two Spotted Sandpipers and two Semipalmated Plovers. 
Leach's Petrels (43), Prof. Alfred 0. Gross, Brunswick, 
Maine. 
Roseate Terns (49 young) at Chatham, Mass., and 61 
Cliff Swallows in Sweden, Me.„ Henry E. Childs of Provi¬ 
dence, R. I. 
Purple Finches (19), Mrs. W. K. Harrington, Norwalk, 
Conn. 
Song Sparrows (65), Sydney Harris, Vineyard Haven, 
Mass. 
Redstart, male, flew into back kitchen, banded by Miss 
Inez Annie Howe, St. Johnsbury, Vt. 
Fox,, Song and Tree Sparrows (70), in March and April, 
Mr. Frank Novak, Fairfield, Conn. 
At Sandwich, Cape Cod, Mass., a Juneo was banded 
March 31, by Mrs. George H. Burbank. On April 26 a 
cat brought in this bird in Buckland, in the extreme western 
part of the same state. 
Mr. R. E. Horsey, of Rochester, N. Y., reported that 
Common Tern No. 104872 was found August 13, at Stop 22, 
Manitou Line, near Rochester, alive, but it soon died. The 
bird was banded by Edwin Beaupre, near Kingston, Ontario. 
On June 17, Messrs. Fletcher, Floyd and Mackaye banded 
one hundred and four Black-crowned Night Herons (fledg¬ 
lings) at Sandy Neck, West Barnstable, Mass. Three of 
these banded birds were heard from later in the summer. 
The first, August 7, at Kennebunkport, Me., about 120 miles 
north of Sandy Neck; the second, August 20, at Fryeburg, 
Maine, 200 miles north of Cape Cod and well inland; while 
the third was picked up September 4 near Marblehead, 
Mass., about 60 miles from its place of banding. 
Black-crowned Night Heron 201635, banded by Mr. S. C. 
Emilio at Ipswich Beach, July 30, was found injured at 
North Andover on September 25. This town is about 20 
miles west of Ipswich. 
Mr. J. Howard Edwards, of Boston, shot nine banded 
Black Ducks, among others, at Tunk Pond, Maine, Novem¬ 
ber 6 and 7. These birds were banded by Joseph Pulitzer, 
of Bar Harbor, Maine. 
49 
