24 Lieut. W. Y. Legge on the Distribution of 
Morowa-Korle coffee-country in 1871, frequenting the edges 
of forests, and hopping actively, Bulbul-like, about among the 
leaves of fruit-bearing trees, clinging, Tit-like, to the twigs, 
and uttering a single note, which I find jotted down in my 
rough memoranda as very Starling-like. I subsequently 
found it in numbers in “ cheena 99 clearings in the Singha 
forest, which is a continuation of the Morowa-Korle hills, 
being simply divided from them by the deep gorges of the 
Gindurah. In the mornings it fed, in company with flocks 
of Palceornis calthropce, on the seeds or fruit of the Kanda-tree 
(.Macaranga tomentosa) growing near the edges of the jungle; 
and in the heat of the day I observed it hopping about the 
leaves of Jack-trees searching for insects. On procuring spe¬ 
cimens the stomachs proved to contain a mixed diet. In the 
evenings they became restless, in just the same manner as the 
Hill-Mynah, Eulabes ptilogenys , and roamed about the val¬ 
leys, alighting on the tops of dead trees in small parties of 
two and three. Layard got his specimen from Mr. Thwaites, 
and believed it -was procured in the Saffragam district, which 
is the opposite slope of the central mountains on the north 
side of the valley which divides them from the ranges I now 
speak of. Males measure in the flesh 8*3"; wing 4*2 ,/ > tail 
2‘7 n ; tarsus nearly 1*1"; bill from gape LI". The iris is 
whitish, with a brown inner circle; bill light glaucous green, 
bluish about the base; legs and feet bluish slate. The female 
differs materially from the male in the character of its color¬ 
ation, in having far more white on the head, and in the neutral 
grey of the under surface being much more in extent. These 
parts may be described thus :—forehead, front of crown , side 
of head just over the eye, face, ear-coverts, chin, and gorge 
white; fore neck and the sides (gradually blending thence into 
the ashy black of the hind neck), chest, breast, and flanks 
neutral grey or bluish cinereous, the feathers with fine white 
shafts; on the belly the feathers commence to be edged 
greyish white until the abdomen and under tail-coverts be¬ 
come entirely of that colour. In the male the forehead alone 
is white, with a buff tinge, ending abruptly at the crown, the 
white of the throat descends further to the neck; and the 
