Monthly Bulletin 5 



Trafton. Bird Friends 2.00 



" Methods of Attracting Birds 1.50 



Bailey. Handbook of Birds of Western United States 4.00 



Hoflfmann. Guide to the Birds 1.75 



Pearson. The Bird Study Book 1.35 



Tales from Birdland 1.00 



" Stories of Bird Life 75 



Birds of New York (Colored Plates) . Portfolio, $1.50; Bound 2.50 



Reed. Bird Guides, Flower Guides, etc. Cloth, $1.25 ; Leather 1.50 



" Nature Studies, Birds 75 



Miller. First Book of Birds 1.00 



" Second Book of Birds 1.00 



Baynes. Wild Bird Guests 2.50 



Mathews. Field Book of Wild Birds 3.00 



Townsend. In Audubon's Labrador 2.50 



Packard. Old Plymouth Trails 3.50 



Florida Trails 3.00 



White Mountain Trails 3.00 



" Literary Pilgrimages of a Naturalist 2.00 



THE MOOSE HILL BIKD SANCTUARY. 

 By Harry George Higbee, Superintendent 



The increasing interest in the Moose Hill Bird Sanctuary in Sharon 

 has been evidenced during the past season by its largely increased patronage. 

 In the past ten months (January to October inclusive) we have registered 

 here over twenty-five hundred visitors, as against thirteen hundred during 

 the whole of 1919. 



This throng of nature lovers represents not only a larger, but a more 

 actively interested gathering of friends of the Audubon Society and game 

 protection than has been recorded here in previous years. Many have come 

 from long distances to study and observe our methods in bird protection, or 

 to secure information relative to establishment of sanctuaries in other places. 



In addition to our Massachusetts friends, — who have come from one 

 hundred and thirty-two localities throughout the State, — we have this year 

 received visitors from Abbot, Maine; Anchorage, Kentucky; Bangor, Maine; 

 Barre, Vermont; Bethel, Vermont; Chicago, Illinois; Cincinnati, Ohio; 

 Denver, Colorado; Dover, New Hampshire; Doylestown, Pennsylvania; East 

 Derry, New Hampshire; Franklin, New Hampshire; Greenwich, Connecti- 

 cut; Los Angeles, California; Maplewood, New Jersey; Montclair, New 

 Jersey; Morristown, New Jersey; Nashua, New Hampshire; Newport, Rhode 

 Island; New Haven, Connecticut; New York City; Oberlin, Ohio; Ogden, 

 Utah; Palmyra, Maine; Palo Alto, California; Pawtucket, Rhode Island; 

 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Pittsburg, Pennsylvania; Portland, Maine; 

 Portland, Oregon; Portsmouth, New Hampshire; Portsmouth, Rhode Island; 

 Ripon, Wisconsin; Rochester, New York; Rockland, Maine; Saranac Lake, 

 New York; South Paris, Maine; Springfield, Missouri; Staten Island, New 

 York; Strafford, New Hampshire; Troy, New York; Troy, Ohio; Tuxedo 

 Park, New York; Washington, D. C; Waterbury, Connecticut; Weld, Maine; 

 West Falmouth, Maine; Kentville, Nova Scotia; Truro, Nova Scotia; Yar- 

 mouth, Nova Scotia; St. John, New Brunswick; Trinidad, Cuba, and Eng- 

 land. 



This widespread interest has centered not only in our avifauna, but in 

 the protection and conservation of all forms of useful wild life, and demon- 



