3o8 



Bird - Lore 



Southern States 



States Classes 



Alabama 30 



Arkansas 9 



District of Columbia 6 



Florida 177 



Georgia 69 



Kentucky 89 



Louisiana 30 



Maryland 119 



Mississippi 38 



North Carolina 57 



Panama (Canal Zone) i 



South Carolina 37 



Tennessee 91 



Texas 47 



Virginia 160 



West Virginia 97 



Totals 1,057 



Northern States 



States Classes 



Arizona i 



California 55 



Canada 221 



Colorado 26 



Connecticut 137 



Delaware 6 



Idaho 10 



Illinois 439 



Mem- 

 bers 



471 

 123 

 129 



3.701 

 1,222 



1,465 

 503 



2,401 

 660 

 962 



31 



SCO 



1,716 



910 



2,336 



1,991 



19,121 



Mem- 

 bers 

 16 



1,119 



3,655 

 447 



2,451 



64 



180 



8,065 



Northern States, continued 



Mem- 

 States Classes berg 



Indiana 128 2,200 



Iowa 169 3,220 



Kansas 31 498 



Maine 58 947 



Massachusetts 359 8,463 



Michigan 576 10,414 



Minnesota 243 4,509 



Missouri 80 1,427 



Montana 50 770 



Nebraska 34 422 



Nevada 28 471 



New Hampshire 34 597 



New Jersey 436 9,273 



New Mexico 22 376 



New York 779 14,174 



North Dakota 28 604 



Ohio 386 7,934 



Oklahoma 41 608 



Oregon 42 780 



Pennsylvania 354 6,790 



Rhode Island 63 1,096 



South Dakota 65 901 



Utah 7 142 



Vermont 35 674 



Washington 67 982 



Wisconsin 115 1,253 



Wyoming 20 396 



Totals 5,14s 95,918 



COOPERATIVE WORK IN OREGON 



The Oregon Fish and Game Commission 

 has been carrying on an active educational 

 campaign during the past few months 

 under the direction of our Western Field 

 Agent, William L. Finley. Prof. Charles F. 

 Hodge, formerly of Worcester, Mass., has 

 been employed jointly by the University 

 of Oregon and the Commission to devote 

 his entire time to lecturing among the 

 schools of the state. Professor Hodge has 

 not only been giving stereopticon lectures 

 upon the economic value of song-birds 

 and insect-eating birds, but also has been 

 lecturing in the schools upon the protec- 

 tion and propagation of game. The idea 

 has been to encourage children in the 

 country toward rearing quail, grouse, and 

 other game-birds, to stock the fields and 

 supply the demand for propagating pur- 

 poses. 



In order to create greater interest from 

 an educational point of view, moving- 

 picture films have been exhibited, illus- 



trating the State Game Farm, fish-hatch- 

 eries, angling, and other features of out- 

 door life. An excellent educational film 

 has been secured of school-children making 

 and putting up bird-houses. Others will 

 be taken illustrating wild birds and other 

 animals in various parts of the state, 

 especially on some of the larger wild-bird 

 refuges. 



As a result of educational work in the 

 schools, boys in some of the country school 

 districts, who were formerly accustomed 

 to kill birds at every opportunity, have 

 now become their greatest protectors, by 

 supplying food in the winter when the 

 snow is on the ground, and by furnishing 

 bird-homes in the spring. 



From the office of the National Audubon 

 Association in New York, 780 Oregon 

 school-children have also been enrolled in 

 Junior Audubon classes, and by this means 

 provided with careful instruction in study 

 and bird-protection. 



