Massachusetts Audubon Society 



Merritt, Mrs. C. C. 

 Miller, Mrs. Arthur M. 

 Minot, Francis 

 Page, Miss Valeria S. 

 Parker, Mrs. O. A. 

 Pattee, Miss Alice R. 

 Pease, Frank A. 

 Peck, James A. 

 Pendergast, R. B. 

 Perkins, John A. 

 Perry, Mrs. John S. 

 Pettingill, Miss Lucy E. 

 Pierce, Miss Mary E. 

 Pierce, Myron E. 

 Reed, Miss Florence M. 

 Rossi, Mrs. L. Melano 

 Rotch, Miss Josephine Noyes 

 Sumner, Mrs. Charles 

 Tripp, Miss Katherine M. 

 Tufts, Miss Mary J. 

 Turner, Miss Helen G. 

 White, Albert Audubon 

 Woodman, Mrs. Julian C. 

 Wylie, James 

 Zahn, Louis 



202 Newbury St., Brockton 



11 Spruce St., Braintree 



56 Fenway, Boston 

 349 Pleasant St., Maiden 

 Wakefield 



29 Commonwealth Ave., Boston 



31 South Main St., Fall River 



15 North Beacon St., AUston 

 1901 Wyoming Ave., Washington, D. C. 

 293 Broadway, Methuen 

 490 County St., New Bedford 



Hotel Beaconsfield, Brookline 

 224 South Ave., Whitman 



Bancroft Road, Wellesley Hills 



49 Electric Ave., West Somerville 



93 Moreland St., Roxbury 

 197 Commonwealth Ave., Boston 

 175 Chapman St., Canton 



64 Hillman St., New Bedford 

 1 Atlantic St., Lynn 



41 Harvard St., Worcester 



78 Pinckney St., Boston 



35 Bellevue Ave., Melrose 

 771 Heath St., Brookline 



11 Enfield St., Jamaica Plain 



THE BIRDS FROM DAY TO DAY 



SOUTHBRIDGE 



We have had a goodly number of birds here this winter — crows, star- 

 lings, downy and hairy woodpeckers, chickadees, redpolls, jays, snowbirds, 

 and a large flock of evening grosbeaks. We had a junco here all winter 

 feeding at our box. I am quite sure we had a family of j uncos breed here 

 near my house this last. summer because we saw them many times with the 

 yoimg in the road, almost in the center of the town. A robin arrived in our 

 yard March 5th and has been here since, feeding on the barberries, etc. 



Allan H. Faxon. 



THE PUNCTUAL CARDINAL 



A letter from my son, who is at Augusta, Ga., tells me that the same old 

 cardinal-bird is back this season, whistling every morning in the same tree 

 in front of their windows. He has discovered that the bird "starts full tilt 

 at seven o'clock when the whistles of the cotton factories in the valley blow, 

 but he is at a loss on Sundays, when there are no whistles, and his time 

 varies from 7.15 to 7.35." 



Elizabeth F. Parker. 



A TRUE SNAKE STORY 



In North Haverhill, in 1917, some ladies were sitting on a piazza. 

 Near by, in view of the house, was a robin's nest. Mother robin was seen 

 to return to her nest with what appeared to be an extra long worm. The 

 ladies watched the mother try desperately to get the whole length of the 

 tidbit down her offspring's throat. Failing in this, she tried to break off the 



