<h3><SPAN name="THE_TWO-STORIED_NEST" id="THE_TWO-STORIED_NEST"></SPAN>THE TWO-STORIED NEST.</h3>
<p class="ac">ETHEL MORTON.</p>
<p>Looking from my study window, one
day, last June, I noticed a little yellow and
brown bird, who was hopping from bush
to bush. She was busily chattering to another
bird, who sat on a neighboring tree,
evidently much enjoying a worm he was
eating. I knew the pair, directly, as my
friends of the season before,—the Yellow
Warblers.</p>
<p>Mrs. Warbler was looking for a good
place to build her nest. After some consideration,
she decided on a bush in front
of my window. Off she flew to a field
of dandelions, and soon returned with
several pieces of dandelion fluff. It took
quite a while to complete the house, for
Mrs. W. was very neat and precise in her
work, but after it was finished, Mr. Warbler
came over to look at it (he had left
the building to his wife!), and as he
seemed perfectly satisfied with it, Mrs.
Warbler was happy.</p>
<p>Not many days after this, some pretty
little blue eggs lay snugly in the nest, and
Mrs. Warbler was a mother! Alas! On
the day the young Warblers left their
shells, their mother came home from a
call on Mrs. Robin, to find her children
crying most bitterly. An ugly Cowbird
had dropped its great, brown, spotted egg
right in their beautiful parlor! (It seems
to be a custom with these birds, to leave
their eggs in the nests of their unfortunate
neighbors, rather than hatch them
themselves.)</p>
<p>Poor, little Mrs. Warbler! She tried
with all her strength to push the egg out
of her home, but without success. So,
what do you suppose she did? Why, she
just built another nest on top of the old
one! It was a great deal of trouble, and
the young Warblers tried her patience
sorely, by persisting in pulling at the
threads and straws, as she wove the
frame-work of her new dwelling. "Labor
is its own reward," however, for there
was not a happier couple in all bird land
than Mr. and Mrs. Yellow Warbler, when
they brought their admiring friends and
relations, to see the young Warblers, in
the two-storied nest.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 style="margin-bottom:2em;"><SPAN name="INDUSTRY"></SPAN>INDUSTRY</h2>
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