. The Audubon annual bulletin. Birds; Birds. ILLINOIS AUDUBON SOCIETY. THE MILITANT MARY LOUISE IN A NON-MILITANT MOOD vacation by filling his game hag with slaughtered song birds. It cost the policeman in fines $ plus court fees. For the five months beginning September, 1919. the fines accruing from arrests made bv Warden Schultze totaled respectively $, $, $, $ and $ It is easy to believe that Schultze made good use of the tin Lizzie furnished him by the Division. It is hinted that two additional machines are to be used in the Chicago District this Spring


. The Audubon annual bulletin. Birds; Birds. ILLINOIS AUDUBON SOCIETY. THE MILITANT MARY LOUISE IN A NON-MILITANT MOOD vacation by filling his game hag with slaughtered song birds. It cost the policeman in fines $ plus court fees. For the five months beginning September, 1919. the fines accruing from arrests made bv Warden Schultze totaled respectively $, $, $, $ and $ It is easy to believe that Schultze made good use of the tin Lizzie furnished him by the Division. It is hinted that two additional machines are to be used in the Chicago District this Spring. The efficient wardens named above are three of the fifteen wardens in the district of which Inspector Edward St. Clair is in charge. This in- cludes, Lake. Cook. McHenry. DuPage and Kankakee Counties. In- spector St. Clair's office is in the Kimball Building at 25 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago. A splendid collection of mounted specimens with photographic backgrounds has been installed here and the office is fast becoming head- quarters for information about bird life of the area. Mr. St. Clair is proud of the record of law enforcement his district has achieved and with good right. The most notable achievement of the year in his district was the setting aside of Fox Lake as a refuge or rest for water fowl and other birds. In August the Inspector and his associates secured the necessary signatures of residents of the Fox Lake area to a petition and Chief Game \\ arden Bradford proclaimed the lake a Refuge, September 1st. Now Fox Lake is about five and one-half miles long and two and one-half miles wide and it must have been a great surprise to the migratory host of wild fowl to find that they could float anywhere on this fine stretch of water or feed along its margin without molestation. The record of what happened soon after the area was placarded and the Warden's motor boat, the Mary Louise, began to cruise about the lake is remarkable, to say the least. The accompanying photogra


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1900, bookcollectionbiodiversity, booksubjectbirds