39 
pool® «? lotos. Distiaatiou between those three granpe is nartod by 
ao iwd sad fast linos m ommimml individuals may bo found cmywhere 
about eater* but in a geaoral way these divisions my bold. Shoe© fpeoiee 
aeonstoned to frequent the uplands have booa jellied or redueod in mssfom 
m they wo amble to 
that they inhabit, ooupiod 
the oo«Mnation of olmng® in the osumtry 
hoary shooting both in north and south. 
Hsaii» Caetmf sad Upland fluw tod. in pert tim QoMm 
thou#* 
been 
as there has 
Mm fSbmm in its haunts. She Had®out&a CkMt hoc?- 
•Wf • Spool08 ooafeiniae large ©is© with a temlenoy to fly in oloa© 
flooses f hm miimrn tea 1 vily, mors so t-m its smaller oeeganions, sad 
now is rar®. &» third group laela&es a variety of sandpipers that with 
all tbs other Spool®® have boon re&uooQi in oata'bor but have stsah an ex¬ 
tensive winter mugs, mad a#o m aeatterM that they haw not been boated 
ohjusMjing oottil lions 
degree 
Ottm a year in tbs field in the region in bastion it is ray 
©andid opinion that no lagisl&tioa will servo to preserve soss© of those 
bird® in oiyuhera noas* ti»lr former ®Mm mw m in nest eases to 
vent their tieoroase below their present number. fh* Ooldsn Plover, 
teontfi inhabiting prairie* also ranges to aoaa extent on distant, barren, 
ooastal Mftfi&t® i^ber© it is safe frost persecution,saA ao easy continue. 
2 h© Upland Plover, a spool®© that ranges almost entirely in prairie 
ooantry, will asrtainly not increase, taw© especially as it is unfortunate 
enough to have attmotod attention m a table bird favored by epicures* 
