 902 
ly 12 
Arrivals 
[Tennessee Warbler, a male singing freely at the usual 
short intervals, in the Barrett Run nearly opposite the foot 
of the lane.that leads from the barn. The beginning of the 
song ( pit chy-pitchy-pitchy ) was normal but its terminal half 
was so like that of a Nashville W a rbler that I did not feel 
qiite sure of the bird until I got my glass on him. He was 
in high plumage with very blue head and pure white (i.e. 
ashy-white) under parts. He was in the top of a gray birch 
at first; soon afterwards he flew into a tall oak and finally 
into the blossoming apple orchard where we lost him. This 
is the first Tennessee Warbler I have ever noted in the Ball’s 
Hill region. 
Bay-breasted Warbler . Among the old oak woods which 
lie between the Barrett farm and the road that leads from 
the school-house to Bensen’s are a few good-sized white pines. 
As we were passing one of these trees at about 9 A. M., I 
heard the unmistakable zeezy-zeezy-zee of a Bay-breast and 
presently discovered the bird, a fine male; not,as it turned 
out,in the pine, but in a neighboring oak, the leaves of 
which were just beginning to unfold. 
The third and last arrival for the day was the 
Canadian W a rbler of which we heard a male singing in Davis’s 
Swamp. Perhaps I should add to the list a solitary Cedar 
Bird seen in the blueberry pasture at the Farm the first 
since L'arch 
