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.

Whenever fines are not paid, the convicted party should be sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor at the rate of one-half day for each dollar of the fine imposed; and a sentence at hard labor should be the first option of the court!  Many a rich and reckless poacher snaps his fingers at fines; but a sentence to hard labor would strike terror to the heart of the most brazen of them.  To all such men, “labor” is the twin terror to “death.”

THE INTRODUCTION OF A BILL.—­Much wisdom is called for in the selection of legislative champions for wild-life bills.  It is possible to state here only the leading principles involved.

Of course it is best to look for an introducer within the political party that is in the majority.  A man who has many important bills on his hands is bound to give his best attention to his own pet measures; and it is best to choose a man who is not already overloaded.  If a man has a host of enemies, pass him by.  By all means choose a man whose high character and good name will be a tower of strength to your cause; and if necessary, wait for him to make up his mind.  Mr. Lawrence W. Trowbridge waited three long and anxious weeks in the hope that Hon. George A. Blauvelt would finally consent to champion the Bayne bill in the New York Assembly.  At last Mr. Blauvelt consented to take it up; and the time spent in waiting for his decision was a grand investment!  He was the Man of all men to pilot that bill through the Assembly.

Very often the “quiet man” of a legislative body is a good man to champion a new and drastic measure.  The quiet man who makes up his mind to take hold of “a hard bill to pass” often astonishes the natives by his ability to get results.  Representative John F. Lacey, of Iowa, made his name a household word all over the United States by the quiet, steady, tireless and finally resistless energy with which for three long years in Congress he worked for “the Lacey bird bill.”  For years his colleagues laughed at him, and cheerfully voted down his bill.  But he persisted.  His cause steadily gained in strength; and his final triumph laid the axe at the root of a thousand crimes against wild life, throughout the length and breadth of this land.  He rendered the people of America a service that entitles him to our everlasting gratitude and remembrance.

AFTER THE INTRODUCTION OF A BILL.—­As soon as a bill is introduced it is referred to a committee, to be examined and reported upon.  If there is opposition,—­and to every bill that really does something worth while there always is opposition,—­then there is a “hearing.”  The committee appoints a day, when the friends and foes of the bill assemble, and express their views.

The week preceding a hearing is your busy week.  You must plan your campaign, down to the smallest details.  Pick the men whom you wish to have speak (for ten minutes each) on the various parts of your bill, and divide the topics and the time between them.  Call upon the friends of the bill in various portions of the state to attend and “say something.”  Go up with a strong body of fine men. Have as many organizations represented as you possibly can!  The “organizations” represent the great mass of people, and the voters also.

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