Bird Club Notes 



The Club is indebted to the American Entomological Society 

 for the lithographs of Dr. Wilson used in the present issue. 

 They were printed many years ago, presumably for the memoir 

 by Prof. Jacob Ennis. For the halftone blocks of young hawks 

 we are indebted to Mr. Robert P. Sharpies. 



* * * 



The Club has held sixteen meetings during the year in which 

 fifty members took part. The average attendance was nineteen. 



5K * * 



Again the Club has suffered a severe blow in losing the ser- 

 vices of its Secretary. Mr. C. J. Hunt has removed to Chicago, 

 making the third secretary who has been drawn into a westward 

 migration just as he had become essential to the welfare of the 

 Club. By the theory of orientation we may expect some day to 

 have them all back again. 



At the A. O. U. meeting in New York the Club was repre- 

 sented by Messrs. Rhoads, Baily, Morris, Pennock, Wright, 

 Rehn and Stone, while Messrs. Miller, Todd, Hales, Rogers and 

 Marx, of our Correspondents, were present. 



H< * * 



Dr. Trotter has been in Europe since August and during the 

 early summer visited the Canadian Rockies and the northwest 

 coast. Brown was in Bermuda, Dr. Hughes in British Colum- 

 bia and Redfield at Cape Cod, while Rehn was gathering grass- 

 hoppers in Idaho, Washington, Oregon and California. 



(60) 



