























Overlay sheet on actual soil maps, it is believed that valuable inform- 
ation would result. If a fellowship on Hungarians is granted to eny 
institution it is believed that this kind of a distribution Spread stu-= 
we} rs ae 
t 
b 
dy would. be well worth while. Even such rough“work as is représented by 
Map H presents some very interesting Ssuggestions.Why,for instance, should 
such a m@p spread occur inthe years 1 
<O 
AO 
i) 
i 
> 
a8) 
e aT mites pu ZT) gee tl de L a a ss pur 
45 Contrasted with the smal 
ee 
bO 
ler spread for 1927-8? In this connee tion e islands appearing in Kalb, 
Gill,and Cook counttiés may have been thrown: of f during the 1926 s 
rather than later.It is know that the Wisconsin stock made an extra Large | 
spread in 1926,and apparently part of the range gathered during that year 
has since been lost .It is interesting to speculate that 1926 was also 
near the peak of the last grouse cycle.There may conceivably be a 
tion between these '2 phenomene ,especially in view of the recent discovery 
that the entire grouse. femily is involved and the further discover by 
Greene, of a natural case of tularemia in quail 
It looks as though the McHenry County spread of Hungarians had 
reached its limit,since they have been in the Vicinity of Harvard since 
1924. This limit is the western boundary of the Lake region already point- 
ed out under pheasants,and is nearly the same for pheasant and Hungarians 
The country included within the Hungarian range in the Lake region 
looks entirely different from that in whieh the spec 
pecies was successfully 
4 + 
established in northwestern Ohio. The Vermillion County establishment 

country which looks very much like the Hungarian range 
