4 THE WREN 
list and a bird list. Any species to be put on a list had to be seen 
in Massachusetts. Although we have discontinued the first two 
lists we have a keen interest in the last. 
Owing to the resignation of a few members when we changed 
from the Brookline Topic Club to the Norfolk Bird Club we 
elected other fellows whose interest in nature was great and our 
membership is now eleven active members, a number which has 
been maintained for several years. We elected in the spring of 1908 
several honorary members who we thought would like to visit us at 
different meetings and see how we proceeded. It is now our inten- 
tion to invite two or three honorary members to each meeting to 
listen to our papers and add criticisms or remarks of their own 
observation, or if they are unable to come to send us a communica- 
tion on some subject of interest. 
In the spring of 1908 we issued a club paper, “‘ Bulletin of the 
Norfolk Bird Club,” which owing to a lack of proper printing 
facilities was a poor success. 
In the fall of 1908 a new system was adopted whereby each 
member writes on a given bird from personal observation. ‘The 
papers are open to discussion. 
At a meeting of the Norfolk Bird Club, December 26, 1908, 
Richard L. Creesy of 42 Harris St., Brookline, was elected an active 
member. 
MEMBERS OF THE NORFOLK BIRD CLUB. 
Active. 
Barron Brainerd 
Richard L. Creesy 
Joseph Kittredge, Jr. 
W. Charlesworth Levey 
Richard M. Marble 
All 
Dr. J. B. Brainerd 
Nathan Clifford Brown 
Henry F. Dunbar 
T. Otis Fuller 
Harold G. Morse 
Randolph Morse 
Carlyle Morris 
James L. Peters 
Charles Schweinfurth 
an G. Waite. 
Honorary. 
Hon. Charles F. Jenney 
Charles J. Maynard 
Harold St. John 
Horace W. Wright. 
