8. Lophophanes bicolor (L.) Bp. Tufted Titmouse.—Not very common. Frequenting principally the tops of trees.

9. Parus carolinensis Aud. Carolina Chickadee.—But few observed. A pair bred in a hole in a cedar post within twenty yards of the house last year.

10. Thryothorus ludovicianus (Gm.) Bp. Carolina Wren.—Very abundant everywhere. A clutch of three eggs was taken on the 19th from a nest in a small recess formed by the junction of several timbers, under the piazza, which was frequented at all times of the day. The nest was empty on the 16th, one egg was deposited on the 17th, one on the 18th, and one on the 19th. I saw neither of the old birds about the place at all, and it was only by capturing the female on the nest at night, that the eggs were positively identified. A pair have bred about this piazza for many years, I am informed.

11. Mniotilta varia (L.) V. Black-and-white Creeper.—A male, the only one seen at all, was captured in a dense wood on the 17th.

12. Parula americana (L.) Bp. Blue-yellow-backed Warbler.—Very abundant. A persistent but weak vocalist.

13. Dendrœca æstiva (Gm.) Bd. Summer Yellowbird.—Common in open places.

14. Dendrœca blackburniæ (Gm.) Bd. Blackburnian Warbler.—Common in large trees about open ground.

15. Dendrœca dominica albilora Bd. White-browed-yellow-throated Warbler.—A male, the only one seen, was shot out of a magnolia tree on the 10th. In all of my Kentucky specimens of this bird the anterior portion of the superciliary line has a trace of yellow. In this one no yellow is perceptible.

16. Dendrœca pinus (Wils.) Bd. Pine-creeping Warbler.—Apparently not uncommon. Preferring open ground. In song.

17. Siurus auricapillus (L.) Sw. Golden-crowned Thrush.—One specimen captured in a thicket on the 15th.