li a. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 723 
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: Forte dered r dat weds — — —— — by ak young poultry G on ac. — T — U 1 5 of the 
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annoyance and plunder. ou want a gal- | rather than the latter which induces th fi i i N 
? you are served with ey — her — —— shell, for a yolk may be looked on as . Aem re 9 Fat dian a 101 . OF fy ang 
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Do Jou want à ser vant ? the ty and firing for the chick on its obtainin i h Are 
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m P Z 15 these important points N conside: in females 
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are e told with canine surlin ess no fidon In a monstrosity, the yolk and the albumen — their 1 i is not the rationale of 
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re trifles i In detail, * you will narrow pedi E nd ay P- the e yo ba U sek shou ul la ignorant of how genera 
g É e ver ipi ingly laid 110 25 re, dab into life. No; he 
* e poor wretches are sunk into th commonly present th e a et aaa leat comparatively so if 
— oe brutality; 9 65 en — Go ve n the| shell. That. the alk —— e poe ae Po anh * cleverness dependin 
; hose sou oe Own- I i f 
Al g : coe in contact with the uterus at all, is stated by M A the e —4 ha okt to awaken, cherish, and expand ; 
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of purpose in the clean, neat, happy | of the hon zt or — of tke 4 
I yolk, In the same people to get wh i N 
. pensantry, 4 ee sobriety admirable paper Mr. Tod states that one visit of the ie tet 25 3 1 a 
and a humble observance male bird fecundates all the eggs of a season. Different serve and increase it, by leading them (when Aan ina 
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ouraging picture of rural life, of game cocks usually consider that the next four 
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n Avast ae reverence of their parent. Sad no other, worthy of being cleared up. The breeders hausti ble fountain. _ In my next 1 will endeavour to 
2 * Sn Astin of the society by which I egge Kei ia after the cock is removed may be de-| of b boys; T. C. Brown, Cirencester 
religious instruction is one | pen on, That the whole of the eggs of a se m 
aa er iov o Beri of of cultivators, who care nothing | are not fecundated by one or a fuer alta 0 "the 3 9 2 8 5 
ance 18 2 495 8 a aoa is another. male bird in spring I am sure, for this year I had a the 8 matter so aer poured into it from 
E : 1 myself, are led by “know- cock removed in May from a number of hens at an the dra on is min r 
as well as inclination to ow pursuits of a rural ee cottage, with a view of getting half-bred phea- in h e wie is arriving w only 
KS c eat circumspection in | sants from the cock pheasant of the wood, and almost | health of the metropolis be benefi ted b ig "he inter 
| San . 3 The details I have given will | the whole of the eggs tried from the hens were unfer- | of the fo ul matter, “but agriculture 12 Ba the ad ae 
‘Serve as e nature of the inquiries they ou ous hatchings of eggs taken in J — 2 
1 g gg en in June and Jul 0 e provision of the most aber n, ma- 
ade 15 oeality such | from hens which at the e mm f the spring nure that the sewerage of all large towns i 
1 yours, : a road by which eve ad laid fruitful eggs, eggs which were hatched, failed | of affordin unding districts. t 1 
ot pay a third class fare must | altogether ; and as these eggs were from “ ey Mg tees E years ago, a plan of mine for intercepting the foul 
ngham, Liverpool, | layers, there had been no interval of clucking to| matter was matured, and a company formed to make it 
y beyond most other places. “ break the line.” The cock pheasant had been capri- | available for agricultural purposes. I proposed, at the 
e series of papers in the cious in his choice of mates. Many country breeders | mouth of ev sewer, to sin e cesspoels or tanks, 
tructure and Hatching of the Egg of | believe that if ing hen be taken ith means to alternately diy the stream from cne 
» commencing April 1846, Mr. | cock, all the eggs, unt has “laid out her line,” that | to the other, so as constantly to havea receiving 
en egg is is until she elueks, will be le. The experi- voir, a subsiding one, and an emp 3 n 
yS, is impossible to discover the len ment proved that this is not so either, in every instance, had ascertained that, by the i a simple 
h the oviduct to but that in the case of “everlasting” layers, at least, matter, the whole of the foul ee e 3 
5; but when it reaches the uterus the egg is as these hens (bred from the pheasant and game hen) precipitated, and all smell a ed. Our 
res, except the shel], which is | were called, a period, not distant from the separation, | was, at low ti ide to let off t er, which wnat — 4 
his uterine secretion seems to arrives when the e eggs cease to be fertile; L., Valley become so purified as to 7 — perceptible matter; 
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j e i i the so! 
hell.“ ee however, | Education (No.3).—In my previous le I confined | and ba to applicants on the spot, or to carry it a 
T 520 containing only glaire or albumen, | m myself to a general —.— of the subject. ien T look | to ect A a: You will see by the b 4 
da hen which laid Bice regularly, | upon as the tool that is —— through life, and that | prospectus who were the supporters of a plan. The 
containing a yolk and another | it is valuable 1 — its ada —— to all the present Duke of Grafton, as Chairman, fi e best of 
es “the latter much smaller than the | wants, and its fitness to — — neral happiness motives N most active in endeavouring to get over 
ished wit f soci ociety. To educate a people merely in letters, . the numerous difficulties in ol way of obtaining the 
imi ae pee powers; 12,000/. were raised arx spent in 
entary e: mmission to 3 ce, Wiir- 
mean, as being quite firm all round, and of suffi- | out aiming at instruction in all useful knowledge, 
4 in all these smaller eggs there was —.— adding training and moral ee is — * Parliam 
a depression and cicatrix, as if paratively useless; all children cannot have parents varia, Austria, 
eut out from the cavity, and the | qualified or a tae or re know how to instruct. | Holland, and "Beet j in all of which 
ie mention — 55 2 Jes fk: Few parents in any class ro familiar with ‘the nature | s the two last, it was found tha considerable gains 
i the pearance presented, an rious of the human mind, or TW is best acted upon. | are yearly realise gate ts Go- 
1 n 2 Natira, 1 ha! deficiencies Fewer wir — add to chat na the kore: — en 
1l sed beings, still retains some | persevera e requisite ite for r instruction, and the d 
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i prejudice, and igno: > 
“the egg, instead of th be placed under cultivated, well informed, and 
to the cavity of the abdo- | well regulated minds who love truth, and lead | w 
e bird recommences laying a eo nt read 
d occurred to it.” | of themselves. if reading does not to k om 
ve, Ist, that as the hen ve | it is of no use ; mend a rons for performing 
day after day, seldom missing | mechanical p we inquire w. at 
the yolk, but always with | useful ideas h arnt from it; to those who have 
believed that the yolk in to live by doing, is it not of paramount importa 
that the y 
arty ; and 2d, that, | to teach them how to do everything — that con- 
er she had laid a yolk- cerns the necessary business of life. What girl is fit to 
iy of te indicate hoger the yolk had | enter upon a life who does not know everything about 
his event is not | the making, repairing, and cleaning of her clothes ; the 
T should think not waty The | varieties of bra — preparation and pres its 
terus were all healthy, a | various q compa value, ot 2 
bite, and shell, occu- making it palatable with due regard to economy. 
s in the oviduet, and | it not the duty of the female head of a family 
autiful ion to promote the health, comfort, and pleasure of every 
The hen was loaded | branch of it! Black bread or pud contain the 
eggs | same elements mntrition as the whitest; but f 
R ülsive form n er excites ap- 
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