32 



No. 24, Hints for Outdoor Bird Study — How to approach 

 birds. 



No. 25, Hints for Outdoor Bird Study — How to attract birds. 

 Fourth Annual Report of the State Ornithologist, E. H. 

 Forbush. 



Newspaper Articles from "Boston Evening Transcript" 

 Must Conserve Birds. Strong appeal by the State Orni- 

 thologist, Edward H. Forbush, in illustrated lecture before 

 the Horticultural Society, Jan. 3, 1914. 



The Birds' Promised Land. The Meriden Idea as Ernest 

 Harold Baynes is working it out, April 30, 1913. 



Brookline after Woodpeckers, Winthrop Packard, April 

 11, 1914. 



World's Peace for the Birds, Europe following our lead to 

 halt the plumage trade, Winthrop Packard, March 28, 1914. 



After the Tent Caterpillar. Birds and school children hunt 

 these troublesome pests, Winthrop Packard, Jan. 3, 1914. 



Evening Grosbeaks, distinguished visitors at Quincy from 

 the far northwest, Winthrop Packard, April 18, 19 14. 



Milton's Bird Protection Exhibit, Winthrop Packard, 

 Jan. 24, 1914. 



The Bird Warden in Poetry and Practice, Percy MacKaye's 

 "Faun" played in Real Life by the New Appointee at Dover, 

 Winthrop Packard, Feb. 14, 1914. 



The Leopard Moth. How this mighty midget has attacked 

 the trees on Boston Common, by Alice Shay, April 18, 1914. 



Attracting Birds and Planning Sanctuaries, by Bradford 

 A. Scudder, Secretary of the Mass. Fish & Game Protective 

 Association, May 23, 1914. 



Bird Portraits 



A collection of the bird pictures in colors, issued by 

 George P. Brown & Co., Beverly, Mass., and obtainable 

 at two cents each, was used freely to cover wall space, 

 and brighten the exhibit. Some five hundred different 

 subjects are represented in their catalogue list. The 

 three Audubon charts were also useful for decoration 

 and instruction. 



