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Bird lore - Project Puffin

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Reports of State Societies and <strong>Bird</strong> Clubs 473<br />

mittee of twelve, each member of which was made responsible for one program<br />

during the year. In the main this plan was successful, and will probably be<br />

repeated the coming year. The secretary has also attended to a large corre-<br />

spondence concerning various phases of bird-conservation, and has dispensed<br />

information on this subject to practically every state in the Union, and to<br />

many parts of Canada. Elizabeth F. Bennett, Secretary.<br />

Michigan City (Ind.) <strong>Bird</strong> Club.—About the first work that presented<br />

itself to our Club at the beginning of the past year, was the task of finding out<br />

what real dependable enthusiasm for birds the vicinity could offer us, and of<br />

creating interest in quarters apparently barren of such enthusiasm. It was<br />

easy to find some splendid boys ready to work, and they were at once organized<br />

and afhHated as Junior Audubon workers. Then some senior members<br />

made several large and interesting posters of bird-pictures and bird-facts.<br />

The president of the Club went before as many of the public school-teachers<br />

as she could reach, gave practical bird-talks, and circulated the posters. We<br />

were able during the winter to give talks also before a local fruit-growers'<br />

association and a large grange. As a direct result the managers of the Agricul-<br />

tural Association inserted into their yearly premium-list an ornithological<br />

department. Contests in essays and in model bird-houses gave our Juniors a<br />

chance to win premiums. During the early spring one of our theatres ran a<br />

series of bird-films, the best of which was the National Audubon Association's<br />

'The Spirit of Audubon.'<br />

Throughout the entire year our press secretary has kept a series of bird-<br />

articles running in one or more newspapers. The manual-training department<br />

of the public schools gave us hearty cooperation in planning bird-houses, and<br />

our first exhibit in the early spring was successful enough to encourage us to<br />

have a much larger exhibit this fall. Before the close of the public schools we<br />

were able to have Mrs. Etta Wilson here for several days of earnest work in<br />

all the grades and one or two public lectures. It was most fortunate for us<br />

that the Chautauqua season brought to us Ernest Harold Baynes and the<br />

'<strong>Bird</strong> Masque.' He accomphshed much that could not have been done by<br />

local workers. The Club members are making a careful study of all birds seen in<br />

the vicinity, hoping to compile valuable data.<br />

—<br />

Alice M. Belden, Secretary.<br />

Outdoor Club of Fitchburg (Mass.).—The Outdoor Club has not been<br />

very active as an organization the past year, but individual members have<br />

kept up their interest and enthusiasm, taking weekly walks, establishing winter<br />

feeding-boxes, looking after the posting of some favorite bird-haunts, etc. As<br />

a Club we have responded to all appeals of the National Association of Audubon<br />

Societies for influencing legislation. During the winter we formed a study<br />

class, taking up the evolution of plants, under the leadership of a member of<br />

the Club. Grace F. Barnes, Secretary.

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