4 Massachusetts Audubon Society 



TREMONT TEMPLE BIRD LECTURES 



Tickets and the following announcements have been sent to all mem- 

 bers: — 



The enclosed tickets will call your atlcntion t" the Lecture Course of the Massa- 

 chusetts Audubon Society at Tremont Temple, Saturdays, at 10:30 o'clock, January 

 20th, 27th, February 3rd and 10th, 1923. Please note carefully the hour and place. 

 These tickets are sent only to members and a few others especially interested in birdi. 

 If you care to use them, please remit the price — $2.50 each; if not, will you not please 

 reniail them to us in the enclosed envelope? 



NO COURSE TICKETS AT THE DOOR 



Course tickets will not be sold at the door and we take this liberty that you may 

 have first-hand opportunity to purchase them. More tickets may be obtained at the 

 office, 66 Newbury .Street. Boston, Mass. Single admission at 75(^ may be obtained in 

 the same way. 



RESERVED SEATS 



Seats on the floor of the hall (the centre section only) have been reserved, price for 

 the course, includinc: admission, .f4.00. The enclosed admission tickets may be exchanged 

 for Reserved Seat tickets on application at the office of the Audubon .Society, 66 New- 

 bury Street, Boston, and payment of the Reservetl Seat price in person or by mail, sale 

 closing January 13th at 12 M. Reserved Seats for single lectures on sale at the office 

 of the .Society, 66 Newbury Street, on and after Monday. January 15th, at .fl.25 each. 



January 20th, Dr. A. H. Cordier, of Missouri: ''Adventures in Bird Photography."' 

 Dr. Cordier's especial study is the birds of the great Mississippi Valley. He has had 

 many exciting adventures in this work, and his photographs are wonderfully accurate 

 and unusual in posing and opportunity. 



Bird Music: Mr. Charles C. Gorst will give his delightful whistling reproductions. 



January 27th, William L. Finley, of Oregon: "Tide Line to Mountain Top." 

 Rambles of a naturalist with a motion picture camera from the Gulf Coast to the roof 

 of the Rockies. In the Finley motion pictures you live with the birds and animals of 

 desert and wilderness. You not only see rare, shy birds and animals but you see them 

 in the most intimate and unexpected acts of their wild life. The lecture is real college 

 course nature study, but it is like going to the circus at the same time. 



Bird Music: More delightful reproductions by Mr. Gorst. 



February 3rd, Robert Cushman Murphy, of the American Museum of Natural His- 

 tory: "The Land of Penguin and Albatross." The golden-collared king penguins are 

 humorous, grotesque, friendly, quaint and most interesting. The great albatross, the 

 '"Ancient Mariner's" bird, and all the other strange and picturesque wild life of the 

 frozen south polar seas are shown in Mr. Murpliy's pictures and made vivid by his story 

 of his adventures in these far seas. 



Bird Music: Arthur E. Wilson will give whistling reproductions of bird songs. 



February 10th, Herbert K. Job, of Connecticut : '"Feathered Down-Easters." llnique 

 motion pictures of bird-life from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to Gardiner's Island, New 

 York, our feathered friends along shore, also glimpses of intimate friendly relations with 

 birds at Camp. 



Bird Music: Mr. Edward Avis will give bird songs with whistling and violin solos. 



The Audubon Bird Lectures are unique in their appeal to nature lovers, bringing 

 into one course the Pacific Coast, the Mississippi Valley, the South polar seas and 

 familiar New England scenes. 



No expense is spared. Please come; bring your friends, and especially the chil- 

 dren. The day and hour, Saturday at 10:30 A. M., are particularlv convenient for the 

 little folks. 



MASSACHUSETTS AUDUBON SOCIETY, 



66 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass. 



