THE SIMPLEX NET 



is the net you are looking for. 



It will not break and cannot get out of order. It is so 



light you can easily catch the speediest butterflies with 



it, and so compact that when closed you can 



take it in your pocket anywhere, unobserved. 



Used the world over by good collectors 

 Used more than any other 



Air Net. 75c. postpaid Water Net, 60c. 



Metal parts for either. 25c.. $2.50 per dos. 



Descriptive Price List on application, address 



THE SIMPLEX NET CO. Ithaca, N.Y. 



SAVE OUR NATIVE BIRDS 



You can keep native birds about your place 

 many weeks later than usual by setting out the 



Dodson Sheltered Food House 

 for Birds 



and you will save the lives of many birds by so doing. It is 

 a fact that birds do not freeze to death, they starve to death. 

 Many native birds will remain north all winter if they get 

 plenty of food. This is tiue of robins, thrushes, blue birds, 

 flickers, downy woodpeckers, nut hatches and many other birds. 



This Sheltered Food House should be set out right now — 

 for the bird's sake 



Built of clear, white pine and is 24 x 24 x 18 inches. Price with 8 foot pole $8.00 f. o. b. 

 Chicago — with copper roof $10.00. A smaller Shelter and Feeding Table (different design) 

 with 8 foot pole, 16.00 — with copper roof, $7.50. 



TRAP FOR SPARROWS 



You can get rid of English Spai - 

 rows — the pests that drive away 

 song birds. 



The Dodson Sparrow Trap ^j^ 



is catching thousands of sparrows. 

 Used all over America. Works 

 automatically all the time. Remove sparrows once a day. 



This is the Dodson Sparrow Trap. It catches as many as 75 to 100 sparrows a day. 

 Made of tinned wire. Size — 36 x 18 x 12 inches. Price, including receiving box, $5.00 

 f. o. b. Chicago. 



For illustrated folders about birds, bird house shelter and feeding houses or for any 

 information on the subject of native birds, write to The Man The Birds Love — address 

 JOSEPH H. DODSON, 723 Security Building, Chicago, 111. 

 (Mr. Dodson is a Director of the Illinois Audubon Society.) 



