Annual Meeting 49 



well as one of the Duck Hawk from the brush of Mr. George M. 

 Suttou, and loaned by the owner. The evening was concluded with 

 Mr. Richardson's collection of slides, at which time over 250 ac- 

 curately tinted and splendidly taken views of birds and wild flow- 

 ers were thrown on the screen. 



When the hour of adjournment arrived, at the close of the sec- 

 ond day, those who had attended expressed themselves as well re- 

 paid for their time and not a little loath to wait a year for a repe- 

 tition of the pleasure. 



The complete program was as follows: 



Monday, December 27 

 9:30 A. M. — Conference of Officers. 



Business Meeting of the Club. 



The New Standard Catalog for Oological Exchange, 



B. R. Bales, Circleville, O. 

 Ornithological Pot-Pourri — Members. 

 President's Address. 

 12:30 P. M.— Buffet Luncheon, Men's Cafe, University of Chicago 

 Campus. 

 2:00 P. M. — Bird Banding; Purpose, Methods and Results. 



(Slides)— S. Prentiss Baldwin, Cleveland, 0. 

 Bird Banding in the Douglas Lake Region of North- 

 ern Michigan. 



(Slides) — Dayton Stoner, Iowa City, Iowa. 

 Observations Made on Auto Trips Through the Far 

 West, Lynds Jones, Oberlin, O. 



Bird Notes from Eastern Florida, (Slides), 



Gerard Alan Abbott, Gallipolis, 0. 

 Breeding Warblers About Atlanta, Ga., 



Wm. H. La Prade, Atlanta, Ga. 

 Monday Evening 

 6:30 P. M.— Annual Dinner at the City Club, Plymouth Place, 



near Van Buren St. 

 8:30 P. M. — Birds and Seasons in the Chicago Area. 



(Slides) — Wm. D. Richardson, Chicago, 111. 

 Tuesday Morning, December 28 

 9:00 A. M. — Impressions of a Nature Lover in the Appalachian 

 Mountains, (Slides), 



O. M. Schantz, Cicero, 111. 

 June Bird Notes from the Great Smoky Mountains 

 of Tennessee, 



Albert F. Ganier, Nashville, Tenn. 

 Changes in Bird Habitat and Other Notes, 



C. W. G. Eifrig, Oak Park, 111. 

 The Great Horned Owl, 



Herbert L. Stoddard, Milwaukee, Wis. 



