1 
No vember 6, 1 901 - Wednesday. 
'i'he woman that lived in the house nearby said 
bat the shrikes were there quite early and were 
lighting hard. The sparrow which I had put on a 
thorn was gone this evening though 1 saw it in 
the morning about eight o’clock. 
November 7, 1901 - Thursday . 
1'his morning I heard one of the shrikes scream 
1 h T nt ° Ver there after getting my opera glasses. 
had seen it fly into the bushes but could not 
0 it again. The English sparrows kept in the 
ak and pine trees and were very quiet. It was 
a - en min h' fces before the sparrow began to feed 
h chirp again. It was not very cold with a 
ar d northwest wind and an overcast sky. 
November 8, 1S01 - Firday. 
Em ? hiS nocm while down in the switches I saw an 
^hgiish sparrow with a white feeding with 
ber of others. It was a female. 
a 
Nov ember 10, 1901 - Sunday . 
the^-r^ 0 coming after breakfast I went down in 
,• 16 lbs. In Seeley's marsh I saw two imle 
beTt° eS ’ °? e star t ed - to fly av/ay but thought 
Wiii 61 " ltj 311,1 cir ded around and lit in a 
with the other again. It gave a rapid run 
it ® h6r note like tsip-it tsip-it .while flying 
firff Ve a note like tsip tsip tsip slower than the 
Of ® n b0th of them flevv in to another bunch 
the lhe fli & ht v/as tipping like that of 
s tmv 1Cadee and the tail v/as s Pread with every 
dw -Vf th ® wings * The y flew ^te fast and 
J| h ? r direction every three or four strokes 
ihg their flight erratic. They and the tree 
Phrrows fly exactly alike. 
