THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ 



place the dai 





n'e^h^There'should ! 1 ! 





hen I visited Glasgow with Mr. ("h:\---v 

 tntly prevailed, but where, by makin 







■,-' ,/ ■ 



,-, 























• 







■■;>■; 



' adds Dr. Ar 



:; 



ich n 8erve 3 PO to t sh C 















irh 



Zoological Garde 



















ti....>. 



""' 



management, cou 



■:■ 



the room should not escape by < 

 neys, while the windows and other openings in 



erroneous idea that the carbonic acid gas produ< 

 the respiration of the animals, because heavier tha 



<ncape below. 6 When In" this^ras "done™ abi 



month after more than 50 were dead, and the 

 remaining ones were dying. This room, open 

 below, was as truly an extinguisher to the living 

 keys, as an inverted coffee-cup, held over and aj 

 the flame of a candle, is an extinguisher to the ci 

 Not only 



ttinga in the floor, 1 



:■>■■-■ ^ ' : . ■;••■';■■ ■■ , ■■ 



the time the monkeys went 

 open, in the winter, part of the ventihf 



■it a young gentleman, at a respectable 

 d of London, where there 

 were about 40 boys : the boy I went to s, ■ 



tag into consumption, and i 

 others of the boys were also ill. On i 

 found the cause to be only a less degrei 

 which had destroyed the monkeys. 1 

 struck me forcibly, as illustrations of tl 

 ■ ' 



ised by persons otherwise highly accora- 



3. On the Influence of Cottage Homes.—" A clean, 



amoral no less than a phi 



ey to make the members of the family 

 sober, peaceable, and considerate of the feelings and 



mg to every kind and degree ( 



