. Bird lore . fond. He soon becameoblivious of me and began to feast on the berries. Had I left him about theyard, he would probabty have shared the pitiful fate of the little Grosbeak.— Plerson Allen, Eackettstown, N. J. [The Grosbeak referred to is the one described in Bird-Lore, Vol. XIII, No. 6, p. 318,under the title of Some Experiences with a Bird Nurserj-. The bappier fate of Petesuggests the wisdom of training birds reared by hand for life in the open. HoweA-er,there are mam^ enemies besides cats, as well as many dangers which threaten the lifeof any bird, whether captive or free.


. Bird lore . fond. He soon becameoblivious of me and began to feast on the berries. Had I left him about theyard, he would probabty have shared the pitiful fate of the little Grosbeak.— Plerson Allen, Eackettstown, N. J. [The Grosbeak referred to is the one described in Bird-Lore, Vol. XIII, No. 6, p. 318,under the title of Some Experiences with a Bird Nurserj-. The bappier fate of Petesuggests the wisdom of training birds reared by hand for life in the open. HoweA-er,there are mam^ enemies besides cats, as well as many dangers which threaten the lifeof any bird, whether captive or free. To study more closeh into all the conditionswhich make for the health and safety of birds, and particularly of immature birds, isthe problem of the human foster-parent.—A. H. W.]. A REDSTART FRIENDPhotographed by H. W. Osgood, Pittsfield, Mass THE YELLOW-HEADED BLACKBIRD By THOMAS S. ROBERTS Tl^t Rational Si00omtion ot Siuliuhon ^otktitQ EDUCATIONAL LEAFLET NO. 57 The Yellow-headed Blackbird is preeminently a native ofRange the Great Plains, and, although in some parts of its range it invades regions not strictly prairie, it belongs by right to thevast treeless plains of the interior and the sparsely wooded areas immediatelyadjoining on the east and west. Over all this region it ranges, breeding fromthe extreme northern part of Mexico in the south to southern British Columbia,the Saskatchewan and Manitoba in the north. East and west it occurs reg-ularly as a summer resident, from Wisconsin, Illinois, northwestern Indianaand western Louisiana to the valleys of the Pacific Coast States. It wintersthroughout the extreme southern portion of its United States range and onthe plateaus of Central Mexico. Farther east in the United States it is but arare wanderer. Ther


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectbirds, booksubjectorn