Wtft ^utiubon Societies 



" Vou cannot with a scalpel find the poefs soul, 

 Nor yet the wild bird's son^r." 



Edited by Mrs. Mabel Osgood Wright (President of the Audubon Society of the State oir 

 Connecticut), Fairtield, Conn., to whom all communications relating to the work of the Audubon 

 and other Bird Protective Societies should be addressed. Reports, etc., designed for this departments 

 should be sent at least one month prior to the date of publication. 



DIRECTORY OF STATE AUDUBON SOCIETIES 



With names and addresses of their Secretaries 



California Mrs. George S. Gay, Redlands.. 



Colorado Mrs. Martha A. Shute, Denver_ 



Connecticut Mrs. William Brown Glover , Fairfi eld . 



Delaware Mrs. Wm. S. Hilles, Delamore Place, Wilmington. 



District of Columbia Mrs. John Dewhurst Patten, 2212 R street, Washington. 



Florida Mrs. I. Vanderpooi., Maitland. 



Georgia Professor H. N. Starnes, of Experiment. 



Illinois Miss Mary Drummond, 208 West street, Wheaton. 



Indiana W. W. Woolen, Indiarrapoli!=_ 



lovfa. Mrs L. E. Felt, Keokuk. 



Kentucky 



Louisiana Miss Anita Pring, 1449 Arabella St. New Orleans. 



Maine Mrs. C. B. Tuttle, Fairfield. 



Maryland Miss Anne Weston Whitney, 715 St. Paul street, Baltmiore. 



Massachusetts Miss Harriet E. Richards, care Boston Society of Natural History. Boston.. 



Minnesota Miss Sarah L. Putnam, 229 8lh ave., S. E., Minneapolis 



Missouri August Reese, 2516 North Fourteenth street, St. Louis. 



Nebraska Miss Joy Higgins, 544 South 30th street, Omaha. 



New Hampshire Mrs F. W. Batch elder, Maiu ticstei ._ 



New Jersey Miss Julia Scribner, 510 E. Front street, Plainfield, N. J . 



New York Miss Emma H. Lock wood, 243 West Seventy-fifth street. New York City. 



North Carolina T. Gilbert Pearson, Greensboro. 



Ohio Mrs. D. Z. McClelland, 820 West Ninth street. Cincinnati. 



Oklahoma Mrs. Adelia Holcomb, Enid. 



Oregon Miss Gertrude Metcalfe, 634 Williams a^■e., Portland 



Pennsylvania ftiRS Edward Robins, 114 South Twenty-first street, Philadelphia. 



Rhode Island Martha R. Clarke, S9 Brown street, Providence .^ 



South Carolina \Iiss S. A. Smyth, Legare street, Charleston. 



Tennessee Mrs. C. C. Conner. Riplej . . 



Vermont Mrs. Fletcher K. Barrows, Brattleboro. 



Virginia Mrs. J. C. Plant, Glencarlyn. 



Wisconsin Mrs. Reuben G. Thwaitks, 260 Langdon street, Madison. 



Wyoming Mrs. N. R. Davis, Cheyenne. . 



THE /AUTUMN OUTLOOK .u u j .• j ■ • n 



the shops or advertised pictonally we re- 



With the echoing of guns from moor and member that in May last the Milliners' Pro- 

 marsh the shooting season opens, the au tective Association of New York and the 

 tumttal bird migration sets in, and the various State Audubon Society entered into a three 

 bird protective societies shake off the summer years' compact for the regulation of the 

 lethargy. For in summer, though the birds trade in bird plumage. 



are with us and we may go freely to their What is the result, and how many other 



haunts, the separatenessof individuals causes State Societies have followed suit and shown 



almost a total suspension of organized work. that they are possessed by a spirit of fairness 



With autumn comes the demand for new and the willingness to meet reasonable com- 



clothing, hats in particular, for the way of promise part way? 



the world has been to go hatless in summer, As to the direct effect of the agreement 



with the result that many human beaks are upon artistic millinery, it is too early yet to 



as highly colored as those of Sea Coots, predict. The stiff quill remains upon the 



and as we look at the headgear shown in outing and rainy-day hat even as the Os- - 



(171) 



