A single individual shot Howamber 22 noar Koneyville was reported as tills 
and poor so that It perhaps ms diseased or injured in sow way.. One was 
idilot’s near the Hot Springs north of Ogden on liovenber 18* and on© noss? the 
mouth of the Weber Diver on Ootober 20# i?rom a little further south three were 
. ."* * ' " “. " “ **■" ."r ent Salt Lake* October 14 
itwo baaded birds shot- in oos^a^J) and October 20. fm were shot on October 
2 in the slou^is west of Salt lake City and another in the same vicinity admit 
th© middle of Hovember. In the Harrows of the Jordan Elver* twenty miles south 
of Salt lake City one was kilted December 24* 1915 while another was recorded 
from the Soviet Elver mar Gunnison, Utah cm October 1. 
ttUNMi marked redheads were secured to eastern Idaho all in or near th© 
drainage of Snake Diver. 2wo of these wore shot on October 1 and 15 respective¬ 
ly, and one, taken to Bingham County, on December 8. She last bird mentioned 
ms released on August 20, 1918. 
Scattered records from east of toe Kooky Mountains have considerable 
value am they indicat# a line of flight to a winter range. One bird released 
September 27, 1916 was kilted about How amber 27 near Ordway, to the drainage 
of the Arkansas Elver on the plains of eastern Colorado. Another banded October 
23, 1916 me secured near O’Ponnoll to Dawson County, western Seans on Ifovamber 
22. ,4 third set at freedom August 80, 1916 was secured near Baehvilte, Kingman 
/ 
County, south Central Kansas, on April 21, 1917, probably sfriile in aw tlsvard 
migration. She last of these distant records, om without apparent connection 
with the others, is that of an individual released between August 27 and September 
27, 1916 and killed January 25, 1919 on th© Florence Beservoir near Florence, 
Arizona to the Gila Elver Basin. 
fhe majority of redheads on the Bear River Marshes leave to fall migration 
between the first and the tenth of September, and after that date only stragglers 
