iwnryfi The Commoner. IO ?3rrj&mK'J 1 T. A"W & A Pica for the Protection of Birds. The fact that Insect depredations are increasing in extent each succeeding year makes it plain to us that some thing must bo done to prevent it, and that quickly. Wo havo found to our sorrow, that although wo aro contin ually making increased efforts to de stroy these pests, our efforts avail but little and the destruction of our crops goes on. What, then, is to bo done? How can wo bo released from this ever increasing struggle for oxistenco? The answer is plain. Heed the ad vice ot the naturalist who has made a study of the life-histories of tho var ious other living creatures in tho world about us. Do not condemn what ho says without at least examining into it a little. In his desire for bird protection tho naturalist is not prompted by senti ment alone far from it! Although from the sentimental standpoint sole ly tho friend of birds would havo suf ficient grounds for making such a re quest. "To. appreciate tho "beauty of form and plumage of birds, tholr grace of motion and musical powers, wo must know thorn." "Tho easo with which wo may become familiar with the feathered neighbors robs ignorance of all excuses." "Once awaro of their existence, and wo shall seo a bird in ovory bush and find the heavens their I pathway. One moment we may admire their beauty of plumage, tho next mar vel at the ease and grace with which they dash by us or circle high over head." Tho comings and goings of our migratory birds in springtime and fall, their nest-building and rearing of young, their many regular and beau tiful ways as exhibited in their daily lives, stir within us impulses for kind- ness toward tho various creatures which share tho world with us. "But birds will appeal to us most strongly through their song. When your ears aro attuned to the music of birds, your world will bo transformed. Birds' songs are the most eloquent of nature's voices: the gay carol of the grosbeak in tho morning, tho dreamy, midday call of tho pewee, tho vesper hymn of the thrush, the clanging of geese in springtime, tho farewell of the blue bird in the fall how clearly each one expresses the sentiment of the hour or season!" But if we cannot take up the sub ject of bird protection from the hu mane standpoint, if we have no chord of sympathy or sense of honor re maining, aro we willing to adopt busi ness principles in our dealings with tho birds? Quoting from a paper by Professor S. A. Forbes, who has done much in the lino of bird study in their direct relations to man, we have the follow ing: "Excluding the inhabitants of tho great seas, birds aro tho most abundant of the vertebrata, occupying In this great sub-kingdom the same prominent position that insects do among invertebrate animals." This position of the two groups in their re spective divisions of tho animal life of tho globe cannot bo duo simply to chance. There must be some conneq tion between them. What is it? It is needless here for mo to state that tho insect life about us Js num erous and varied. We all know this to be too true. Nearly, if not quite, nine tenths of all animal forms belong here, while the individuals of many kinds are incalculable. We know also that their powers of reproduction are sim ply wonderful, being limited only by tho amount of food available, etc. Now, tho disproportionate number of birds on tho other hand, with their "universal distribution, tho remarka ble locomotive power which enables them readily to escape unfavorable conditions, and their higher rate of life, requiring for their maintenance an amount of food rolativoly enorm ous," give to them a significance which iew seem ever to havo realized. jineny tow, tho economic rolatlon t birds to man lies in the services &&&&&k&'QBfifr'& 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 WRITE FOR OUR WINDMILL BOOK We have just issued the best book ever published on Windmills. It is a 40-page book, with 125 pictures, written by the man who knows more than anyone else about Windmills. This man tells, in an interesting way, of the 5,000 experiments made in developing the wind wheel, and the results of them. He tells the vital facts that you should know before buying. You cannot buy a Windmill wisely before you read this book. Please write for it. THE HISTORY OF AERMOTORS The writer of this bopk is the maker of Aermotors. He tells you how he started 12 years ago by spending a fortune in experiments. He tells how he eventually made a wind wheel that is perfect; a wheel that gets power from a zephyr; that works when all other wind wheels stand still. He tells how he developed the modern windmill. How he invented the Aermotor features, now covered by 55 patents. How he originated steel towers, and how he perfected them. How he devised the labor-saving machinery that makes Aermotors cheaply; that makes them cost less than any other windmills worth having. ." He tells how in 12 years he has dotted the earth with Aermo tors. How he eritered a field overcrowded with rich makers and captured over half the world's trade by making a windmill with which no one could compete. It is an interesting tale, and honest. 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Please write for it, AERMOTOR CO., 1263 TWELFTH ST., CHICAGO Write us for Windmill Book, Pump Book, or both. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 j . p which they render in checking the un due increase of insects, the devouring of small rodents, in destroying tho seeds of noxious weeds, and by acting as scavengers on land and water. Those who havo studied the subject carefully have estimated that a loss of nearly $400,000,000 is sustained annual ly by tho cultivators of the soil from insect ravages in the United States and Canada. This does not include the damage done to ornamental shrub bery, shade, and forest trees, nor to the grasses growing on our prairies. "But if insects are the natural enemies of vegetation, birds are the natural ene mies of insects." "In the air swallows and swifts are coursing rapidly to and fro, ever in pursuit of tho insects which constitute their sole food.'r,When they retire, the nighthtfwks and wliip-poor-wills will take up the chase, catching moths and other nocturnal insects which would escape day-flyfng birds. Fly-catchers lie in wait, darting from ambush at passing prey, and with a suggestive click of tho bill returning to their post. The warblers, light, active creatures, flutter about the terminal foilago, and. with almost tho skill of a humming bird, pick insects from the leaf or blossoms. The vireos patiently explore tho undersides of leaves and odd nooks and corners to see that no skulker es capes. The woodpeckers, nuthatches, and creepers attend to the trunks and limbs, examining carefully each inch of bark for insects' eggs and larvae, or excavating for the ants and borers they hear within. On the ground tho hunt is continued by the thrushes, sparrows, and other birds that feed upon the innumerable forms of ter restrial insects. Few places in which insects exist aro neglected; oven somo species which pass their earlier stages or entire lives in the water are preyed upon by aquatic birds." In nearly every case where the food habits of our birds have been careful ly studied, do we And that tho good done far exceeds the possible harm that might be inflicted by our birds. Allowing twenty-flve insects per day as an avorage diet for each individual bird, and estimating that wo have about 6ne and one-half birds to tho acre, or in round numbers 75,000,000 birds in Nebraska, there would be re- V