. Bird lore . th a colored plate by E. J. Sawyer E. H. Forbush. 255 AUDUBON SOCIETIES—EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT 259 Directory of State Societies; President Dutcher III; Sixth AnnualMeeting; New Audubon Societies; A Word of Warning; The LastPigeon; Cats and Petrels. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AUDUBONSOCIETIES FOR 1910 262 *** Manuscripts intended for publication, books, etc., for review and exchanges, should besent to the Editor, at the American Museum oj Natural History, 77th Street and 8th Avenue,New York City, N. Y. Notices of changes of addresses, renewals and subscriptions sho
. Bird lore . th a colored plate by E. J. Sawyer E. H. Forbush. 255 AUDUBON SOCIETIES—EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT 259 Directory of State Societies; President Dutcher III; Sixth AnnualMeeting; New Audubon Societies; A Word of Warning; The LastPigeon; Cats and Petrels. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AUDUBONSOCIETIES FOR 1910 262 *** Manuscripts intended for publication, books, etc., for review and exchanges, should besent to the Editor, at the American Museum oj Natural History, 77th Street and 8th Avenue,New York City, N. Y. Notices of changes of addresses, renewals and subscriptions should be sent toBIRD-LORE, HARRISBURG, PA. Special Notice TT would very greatly assist us in the handling of BIRD-LORE if subscribers*■ whose subscriptions expire with this number, would either renewpromptly, or, if they desire to discontinue their subscriptions, would notifyus to that effect. We shall be grateful for this attention. Entered as second-class mail matter in the Post Office at Harrisburg, /$?// Antp* ^tt/^fi. 1 Longspue, ad. male, Summer. 4. Lapland Longspue, ad. malo, Chestnut-collaeed Longspcp., male, Winter. 5. Lapland Longspue, female. _ 6. Lapland Longspue, male, Winter. 3. Chestnut-collaeed Longspue, female. (One-lialf Natural Size.) A BI-MONTHLY MAGAZINEDEVOTED TO THE STUDY AND PROTECTION OF BIRDS Vol. XII November—December, 1910 No. 6 A Chickadee Home By CRAIG S. THOMS. Vermillion, S. photographs by the author FOR several years I had been trying to induce a pair of Chickadees tobuild their nest in my yard, where I could watch them in their homelife. They boarded with me in the bleak winters, but, notwithstand-ing all my alluring boxes, and hollow-wood chunks, the call of the wildswept them away to orchard or grove at the first peep of spring. But the spring of 1909 brought me good fortune. A cherry tree that stoodabout fifty feet from my study window grew from the ground double, thatis, by two trunks, one of w
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectbirds, booksubjectorn