LAWS GOVERNING THE BREEDING 
CHAPTER II 
Black or White and 
Black and White Breeds 
B24 HE laws that govern fowls of a com- 
WA rag bination of black and white are simi- 
Neg sit lar, whether barred or mottled or seg- 
SA) regated in certain sections. One of 
the greatest proofs that nature has inexorable 
laws that must be obeyed is this: that double 
mating must be resorted to wherever a man-made 
standard of color points runs counter and contrary 
to what nature requires in male and female ac- 
cording to breed. While double mating shows 
man’s versatility and adaptability, it also shows 
his perverseness and his weakness as opposed to 
the mighty forces which control all nature. Since 
the inception of double mating nature has success- 
fully resisted all man’s efforts to produce other 
than make-shifts to conform to the aforesaid man- 
made standard, one to produce males and one to 
produce females according to written require- 
ments; whereas nature’s standard demands but 
one mating to produce standard male and female 
according to kind. The modus operandi of double 
mating only proves how eternally right is nature. 
Search where you will among domestic fowls 
or wild birds and the results are the same. All 
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