There are five States that expressly permit the killing of blackbirds as “game”: Louisiana, South Carolina, Tennessee, District of Columbia, Pennsylvania.

Cranes are killed and eaten in Colorado, Nevada, Nebraska, North Dakota and Oklahoma.

In twenty-six States doves are regularly killed as game—much to the loss of the farmers.

The bobwhite quail is a great destroyer of the seeds of noxious weeds. In our fauna he has no equal. And yet this fact is ignored. Throughout the North and most of the South that species is mercilessly shot, and as a result it is fast becoming extinct. In New York State it will soon be as extinct as the mastodon, unless given a ten-year close season at once. Its value as a plentiful game bird is gone.

The shore birds are fast becoming exterminated by sportsmen and pot-hunters who kill them for food, “according to law.” The Eskimo curlew is totally extinct, and other species are fast going over the same road. Nothing in this world will save this group of birds except a law for the Federal protection of migratory birds, such as the McLean bill, now before Congress. The way the whole group of shore birds is being exterminated is nothing less than a crime. And yet, at least thirty members of this group are of a great value to all of us, because of the great numbers of crop-destroying insects that they annually consume.

THE DUTY OF THE HOUR.

The only way in which all these valuable migratory birds can be saved to us is through the strong arm of the National Government, and a Federal law for the protection of all migratory birds! Protection of game birds alone will not answer. Too many other birds are being killed for food, especially in the South.

The Wild Life Protection Committee urges all delegates to take home with them the burden that rests on every good citizen regarding the enactment into law of a satisfactory measure for the preservation of the insect-eating birds. If any opposition should arise on account of the feature of the bill which covers the ducks, geese and swans, and other migratory wild fowl, the committee is quite willing that those birds should be stricken out of the bill entirely, in order that the protection of the crop-saving birds may be secured. It is believed that no sensible person can possibly raise any objection to the protection of the insectivorous birds by the passage of the McLean or Weeks bill, in case the water fowl are left out. It is, however, regarded as extremely necessary that the shore birds should be included because of their immense value to agriculture.

In concluding, the committee urges all delegates to take this matter up with your members of Congress, and urge them to vote for, and work for, whatever bill may finally be agreed upon as best calculated to protect the insectivorous birds, and be free from objections regarding its constitutionality. A number of able lawyers have decided that it will be wholly within the spirit and letter of the Constitution of the United States for the Federal Government to protect all insectivorous birds through a law of Congress.

Address, “The Vital Resources of the Nation”