REPORT OF THE DIVISION OF 

 ORNITHOLOGY. 



Publications of the Year. 



The demand for the publications of this Division has in- 

 creased so much, particularly from regions outside Massa- 

 chusetts, that it has become impossible for this office to meet 

 it. Many individual calls have come from long distances, each 

 requiring hundreds of copies of different papers for schools, 

 members of the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, bird clubs and other 

 organizations. The requirements of Massachusetts people will 

 exhaust all the editions that we are likely to be authorized to 

 print. Under these circumstances the Massachusetts Audubon 

 Society, 66 Newbury Street, Boston, Massachusetts, has under- 

 taken to supply some of these publications at cost to people 

 outside Massachusetts who wish them in quantities, and already 

 the society has reprinted Department Bulletin No. 1, on "Out- 

 door Bird Study," and Bulletin No. 9, the "Utility of Birds." 



Following is a list of the prints and reprints issued from the 

 office of the Division of Ornithology during the j'ear beginning 

 December 1, 1920, and ending November 30, 1921: — 



First Annual Report of the Division of Ornithology, December, 1920. 

 Department Bulletin No. 2, Food, Feeding and Drinking Appliances and 



Nesting Material to Attract Birds, fourth edition, January, 1921. A 



re\dsion of the third edition of Department Circular No. 2, 36 pp., 



10 half-tones, 21 line cuts. 

 Department Bulletin No. 6, The English Sparrow, fourth edition, March, 



1921. A revised reprint of Department Circular No. 4, third edition. 



20 pp., 1 half-tone, 9 Une cuts. 

 Arbor and Bird Day, April, 1921. Prepared by Edward Howe Forbush 



and Harris A. Re>'nolds. Approved by Payson Smith, Commissioner 



of Education. 8 pp., 1 half-tone, 2 line cuts. 

 Department Bulletin No. 1, Outdoor Bird Study, third edition, April, 1921. 



A revision of the second edition of Department Circular No. 12. 51 



pp., 4 half-tones, 26 line cuts. 

 Department Bulletin No. 9, The Utihty of Birds, July, 1921. S3 pp., 



9 half-tones, 16 line cuts. 



