32 OUR NATIVE BIRDS 
periment Station, Ithaca, N. Y. It is sent free to 
applicants. 
The bulletin is finely illustrated and gives explicit 
directions for planting trees, shrubbery, and flowers on 
school grounds. The suggestions given there can also 
be applied to rural homes, city homes, and city schools. 
If you follow out Professor Bailey’s ideas, you will soon 
have trees, shrubs, flowers, and birds near your homes 
and schools, and they will become the beauty spots of 
the country.t 
1 See an article on ‘‘School Gardens’’ in Appleton’s Popular Science 
Monthly, February, 1898. Write to Agricultural Experiment Station, 
Fort Collins, Col., for ‘‘ Notes on Birds of Colorado ;” to Agricultural 
Experiment Station, Orono, Maine, for two pamphlets, ‘‘ Ormmament- 
ing Home Grounds”’ and ‘‘Ornamental Plants for Maine ;” to Agri- 
cultural Experiment Station, Lincoln, Neb., for ‘‘ Ornamental Plant- 
ing’’ and ‘Methods of Tree Planting ;’’ to U. S. Department of 
Agriculture, Washington, D. C., for ‘‘ Forestry for Farmers.’’ See 
also ‘‘ The Winter Food of Chickadees’’ and ‘‘ The Feeding Habits of 
the Chipping Sparrow,’’ by Clarence M. Weed, Agricultural Experi- 
ment Station, Durham, N. H. 
