NOTE. 
The first Audubon Bird Chart, issued in 1898 and containing 
portraits of twenty-six of our commonest birds, has been so well 
received that the Massachusetts Audubon Society has published 
a second chart (designated as Chart No. II), showing twenty-six 
more of the common birds of New England and the Middle States. 
This chart, like its predecessor, has been prepared with great care 
under the supervision of Mr. Ralph Hoffmann, the drawings, as in 
the former case, being the work of Mr. Edward Knobel. The 
Society is further indebted to Mr. Hoffmann for the preparation of 
this descriptive pamphlet, which presents in a concise and read¬ 
able form the principal facts in the life-histories of the twenty-six 
species shown upon the Chart, the numbers against the birds’ 
names on the following pages referring to the corresponding num¬ 
bers on the Chart. 
The Charts are mounted on cloth and provided with rollers 
for hanging upon the wall. The size of each is 29 X42 inches and 
the price (including pamphlet) is $1.30 each, postpaid. Orders 
should be addressed to the Prang Educational Company, at no 
Boylston Street, Boston; 5 West iSth Street, New York; or 207 
Michigan Avenue, Chicago. 
The Secretary of the Massachusetts Audubon Society, who 
may be addressed at 234 Berkeley Street, Boston, will be glad to 
furnish information in regard to the work of the Society, which 
has for its object the protection of our native birds. New mem¬ 
bers are wanted, and a special membership card is issued to 
school-children. 
