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About The west shore. (Portland, Or.) 1875-1891 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1889)
110 THE WEST SHOKE. adoption for all, the Dative and the immigrant, the old and the young, and it is not the least pleasant of their reflection! that their children and the children of thoir neighbors will reap the reward of their la lori more fully than they can hope to do. In the dwrU of Arabia be is looked upon as a public ben efactor who makes two blades of grass grow where one grew More, and even more so he who makes a well in the dwrt, for the refreshment of strangers and tho mo of coming generations. To found a col lege to endow a hospital or to create a chair in a uni- fnraitn im a A..nnA.l.lL I it L iL . mij ! a wuuiuii-uufiuiw net, even luougQ me mov ing impuUo 1)0 m much a hope of perpetuating the namo of lhf Annnr ah a (Inni lr KnnofU munViVJ Hut (lUietlv drill nnrmtinfnf innaltf tn An i --'"iiwiivuo v uu ao iucoo b tlemen havo is far letter, since the action springs from a purer and more exalted sentiment It is to uo uui iiaiufrou immigrants irom uer- many will become- as useful and respected in their phero aa are thoso citizens who are responsible for thoir A few Wnnli Knnt (a kUO Dvicijf aim me Diras tnem ri vet will be of interest The idea of bringing these feathered songsters to Oregon originated with Mr. trank Dekum, president of the Portland Savings lion of monojr ro duo tho laccewful currying ont of kum, Jr. C. h Pflogo, nndertook the work of eecur .ng .uUcr,!,,. to . fund for lhi, pnrpo(e Thig ef fort fin!ljr trs,iAtfi ; th, orglnil,to (h n. 8,r g,irJ,iDl0 Oregon, of which M, Ihckel troa.0rer. A fand of 1,000.00 wi J . el, by contention by Ut ono hand J Undfifty lormu,, Anonc. and Kngli.h cifan,, wi lrt u hi, w th a rc.idrat n( ik. f Cnch nd .inging ,,aai T. u;,g0Wfinch' Sn ritig .Ut tho aoib of Mr K ,?"D& ,N WUkfc nd will nodonbt ,ttrU 7 C!P8itioD ""king thii iDIx,rtUoa. A T 0IpoD96 ' tb. Jon C t r0t;i !i0(, J'081 " M ricinitjof thel ' ,he io- diately select places for nesting and begin the w V of raising their families, not having time to fly afot or seek more distant homes; and from the well kn0 habit of these birds to return each spring to the ho of their birth, it is believed that the young ones will find their way back after their southern journey next winter, and Portland will be the center of their colo. ny, from which they will gradually spread until hu few years they will be found throughout the entire region west of the Cascades. Among the first to appreciate the action of this society were members of the Ore, who at once took steps to supplement it by bringing from the eastern states several of the most desirable song birds, such as the famous mocking bird of tie south, the cardinal grosbeak, or redbird, and the joy ous bob-o-link. These birds, also, will arrive early in the spring, and will receive, as will also the others, the fostering attention of the club and the German society until they can propagate in sufficient numbers to be past all danger of extinction. One of the steps to this end was the passage by the legislature in Feb. ruary of an act to protect birds from destruction and their nests from spoliation, including our native birds as well as these strangers. In the supplement which accompanies this num. ber of The West Shore is given a group of these imported songsters, both Germam and American, with their natural colors of plumage, by which our people can so familiarize themselves with the appear, nee of these strangers as to recognize them upon sight. As a help to this end, the following brief de scnptions of the birds will be of interest t Among the most desirable of these feathered im. migrants are the nightingales and thrushes. The fa mous nightingale of poetry and song, the nachtigal of the Germans and the srjlvia luscinia, L. of the natur. aiists, stands foremost among the song birds of En rope. Its soncf is almndf u j . il nuuujr uneieu in me even ing, tnough it ia nnnoin11 il i . it. i a i "U4UiJQ1v uearu inrougnoui uio aay A week or two after their arrival in the spring s the time when they pour forth their rich notes in the greatest volume, the males singing in rivalry, doping to win their mates by the splendor of their aong. tongucal In i .-n. n.. .--u K fe caPed after mating soon dies from Z L a ! f hia mate' When captured before nesting, thev oftAn n,.v i . . , . , i.. ao ueiigmiui singing Diras wr ISST Jr101 U i8 a rich brown on the upper Part of the bodv anr? . l.-x. . ' Jrfl l n . fciojiou wmie Deiow, me cu 2r. .lh6 bird beb8 "I A- swvtnft- "ut0 common vaneiy in u" and power of its eong. A toft of dul