The Audubon Societies 



267 



Ewing, Mrs. H. E $2 00 



Ferris, Miss Ida J i 00 



Flint, Mrs. Alonzo i 00 



"Friend" 5 0° 



Gault, B. T 2 00 



Grasselli, Miss Josephine. ... 2 00 



Greene, A. E 3 5° 



Gwalter, Mrs. H. L 4 00 



Hage, Daniel S i oc 



Hager, George W ,3 00 



Hodenpyl, Anton G 10 00 



Hodgman, Miss Edith M. . . . 3 co 



Hungerford, Richard S 10 00 



Hunter, Mrs. W. H 2 00 



Hunter, WiUiam T., J r i oc 



Jackson, P. T., Jr. . . . . . . 25 00 



James, Mrs. Walter B 10 00 



Johnson, Mrs. Eldridge R. . . . 10 00 



Joslin, Ada L 2 00 



Knowlton, Mrs. Myra R. . . . 10 00 



Marshall, Mrs. E. O i 00 



Milwaukee Downer College 



Students iS oc 



Moore, Robert Thomas .... 50 00 



Murray, J. Irwin, Jr i 00 



Netherland Society for Protec- 

 tion of Birds 5 00 



Oppenheim, Myron H i 00 



Parker, Edward L 50 oc 



Petty, E. R S 00 



Phinney, Charles G 3 00 



Potts, Mrs. WilKam M S 00 



Putnam, Mrs. A. S i 00 



Randolph, Evan 5 00 



Rea, Mrs. James C 2 50 



Reeves, Dr. Wilham C 10 00 



Rich, Master Howard L.' . . . 5 00 



Robbins, Miss N. P. H 3 00 



Robbins, Mr. and Mrs. R. E.. . 10 00 



Rowe, Mrs. Henry E 10 00 



Russell, Mrs. William D. . . . 2 00 



Savage, A. L 5 oc 



Seattle Audubon Society ... 50 00 



Shepard, Mrs. Elizabeth D. . 50 00 



Stanton, Mrs. T. G 2 00 



Struthers, Miss Mary S 10 00 



Tate, J. M., Jr i oc 



Topliff, Miss Anna E 5 00 



Varicle, Miss Renee 2 00 



Wadsworth, Mrs. W. Austin . . S 00 



Whitney, Thomas H 5 00 



Total $2,641 25 



Letters from Young Bird Students 



The class is studying about birds. I 

 will tell you how the bird I am thinking 

 of looks. It is the Chicken Hawk. He is 

 the color of the trees and you cannot see 



him very well. He makes a funny noise, 

 and he keeps flying around in a ring by 

 the chicken-coop and comes nearer every 

 time he goes around. I would like to know 

 how you are protecting the birds this year. 

 — Harold Warner, Cleveland, Ohio. 



We have been studying about birds for 

 three days. I know some winter birds. 

 They are the Hawks, Sparrows, Snowbirds, 

 Crows, Bluebirds, and Doves. I would 

 like to know how you protect the birds in 

 the winter. I have read in the Press a 

 story of a Crow, and will now tell it to you. 



There was a little girl who had a birth- 

 day. Her aunts gave her some books, and 

 her father and mother gave her some nice 

 gold beads. Then she was happy when she 

 saw them and she laid them on the table 

 and went out into the barn and while she 

 was there the Crow hid them. — Eleanor 

 Smith, Cleveland, Ohio. 



For the last three days we have been 

 studying about winter birds. I was talk- 

 ing about the Snowbird. Its wings and 

 tail are black and its back is brown. 

 Under its wings is a white patch and it has 

 a red dot on its head. Will you please tell 

 me how you take care of the winter birds? 

 What is the Snowbird fed on? What do 

 the Eagles, Sea Gulls, and Hawks get 

 fed on and when will you have the next 

 bird pictures out? — Raymond Hahner, 

 Cleveland, Ohio. 



Many people think that birds have no 

 love for each other, but they do. Once 

 there were some birds and they were pick- 

 ing something from the ground, but one 

 could not get anything because his bill 

 was crossed and he was the biggest because 

 the other one had fed him so well. 



I would like to ask you a few questions 

 about birds. What do you do to protect 

 the birds? What kind have you? We have 

 been studying about birds for three days 

 and I am very much interested in them. — 

 Edith A. Scheely, Cleveland, Ohio. 



