<h2><SPAN name="BIRD_DAY" id="BIRD_DAY"></SPAN>BIRD DAY.</h2>
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<p class="drop-cap">THE United States Department of Agriculture issued in July,
1896, a circular suggesting
that a "Bird Day" be added
to the school calendar. In this circular
J. Sterling Morton, Secretary of
Agriculture, says:</p>
<p>"The cause of bird protection is one
that appeals to the best side of our
natures. Let us yield to the appeal.
Let us have a Bird Day—a day set
apart from all the other days of the
year to tell the children about the
birds. But we must not stop here.
We should strive continually to develop
and intensify the sentiment of bird
protection, not alone for the sake of
preserving the birds, but also for the
sake of replacing as far as possible the
barbaric impulses inherent in child
nature by the nobler impulses and
aspirations that should characterize advanced
civilization."</p>
<p>Prof. C. A. Babcock, superintendent
of schools, Oil City, Pa., who has acted
upon the suggestion in his schools,
says:</p>
<p>"The preservation of the birds is
not merely a matter of sentiment, or of
education in that high and fine feeling,
kindness to all living things. It has
an utilitarian side of vast extent, as
broad as our boundless fields and our
orchards' sweep. The birds are necessary
to us. Only by their means can
the insects which injure, and if not
checked, destroy vegetation, be kept
within bounds....</p>
<p>"What is most needed is the knowledge
of the birds themselves, their
modes of life, their curious ways, and
their relation to the scheme of things.
To know a bird is to love him. Birds
are beautiful and interesting objects of
study and make appeals to children
that are responded to with delight."</p>
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