Birds That Every Child Should Know; the East

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A tame bam owl, owned by a gentleman in Philadelphia, would sit on his shoulder for hours at a time. It felt offended if its master would not play with it. The only way the man could gain time for himself during the bird's waking hours, was to feed it well and leave a stuffed bird for it to play with when he went out of the room, just as Jimmy Brown left a doll with his baby sister when he went out to play; only the man cotild not tack the owl's petticoats to the floor.
A pair of bam owls lived
... for many years in the tower of the Smithsonian Institution, Wash- ington. Dr. Fisher found the skulls of four hundred and fifty-four small mammals in the pellets cast about their home. Another pair lived in a tower and on the best of terms with some tame pigeons. Happily the owls had no taste for squab, but the debris of several thousand mice and rats about their curious dwelling proved that their appetite needet' no coaxing with such a delicacy.
Short-eared Owl 329 SHORT-EARED OWL Called also: Marsh Owl; Meadow Owl This owl, and its long-eared cousin, wear the tufts of feathers in their ears that resemble harm- less horns.


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