10 Massachusetts Andiihon Society 



SUSTAINING MEMBERS RECEIVED FROM OCT. 22 TO NOV. 17, 1921 



John C. Alden 5036 74 Fairmount Ave., Newton 



Mrs. Richard Ames 5043 Way land 



T. Winthrop Barnard 5052 46 Norfolk Rd., Arlington 



Mrs. H. S. Bird 5053 46 Shepard St., Cambridge 



Mrs. C. O. Blood Lynnfield Centre 



Mr. C. O. Blood Lynnfield Centre 



Miss I. F. Brigham 5051 578 Main St., Maiden 



Mrs. Walter Dean 5035 293 Walnut St., Dedham 



John Evans 5040 330 Centre St., Milton 



Horace Field, Jr 5049 123 High St., Brookline 



Mrs. Clara Gay 5045 3 Joy St., Boston 



Mary J. Graffam 5046 Holliston 



F. A. Kidder 5038 17 St. Lukes Rd., Allston 



Mrs. F. A. Kidder 5039 17 St. Lukes Rd., Allston 



Library, McGill University 5033 Montreal, Canada 



Miss Edith Monro 5054 122 Concord St., Newton Lower Falls 



Mrs. Irving Porter 5037 65 Woburn St., W. Medford 



E. C. Sherwin 5034 36 CUnton St., Springfield 



Mrs. Mary C. Stevens 5031 44 Woodbine St., Auburndale 



Henry Swift 5032 4 Liberty Square, Boston 



Mrs. Charles D. Thompson 5041 Andover 



E. C. Whiting 5042 7 Chauncy St., Cambridge 



Mrs. Delano Wight 5050 44 Sumner Rd., Brookline 



Miss Martha W. Willett 5044 Norwood 



Clarence H. Wisham 5048 2 Larchwood Drive, Cambridge 



Mr. George H. Woolley 5047A Commercial Wharf, Boston 



Mrs. Edith Christiana Woolley 5047 63 Hyde St., Newton Highlands 



Christmas Hints. Christmas comes in a few weeks. It gives our 

 members an opportunity to remember some bird-loving friend with a 

 bird book, chart or calendar. We especially recommend the Audubon 

 Charts, three in number, showing seventy-two birds in color, $2.50 each 

 chart; '' Birds of New York," neatly bound, all the birds in color, $2.50 

 each; the Audubon Calendar for 1922, six bird pictures in color with 

 descriptive text, $1.00 each. We have a four-page price-list of recommend- 

 ed bird books, leaflets and material which we will gladly mail on request. 



Bird Lectures. Plans already in the making for the annual course of 

 bird lectures would indicate that the Course this year will be more inter- 

 esting, entertaining and instructive than ever before. The lectures will 

 be held on Saturday early in April, probably the 1st, 8th and 15th. 

 Don't fail to reserve these dates. 



Bird Painters. A recent welcome visitor to the Audubon Society 

 office was Mr. H. P. Crane, of Chicago, who rests from the cares of his 

 large business interests by studying wild life and planning his large Wild 

 Rose Farm at St. Charles, Illinois, as a bird sanctuary. He recalled the 

 fact that New Orleans, which he visits frequently, seems especially to be 

 the home of prominent bird painters. Audubon was long supposed to 

 have been born there. He s}ient an important portion of his life there, 

 during which he did many of his woiulerful paintings of lairds. Parelli, 

 now dead, painted there, jirodueing bird pictures which are held in high 

 esteem. A pupil of his, Viavant, now living there, does exquisite bird 

 paintings and Viavant 's daughter, studying under her father, bids fair to 

 rival him in the quality of her work. 



