2 M o nthly B ulletin 



CALENDARS 



The Audubon Society's Calendar for 1923 is now on sale at the office. 

 It will be mailed to any address on receipt of the price, $1.00. This calen- 

 dar is quite the prettiest one that the Society has yet put out. Many people 

 are ordering a dozen or more copies, appreciating their value as Christmas 

 tokens to people interested in birds. The edition is limited, and to avoid 

 disappointment the orders should be placed early. 



RENEWED ACTIVITIES 



The Massachusetts Fish and Game Protective Association is starting the 

 season's campaign with renewed vigor. It is sending a special edition of 

 its Bulletin to several thousand people, members and others, six pages of 

 very interesting and pertinent matter. Its new Secretary, Mr. Arthur L. 

 Clark, is actively engaged in putting the needs and the purposes of the 

 Association before the general public. Assistant Editor Harold C. Palmer 

 presents in the Bulletin a very interesting and instructive article on the 

 history of the Association, and the Bulletin contains much other material 

 of great interest to sportsmen and conservationists. Among other things, 

 the Bulletin shows four types of posters which members may receive for 

 the posting of their land. The Association is also fortunate in securing the 

 services of Mr. Arthur Parker, a staunch conservationist who has been for 

 some time in that work, in the employ of the State. The Association is to 

 be congratulated upon the vigor and the effectiveness of these renewed 

 activities. 



MIGRATION TABLE 



A valuable time-table of the birds about Boston, giving especially their 

 movements in migration, has been compiled by Winthrop Sprague Brooks, 

 of the Boston Society of Natural History. It is on one broad sheet and 

 makes a convenient and useful poster for a class-room or the wall of a 

 bird-lover's den. These time-tables are on sale at the office of the Audubon 

 Society at ten cents each. 



NATURE'S TRAIL 



The Rev. Manly B. Townsend, formerly Secretary of the Audubon 

 Society of New Hampshire, now pleasantly located in a pastorate at Med- 

 field, Mass., is just back from his summer's vacation in the Maine woods. 

 where he reports a wonderful time, studying the boreal birds and other wild- 

 life forms of the wildest part of the State. Mr. Townsend will lecture con- 

 cerning his experiences in the Boston Public Library Course this winter. 



BIRD LECTURERS 



The Audubon Society is in close touch with the movements of the Bird 

 Lecturers, — Wilson, Gorst, Townsend, Avis, Finley and others. It is alv/ays 

 glad to give information concerning opportunities for engaging the services 

 of these men who are doing so much to forward the cause of bird-protection. 



