Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

With money enough to arouse the American people in certain ways, the wild life of North America (north of Mexico) can be saved. Money can secure labor and publicity, and the People will do the rest.  For this campaign work I want, and must have, a permanent fund of $10,000 per annum,—­cash always ready for every emergency in field work.  I greatly need, and must have, immediately, an endowment Wild-Life Fund of at least $100,000, and eventually $250,000.  I can no longer “pass the hat” each year.  This is needed in addition to the several thousands of dollars annually being expended by the Zoological Society in this work.  The Society is already doing its utmost in wild-life protection, just as it is in several other fields of activity.

Outside of New York many wealthy men will say, “Let New York do it!” That often is the way when national campaigning is to be done.  In national wild-life protection work, New York is to-day bearing about nine-tenths of the burden.  It is my belief that in 1912 outside of New York City less than $10,000 was raised and expended in wild-life protection save by state and national appropriations.  We know that in the year mentioned New York expended $221,000 in this cause, all from private sources.

In a very short time I shall call for the $100,000 that I now must have as an endowment fund for nation-wide work, to be placed at 5-1/2 per cent interest for the $5,500 annual income that it will yield.  How much of this will come from outside the State of New York?  Some of it, I am sure, will come from Massachusetts and Pennsylvania; but will any of it come from Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis and San Francisco?

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THE DUTY OF THE HOUR

I have now said my say in behalf of wild life.  Surely the path of duty toward the remnant of wild life is plain enough.  Will those who read this book pass along my message that the hour for a revolution has struck?  Will the millions of men commanded by General Apathy now arouse, before it is too late to act?

Will the true sportsmen rise up, and do their duty, bravely and unselfishly?

Will the people with wealth to give away do their duty toward wild life and humanity, fairly and generously?

Will the zoologists awake, leave their tables in their stone palaces of peace, and come out to the firing-line?

Will the lawmakers heed the handwriting on the wall, and make laws that represent the full discharge of their duty toward wild life and humanity?

Will the editors beat the alarm-gong, early and late, in season and out of season, until the people awake?

On the answers to these questions hang the fate of the wild creatures of the world,—­their preservation or their extermination.

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INDEX

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.