In Winter Quarters 



sands of the old North Shore back to 

 the lake again. When the comprehen- 

 sive scheme is brought to its comple- 

 tion, one of the finest exhibits of its 

 character in the country will have been 

 installed for the benefit of future gen- 

 erations. The present one shows a lot 

 more interest in paved streets and 

 granite skyscrapers than in the dry 

 leaves and rocks and underbrush where 

 foxes, wolves and weasels once had 

 winter quarters. 



Overhead the eagles, geese and owls, 

 the ducks and terns and hawks, and 

 all the feathered generations that once 

 dwelled roundabout Chicago's site, sus- 

 pended from long wires, are in full 

 flight true to life. Most Chicagoans 

 at present, however, are more inter- 

 ested in the flight of oil and motor 

 stocks, and the soaring quotations for 

 shoes and sugar. However, there will 

 always be a few who will find these 

 splendid reproductions of native swamp 

 and field and forest scenes a source of 



