The Audubon Bird-Bath 



is not a bowl, pool, pan or a dish, 

 but a bird-bath, and nothing else; 

 built on scientific principles. It has 



Perches 



for the safety of the birds. The 

 center-piece serves as food- 

 tray; or when connected with 

 running water, as a water-spreader, 

 making a 



Shower -Bath 



It is made in three 

 sizes. 



Send for Illustrated 

 Price-List. 



J. C. Krans Cast Stone 

 Works, Inc. 



All Kinds of Cast Stone 

 Garden Furniture 



363 Lexingfton Ave. 



near 41st St. 



New York City 



Bird-Lores Wanted 



{The publishers of BIRD-LORE respectjully 

 urge subscribers who desire to have unbroken 

 files oj the magazine to renew their subscrip- 

 tion at the time oj its expiration.) 



Sept.-Oct., 1909; Mar .-Apr., 1913; 

 Nov.-Dec, 1913. Wm. C. Clark, Box 

 214, Knickerbocker Road, Tenafly, N.J. 



Vol. XI, Nos. I, S, 6, with index; Vol. 

 XII, No. 4; Vol. XIII, Nos. 3. 4. 5. 6, 

 with index; Vol. XIV, Nos. i, 2, 3, 4; 

 Vol. XVI. Nos. I, 2, 3, 4. Ralph W. 

 Jackson, Route No. i, Cambridge, Md. 



July-August, 1914. Robert Cushman 

 Murphy, Curator, Department Natural 

 Science, The Brooklyn Museum, Brook- 

 lyn, N. Y. 



Vol. I, Nos. 2-4; Vol. II, No. 2; Vol. 

 Ill, No. 2; Vol. IV, Nos. I, 2; Vol. V, 

 No. i; Vol. VII. No. i; Vol. IX, No. 3; 

 Vol. X, No. 4; Vol. XI, No. 5. J. Colin 

 Scott, Stockport, Ohio. 



Complete set or complete single vol- 

 umes. State lowest price. F. G. Floyd, 

 325 Park St., West Roxbury, Mass. 



Vols. I, II, III, entire; Vol. IV, Nos. i, 

 2, 3, 6; Vol. V, Nos. i, 3, 4, 5. Willing to 

 pay good price. — Stephen S. Gregory, 

 Jr., 2609 Hampden Court, Chicago, III. 



Complete sets of BIRD-LORE now bring nearly 

 three times the price at which they were issued. 



Birds and Berries 



Birds are your friends, and you are probably a friend of the 

 birds, or you would not be a reader of this magazine. Both for 

 economical and aesthetic reasons it is essential that the bird popu- 

 lation be increased and protected. Your part consists in protecting 

 them from their enemies, providing nesting sites, shelter, and food. 

 Nothing attracts the birds more than tangled thickets of berry- 

 bearing shrubs. Sixty-seven species feed on Elder; 40 species feed 

 on Dogwood, Sumac, and Wild Cherry; 25 feed on Blueberry and 

 Bayberry; 15 or more feed on Hackberry, Holly, Viburnum, and 

 Juneberry; 10 feed on Spicebush, Aralia, Snowberry, Barberry, 

 Winterberry, Photinia, Indian Currant, and Bush Honeysuckle. 



Bright-berried plants for the birds are a specialty with us. 

 We will send you 10 assorted plants for $1, 50 plants 

 for $4.50, 100 plants for $8. All plants sent prepaid. 



HICKS NURSERIES, Westbury, L. I., N. Y. 



If you mention Bird-Lore, we will increase your order 10 per cent, 

 at no extra charge. 



