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Dp >> Fai D> D> >> >> DD55>~ Dy Se: 4 LS le : 23> Se DS ea z 2 >) SS, De DO > > + J DY > oT ty wore 4 >» > yy wD » a THE Poultry YARD AND MARKER A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON GALLINOCULTUREH, And Description of a New Process for HATCHING EGGS : eS > RAISING POULTRY; FOR WHICH Seberal Gold Wedals und Diplomas habe been atoarded to the Author, Prof. A)GORBETT. - 36, 190 NEW YORK: ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, PUBLISHERS. 2 ES 27, Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1876, by Pror. A. CORBETT, n the Office of the Librarian of Congresss, at Washington, D. C. ry fro® By irenefe Pat office Liv. a ort 1914. TO THE READER. The extraordinary rapidity with which the first editions of this work have been exhausted, and the thousands of letters which have been received from readers in all parts of the country, are proofs that the public have derived substantial profit from my discovery. Among these readers I notice with much pleasure, many eminent writers for the press; men who have de- voted their talents and intelligence to the benefitting of the large numbers of farmers and poultry breeders, whose toil has enhanced the national prosperity ;—and to these particularly do I dedicate this work. Jt was to increase the resources of these men and their families by poultry raising, that one hundred and twenty-five years ago, the celebrated Reaumur, member of the Academy of Sciences of Paris, after having sacri- ficed his time and fortune, discovered how to hatch and raise poultry by means of the heat generated by horse manyre, and it was by continuing the study of this prob- lem, and by thorough, patient and expensive researches, that I have been enabled to teach the public how to utilize this new process in all its workings, with perfect ease and success, and earned for me the numerous awards of various kinds, a list of which will be found further on. The usefulness of this work has been universally acknowledged, (see Opinions of the Press,) and its great fandamental principles rest on the following important points: Ist, How to avoid loss? 2d, How to increase productiveness? These any intelligent man is sure to consider, and to facilitate the means for both, has been my aim and desire, and such result should be obtained by all who read this book. THe AUTHOR. ~ ee Sy ; RRS Pht Oe ete on a Ss . OE ENTONS-OF PEL, PRs. American Agriculturist, (July 1st, 1876.) Of late years there have been many efforts made to perfect a method of artificial incubation and to get rid of the hen, which unfortunately is too fussy and too slow for advanced ideas. Now that poultry bears so high a price, and young chickens for broil- ers are worth more than full grown fowls, it is very desirable to have some way of improving on the slow and unsatisfactory methods provided by nature. The most promising of all the methods, old or new, with which we have become acquainted is the invention of Prof. Corbett, which we describe and illustrate. Prof. Corbett has been very successful. We saw the proof of his success. The results of Mr. Corbett’s investigations and ex- periences have been compiled into a book, entitled ‘‘ The Poultry Yard and Market.” New York Weekly Herald, (September 30th, 1876.) The publishing house of Orange Judd has just issued a very interesting and useful book entitled, ‘‘The Poultry Yard and Market.” It is a practical treatise on gallinoculture and a de- scription of the new process of hatching eggs and raising chick- ens by means of horse manure, the invention of Prof Corbett. of Hicksville, N. Y., for which several medals were awarded him by alf the great exhibitions. It is replete with minute explan- ations which cannot fail to be of great service to farmers and breeders. Poultry, which is a source of great revenue in Europe generally, and in France particularly, has not received in Amer- ica all the attention it deserves, and it is really surprising that a country of such vast resources and as rich in products of all il sorts as ours, should be compelled to import eggs from Europe. We see on page 82 of this book that 5,467,264 dozen eggs, valued at $732,234 have been imported from Europe in the space of eleven months and thrown upon the markets, notwith- standing the fact that by the time they arrived here they were at least forty days old. We believe that Mr. Corbett’s invention will be of great service to our business men and breeders as au improvement of the greatest importance, for the consumption of egosin this country is calculated to be about 60,000,000 annually. In France it is about 80,000,000 or $2.22 for every man, woman and child. —————— Country Gentleman, (April 26th, 1877). ARTIFICIAL INCUBATION.—We have recently received from the Orange Judd Co., New York, Mr. A. Corbett’s little work on Gallinoculture, a manual of 96 pages, devoted to the history of artificial incubation and to the general care of poultry. In the artificial hatching and rearing of poultry, Mr. Corbett claims to have discovered the only feasible method, which is at the same time cheap; and in his book he gives an account of the different methods tried, from the time of the worship of Isis down to the present. The latter half of the book is devoted to poultry “matters generally, and will be found useful by any one who keeps fowls, being the results of experience in raising poultry in large numbers. Southern Agriculturist. “The Poultry Yard and Market,” a practical treatise on hatching eggs and raising poultry by horse manure, by Prof. A. Corbett, is published by the Orange Judd Co. . Price, paper- bound, fifty cents; in cloth, seventy-five cents. This is a very interesting and useful book to the poultry breeder and housewife in the rural districts. ‘This book will aid the farmer who possesses ili a manure heap to hatch eggs by artificial heat and thus hasten to the spring market a large number of chickens when the price is good. Long Island Farmer. The Orange Judd Co., New York, has just issued a very important as well asinteresting work for the farming community. This work is entitled, ‘‘The Poultry Yard and Market.” We have read this interesting work and are confident nothing has been published which will prove so important to the farming interest. He also explains the science of hatching egys and the raising of poultry by the invention of Prof. A. Corbett, by means of horse manure, for which a number of premiums have been awarded by agricultural societies throughout the country. The low price of fifty cents proves that the author does not desire to make a fortune, but to give the farmers the benefit of his great invention, and how they may make the raising of poultry a profitable business. Boston Traveller. “The Poultry Yard and Market,” is a practical treatise on gallinoculture, by Prof..A. Corbett, the inventor of the famous artificial incubator. 'The pamphlet should be in the hands of all who devote time and attention to the raising of fowls. It contains a vast amount of information. Chicago Inter-Ocean, (April 19th, 1877). “The Poultry Yard and Market,” by Prof. A. Corbett is a practical treatise on gallinoculture and a description of the new process of hatching eggs and raising chickens by means of horse manure. It is replete with minute explanations which can not fail to be of great service to farmers and breeders. lv Willamette (Oregon) Farmer. — “The Poultry Yard and Market,” is the title of a pamphlet sent us by the Orange Judd Co., which treats of artificial incu- bation and the way to raise chickens and keep hens for profit. This subject is worth possessing and as it can not be very ex- pensve many of our farmers’ wives and daughters will like to send for it. Cincinnati Weekly Times, (April 19th, 1877). Alatching eggs without the help of the hen is the easiest matter possible, and in no sense whatever contrary to nature, as Prof. Corbett ably demonstrates in ‘‘The Poultry Yard and Market.” Every farmer and housewife should read this work, in which is shown that it needs simply a manure heap to accom- plish this result. New York Weekly Tribune, (Sept. 15th, 1875). His process is alike valuable to the housewife of moderate means, passing her leisure moments in the poultry yard, as to the breeder on a large scale who seeks to supply great city markets with eggs and chickens. Moore's Rural New Yorker, ( Oct. 2d, 1875). Fowls of all breeds and ages are there to be found in immense numbers; all of them in the best condition of health, and alt hatched and raised artificially. ‘The system employed is the in- vention of Mr. CorseTt himself, the sole caloric agent being horse manure. * * * The poultry raised by this method are in all respects as healthy and vigorous as any to be seen elsewhere, while, at the same time, none of them are lamed, as too frequently is the case by natural mothers. American Artisan, (December, 1875). Spring chickens by his process being ready for market all the year round, every month in the year, every week in the month, and his process is alike valuable to the house-wife of moderate means, passing her leisure moments in the poultry-yard, as to the breeder on a larger scale, who seeks to supply great city markets with eggs and chickens. Philadelphia Sunday Sun, ( August 6th, 1876). As all our readers may believe, this important discovery has caused a little revolution in the poultry breeders population. But this revolution is calming since Prof. A. Corbett has written a work in which he explains all his process. We have read this book and have found it the most valuable and the most inter- esting work for poultry-men and farmers, which has ever been published. Its low price of 50 cents, proves that its author does not want to make it a speculation. The name of the werk is, “The Poultry Yard and Market.” It contains also general hints, as says the author, acquired by twenty years experience in poultry breeding. Philadelphia Weekly Press, ( Oct. 30th, 1875). Mr. ADOLPHE CorBETT, the inventor of the process we are about to describe, is a young-looking man of forty years and a native of Belgium. He has devoted most of his life-time to the study of animals, and, besides being a frequent contributor to the scientific journals of France and the land of his birth, he is the author of several works on ornithology, &c. * * * During the last severe winter, with the snow lying several feet deep on the ground, he was almost overrun with young chickens, nearly all of them growing up into strong and healthy birds, notwith- standing the inclemency of the weather. Vi American Artisan, (March, 1875 ). The artificial heat obtained from fermenting manure has .ong been used in the forcing of seeds to early and strong germination. Precisely the same principle is adopted by Mr. Corsert, the heat of manure-beds being employed to hatch his chickens. We recommend everybody interested in this subject to write to Prof. CorsBeTT for his book (the price of which is only fifty cents}, which will be found an extremely interesting pamphlet. Chicago Daily Tribune, ( October 23d, 1875). Chickens hatched and raised by the process above described are as healthy and vigorous as any to be found elsewhere, and they are incomparably more numerous than those produced by what is ignorantly termed the “natural” method. Some farmers, however, as well as many professional poultry-breeders, possess such crowbar-like backbones that they cannot bend to any pro- posed improvement on the old style of doing things, New York Weekly Herald, (Oct. Tth, 1876). About two years ago we informed the readers of the WEEKLY HERALD that Professor A. Corbett, of Hicksville, L. I., was hatching and raising poultry by means of horse manure. This discovery has been perfected and extensively known through the energy and perseverence of the inventor. He has also submitted his system to competent judges, who have awarded him various recompenses. * * * * Jn a new book which Professor Corbett has published, entitled ‘The Poultry Yard and Market,” he frankly declares that it is not to him that any honor is due for this discovery, but entirely to that celebrated Dr. Réamur, who made many experiments, and who, on St. Martin’s day, 1747, read before the Aca !emy of Sciences in Paris, a report in which he gave an account of his experience and success, vii Illustrated Weekly, (March 31st, 1877). The idea of using the heat obtainable from manure for this purpose is not new. In 1747, on St. Martin’s Day, the cele- brated scientist, Réaumur, member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Paris, wrote to that Academy a paper setting forth and explaining his researches and success in giving life to the embryonic fowl by the heat of horse manure alone. But this valuable discovery has reached perfection through the labors and researches of Prof. Adolph Corbett. * * * * The discovery will undoubtedly be of great benefit to all who breed poultry for pleasure or profit, especially those who make it a business to supply the markets of our large cities. New York Sunday News, (Sept. 19th, 1875). It is an old and true saying that “the man who causes two blades of grass to grow where only one was found before,” is a benefactor of his race; and judging by this standard, Professor ApoLpPHE CorpetTtT deserves the gratitude of his fellow-citizens. * * * He hatches and raises poultry of all descriptions by the simple use of horse manure; rendering hens entirely unnecessary, except for laying eggs. Daily Saratogian, (September 4th, 1874). HATCHING CHICKENS ARTIFICIALLY.—The idea of hatching eggs by artificial heat is no new one, nor even the idea of using the natural, even heat of a manure pile. * * * After much ex- perimenting and expense, at last, in July, 1873, Mons. Corbett completed an invention, very successful in hatching healthy chickens, and said by good judges to be the great discovery of recent months. * * * A crowd stood about this exhibition hour after hour, and indeed it is one of the most interesting features of the fair. Chicago Weekly Tribune, ( Oct. 24th, 1875). Hatching eggs without the help of the hen is the easiest matter possible. * * * The vast crowds of young chickens to be seen, from time to time, at the Hicksville Institute, practically prove that the system there adopted is a correct one ; for the youngsters are as bright in plumage, ravenous, and active, as any to be found elsewhere, whilst the mortality amongst them is incomparably less. The Consett system is equally operative in the dead of winter as during spring, summer, or fall. Saturday Review, London, (Dec. 30th, 1876). Mr. Corbett’s treatise on “The Poultry Yard and Market” would hardly deserve notice in these columns for its general remarks on a matter of trade and special department of farming; but it deserves a peculiar interest from the new method of hatching and breeding chickens, worked out and elaborately described by the author. ‘The invention of this method he ascribes to Réaumur, well known as the inventor of the ther- mometer or thermometrical scale, chiefly used in Germany. This eminent scientific thinker seems to have applied his know- ledge of heat and its laws to the practical rearing of poultry, and his system depends on the generation of heat by decaying manure of particular kinds. NOTE. SS SS UP TO THIS DATE, JANUARY Ist, 1879, FROFESSOR A. CORBETT, Inventor of the new process for Raising Poultry, described in the work, has received Gold and Bronze Medals AN DIPLOMAS The Centennial Exhibition, The Chili International Exposition, The Nmerican Institute, AND FROM The most Important States and County Agricultural Societies in the United States. CONTENTS: a re ee ee eet ee’ et Cholera, Crop, Gapes, Pip, Rheumatism, Indigestion, Cramps, Lice, Soft Eggs, Feather-Eating, etc., ete. How to use Kerosene as a Good Curative............... MM ETOMUCLIONS caer o Wietiea's + sine oa a Van ak poe ate Oh gates Diet arse 5 The Artificial Incubation of the Past and Present...... 7 Researches and Success with Horse Manure....... etait 15 The Value of the Eggs......... BP Rpt airy Leen 21 WMS POL, Ol. MAMULOs 50 vcs nie us sath sa'sloulae wees on eta ae diate ers 28 icin VOI SG: ME LGwn.t oik psa oe cts ba Sma nieeie ts oe aiwlee cease’ area's 29 PRE eA Sh, SATOOOUS oF 25 cues ceuclduwe dae oe wees Oradeicliys vases bas 31 Diseased. Feet: in Chickens). cs .cicstsccscesccsoes sooees 32 Infectious Water for Chickens -.........eeeees Te Me eacestes 33 Pensssippine only Six Daye 6652s Siok cence ene see o mee eiee 35 How to See whether Eggs are Fertilized................ 36 Twenty Dollars Profit from each Hen.............e0000% on Prot, A> Corbett’s: Appatatiss 50.4.0. .55. 8 Sib eeeccetee -.. 38 URW IG GO blle" A AGL LOSE oo. cih bee es oe Sine craleibee nis Uvistole sae saree 40 Amount. or. Protit from: Twelve Hens... .s62. «csc nseey ove 49 -How to Establish a Poultry Yard with $1,000............ 43 Practical Rules for-Making Money... . 2.0 sicie..cccccccswccs 45 RBs Ohi: PSEA Ss PU CKIE: Soa. ca! there wlio a.cia opel Oo aioe haven petereianagacd a Kese 51 Helping Chickens Out of the Sirell... 2... os. cee coees sinas 52 Sooked Bood. for. Pawleys 2 oes Oe os. net ah okeine wed ox 53 Keep the Chickens: Growime co... i66cid sigacs awe Sv ac ewes Shee sale 54 Hens that Eat Eggs........ Werk Meare ecb aaes ak date Crt da stele mayest 55 Mie Number of Hens: toa ROOSter so. ie. oscccs ak siemens 50 59 Meeps BOs LOR WIDLEE ir aii sas ote ati erdsce Dene debs ee 62 Fattening and Dressing Poultry for Market............. 61 PiscAses oN LCE GUO... . wher wack ae oHORT «6 ocho de = 8s CA INTRODUCTION. «There is nothing new under the sun,” says Solomon the Wise, so that artificial incubations is also not a new thing, although little practiced. In the most ancient times the Egyptians knew the art of hatching eges without placing them under hens. These enlight- ened and wise people who had found every means to make life easy and pleasant only because they had sought it through agriculture, yet possessed several ideas which we have not yet discovered, and almost now despair to find out, and it is only by direct obser- vation and according to the harmonious laws of nature that such discoveries are made. It is hardly necessary to call the attention of the public to the manner in — which birds set on their eggs. And every one knows, also, that there are some birds (hens for instance) which not only hatch out eggs that they have not laid, but even those also of other species. These peculiarities in revealing themselves to our notice have naturally led us to think there should be, perhaps, a means to obtain broods independent of the hen, since her intervention has been already shown to be insignificant, and without any regard to the species. This our apparatus does accomplish. I was convinced Al 6 of the possibility of it on reflecting that even the sun could take the place of the bird—as it serves in some instances to hatch out eggs, we know. Thus the croc- odile, turtle and the ostrich bury their eggs in the sand, and it is the warmth of the sun that hatches the young ones. The example of the ostrich, especially, appears to be conclusive, and, therefore, I believe that if the sun could hatch out the eggs of the ostrich it would not be impossible to have a like success with other eges by applying artificial heat. To-day the Museum of Natural History, in Paris, exhibits to the view of amateurs and the curious, enor- mous serpents born in hot-houses by the artificial incu- bation of their eggs. Nothing, in fact, is easier, says an author named Par- mentier, than to create the art of hatching eggs with- out the aid of the hen. It only consists in imitating the process that chance has indicated to man and sim- plifiés itself to this, to choose a place where the eggs can receive the same temperature that they would have under the bird that laid the eggs, and during the time that would be required to hatch them under her wings, ARTIFICIAL INCUBATION. Its Origin and its Antiquity. The art of artificially hatching hens’ eggs has been known in Egypt and China for centuries. In Egypt the invention is attributed to the ancient priests of Isis. According to some historians, [sis and Ceres are the same benignant princes who reigned once over Egypt. According to others the art of agriculture is personi- fied under these names, and she was represented with a garland of ears of corn on her head, holding a lighted torch insone hand and in the other a poppy, which was sacred to her. The priests of the temple of Isis, in Egypt as well as in Celt, appear especially to have been employed in ag- riculture and rural economy. The importance of this seems to have deserved a like institution since they studied this great science and extended its principles under the name of the goddess Ceres, who was the di- vine guardian of the fields and every kind of nature’s produce. Whatever it was it seems certain that the prosperity of the ancient kingdoms of Egypt, Damascus, Pales- tina, Jerusalem and Samaria was, in a great measure, due to the benefits they derived from the artificial hatching of hens’ eggs. The ovens, or hatching places of the Egyptians, ealled in the country ma-mals, and which were very numerous in the kingdoms before mentioned. are now only in existence in Mansoura, in the village of Berma, situated in the Delta of the Nil. The latest historians S give the name of Behamians to all the inhabitants of five or six villages, of which Berma is the chief and centre, and where the ovens are most numerous. The inhabitants of these villages are the only ones who to- day have preserved the hereditary industry of directing these ovens. On research I find that the ovens of Egypt alone in olden times hatched out annually one hundred millions of chickens; even to-day the ma-mals of the Beha- mians still hatch out annually thirty millions, but his- tory is silent upon the kind of nourishment given to these chickens. But one will say, how is it that so flourishing and prosperous a business has for the most part disappeared from these countries, and is by found to-day in a small and limited province of the Egyptian Detta? I cannot account for it any more than that these countries have become barren and depopulated, which once, according to history, were fertile and inhab- ited, and of the destruction of towns and cities of which the ruins still exist and bear witness to their ancient splendor. To the Emperor Constantine is attributed a memoir upon the artificial incubation of the Egyptian ovens, so much did he consider the multiplication of every kind of poultry to the welfare of the nation. Another memoir on the same subject is attributed to Democrates, the ancient philosopher who was in the kabit of crying with joy on beholding the beauties of nature in opposition to his companion, Heraclites, who always laughed at the same. Plinus, the naturalist, and Diodorus, of Sicily, speak in their writings of the great benefits a nation would receive from this method. The history of the Egyptian ma-mals and the Chi- 9 nese boxes (these are only for hatching duck eggs) was brought into Europe by the Pastor Juan Gonzales, of Mendoce, in Spain, and translated into French in 1600 by Luc de la Porte. Before Gonzales’ times historians had spoken of the Egyptian ovens, and amongst them Aristot, but these had only written from traditions, whilst at Florence and at Naples they have already built these ovens or kilns. In the year 1415 Charles VII built some & Amboise in France, and Francis I., at Montrichard about the year 1540. These undertakings probably met with but little success, because these ovens were built according to hearsay or tradition. One of the Florentine dukes sent for an Egyptian director, and they say that this man succeeded well. Francis I also followed the same plan and met with a like success ; but, notwithstanding this, it was abandoned later. A physician of Nanterre, named Bonnemain, is the first since 1777 to establish hatching ovens, which communicated their heat to the eggs by means of the circulation in tubes of hot water. Bonnemain tried every expedient, and, after several unsuccessful attempts, started an establishment at No. 4 Rue des Deux Portes,in Paris, and where he had these ovens sufficiently large, that he hatched out one thousand a day. He is often accused of exaggeration, but nevertheless history records the fact that he had chickens all the year round, and that he supplied the Imperial Court of France in all seasons, and that the public markets were overstocked with his birds. The disastrous events of 1814 were the ruin of this fine es- tablishment. Bonnemain published a pamphlet in 1816 giving a description of his ovens regulated by 10 : fire, and he said his method was the result of fifty years’ deep meditation and trials. In this pamphlet he does not give the key of his method, but asks for subscriptions to buy his ovens, and to induce amateurs to try it, he gives statistics of the profit each hatching gave every year. Bonnemain, moreover, assures us that he did obtain this success during fifteen years, and it was only after his establishment was ruined by the invading armies that he asks for aid and assistance from the govern- ment, capitalists, and amateurs; but all failed him, either from disdain, want of confidence, or from politi- cal motives. | The price of his boxes was very high, the small ones costing $2 00 an egg, and large ones 75 cents. His fire regulator was considered a very useful invention. Martial Bonnes, mathematical professor and astron- omer in the observatory at Toulouse, wanted the gov- ernment to send a commission to Egypt to introduce the art of making these ovens or machines for hatching chickens, and to bring back at the same time expe- rienced Behamians to manage these ovens, ete. Another author, under the same administration of the Haut Rhin, I find bas published also a book ex- plaining to the government the great importance of this importation to France. He says: “I would like to see these men and their machines enter France and establish themselves in the palaces of our king ;’ and then he adds: ‘The enemies of this enterprise will at first scoff at and ridicule the project of hatching chick- ens artificially, and will have a thousand stories to tell of these hens’ eggs, the quality of their flesh, ete.; but all these pleasantries ought not to discourage the un- dertaking, and they will pass away as smoke.” eal I can only join my good wishes to the hopes of these men—true friends to the prosperity of their country and to the welfare of every one, which would result in the multiplication of poultry yards. J will now relate the attempts that have been made of this kind by my contemporaries, and the success they have met with. In 1844, Mr. Bir, a merchant of Courbevoie, near Paris, sent to the exhibition of that year, a box for hatching, containing 60 eggs. In 1848 Mr. Vallie, keeper of the serpent gallery at the museum of the Jardin des Plantes, at Paris, sent also to the exhibition of that year, an incubator to hatch out 100 eggs. These two boxes, made after Bonnemain’s model, but much smaller, were heated with lamps. Mr. Vallie even admitted that his box was not fit to be used on @ large scale, but only as a piece of furniture for ama- teurs and the curious. About the same time, however, appeared the great incubator of Messrs. Adrien, Jr., & Tricoche, who founded an establishment at Vau- girard. In 1853 Mr. Cantallo established an institu- tion of numerous incubators, and, according to the English papers, these are all heated with lamps, and he sends a large quantity of poultry to the London market annually. Dr. Preterre, dentist, of New York, has also devoted much of his time to artificial incubation; I have seen and met him at the Farmers’ Club at the Cooper Insti- tute, New York; and in March, 1874, he exhibited several chickens which were hatched artificially by steam and also by means of horse manure. A great many certificates have been presented. ~ There are also several patented incubators in the Uni 12 ted States. Some have the lamp on the top, others have it on the sides; all have more or less pipes hold- ing mercury or alcohol. I believe I have now exhausted all my information about recent incubators, and have posted my readers in all that has been done in this line, and he can now form some idea of the different experiences that have been made to arrive at a practical and paying machine, for it is not enough to hatch eggs, but it must be done with profit; for if, to obtain a few chickens, you must spend more than they are worth, or more than they will sell for, the thing is a failure; and I have never heard that any great success has been attained by machines heated by lamps. One can easily understand that those persons who wish to engage in the raising of poultry, are much embarrassed, and hesitate before risking their money in an enterprise in which the best means to carry it out are still being looked for. Thus does it happen that, after due reflection and deep study, I have decided to found my establishment , and, before investing $40,000 in a poultry establishment, I certainly ought to thoroughly understand what I am undertak- ing, and even better than any other. I ought to be most interested in finding the most advantageous man- ner of applying artificial incubation. My first plan was to follow the natural raising of hens, etc., for, like many others, I had only a weak reliance on the present machines, for I have seen them in operation both in Paris and London; but both proprietors told me that they did not believe it would be practicable on a large scale ; for an establishment that would contain 60 arti- ficial hatching boxes in operation ought to have 120 lamps burning night and day with kerosene; and there was great danger, to say nothing of the difficulty of 13 directing to an equal height such a number of wicks to give to each incubator an equal warmth. And how much money would it not cost daily for kerosene ? These considerations, added to.those of the neces- sary expense required to buy these machines, were a very serious objection to me, and I was forced to reject this system, without condemning it, however. I bought several machines to try them ; those that gave me the ereatest returns were kept in operation for a time; but from one only a small percentage, and from another I never could obtain a single hatching, and thus it was that I did not spend much time with such expensive toys, and, at the same time, with such little profit. I still continued to look for some other way of arriving at the desired end, and to see if it was not possible to ob- tain practical and commercial results, for, if it was once found, I had before me an important affair; with my organization I could take care of any quantity of chick- ens that I could hatch. .I then bought every book that treated of incubation, and you can judge my surprise when I found that each author recommended particu- larly a different machine. It was not long before I discovered that these recommendations were only com- plimentary, for I had already one of the machines thus strongly recommended by one author, and from which it was impossible to obtain the birth or hatching of a single chicken. But what struck me most was that only a few of them spoke of Reaumur’s system, amongst which is Burnham, who mentions in his work, at page 124, that Mr. Manowry, at Mouy, had adopteg — Reaumur’s system. However, not being able to let him pass without mention, the greater number ingenuously say that he did obtain some success, but they take good care not to 2 14 give any explanation ; this is easily understood, as they would have injured their favorite. Our astonishment changes into indignation when we read that these authors, who were so reserved about the celebrated Reaumur, were lavish in their praises of the sellers of the boxes without value (the rotten work of some tin- smith), who, perhaps, had money enough to buy the good will of the writer. — Mr. Reaumur was a clever French naturalist and author of several works, memoirs of great value, and several of his treatises are well known, and the best that were written before Buffon’s time; and, in con- sequence of these works, was made a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences in Paris, where he read his first paper on St. Martin’s Day, 1747, when the pub- lic of that time seemed to have judged as he had done of the great advantages to be expected of making a business of chicken raising; and he further stated, 125 years ago, that the multiplying of poultry yards, of which such a large number are consumed, could not be overdone. The Abbé Copineau undertook to perfect Reau- mur’s method; in 1780 he published a work called “ Artificial Ornithotrophie; or, The Art of Hatching and Raising Poultry by means of Artificial Heat.” The game work was re-published in 1795, under the title of “Man Rival to Nature; or, The Art of giving Exist- ence to Birds, and principally of Poultry.” In 1816 the learned Bonnemain also published a very instruc- tive memoir, and of real value. So that at last we find a number of eminent men occupying themselves with this important question. 15 Researches and Success. The public will now understand from what sources I have sought to learn; and after all the experiments I have made, I concluded, at last, that Reaumur’s system appeared to be most feasible—it being the easiest and less expensive to follow. I, therefore, from that time began to practice it, thus: six casks were placed in a heap of manure, and 600 eggs were placed in them. All were lost. It was in winter, and I thought that in the cellar the casks would keep at a better degree of heat; but there not being room enough, and the want of ventilation, were the causes of my failing. Not in the least discouraged, although disappointed, I again placed eight casks under an old shed, and this time put 800 eggs in them ; the success would have been entire had not the rain fallen one day on part of the manure heap, which cooled it off. Nevertheless, from the other part I proved the success, and you can judge how de- lighted I was to see several hundred young chickens hatched. Let the reader rightly understand that we did not have entire confidence in the success to be derived from this venture at the time, as it was necessary to find a place to put the newly-hatched chickens in, which ap- peared to us like a true army of invaders. Those persons who have never seen hundreds of young chickens of one and two days old, can form no idea of the busy and noisy household. Luckily, we had an ar- tificial mother, warmed by one lamp, and I placed the young chickens in it; whether it was the smell of the kerosene that was injurious to them, or whether the heat produced by the hot water did not accomplish the wished for object, I lost the greater number of them, 16 and I had the misfortune to prove that it was especially from crowding themselves in the corners that they did. This was a bitter disappointment to me. As there was now no doubt that I could hatch the eggs with the aid of manure, it only remained to improve on the casks and mothers, and the manner of directing or regulating the heat, besides providing the proper and necessary ventilation, and to supply the necessary quantity of air. I first of all began my improvements on the artificial mother, in suppressing the corners as much as possible, and at last had one built without cor- ners, measuring twelve feet in length and ten feet in width, and warmed by two kerosene stoves. I thought myself very happy in having such a large artificial mother in which I could place 1,800 chickens of differ- ent ages. Everything was complete in it, park, perches and ventilation. Unfortunately, one night in April one of the iamps exploded and set the building on fire in which it was (which measured 200 feet in length, and cost $6,000). The dog gave the alarm, and soon every one on the farm was awakened, and commenced to extinguish the fire by means of the India rubber hose » kept on the premises for such a calamity, and with a plentiful supply of water the building was saved by a — miracle, but I was not so fortunate with my young brood—nearly all of them were smothered or suffocated. Again was I forced to resign myself to fate and give up the raising of my pullets artificially by means of lamps. The insurance company paid the damage to the build- ing, but the poultry was not insured. Having got over this loss I puzzled my brains to find a new system of raising them, and began to think I should have to renounce it, when the happy thought struck me to try the manure heap, and to see if I could 17 not make it do for the chickens what it did so well for the eggs. I then placed a common box in the manure and put in it some newly-hatched chicks; this was rather a bold proceeding, for the chances were that I should only find dead ones in the morning. Judge my surprise when at five o’clock in the morning I opened the box and saw all these little ones with their large eyes open, waiting their first meal, and they were quickly fed. This, then, was the solution of the great problem. Was it chance or luck? Nevertheless I had before me the fact that there were animated beings born in manure and receiving the warmth necessary for their welfare from the same source. Having already received so many checks and deceptions, I hesitated and refrained from shouting “ Victory !’—Eureka it might be. A few more days will show me what success I might depend on in using this means of raising them, and all those that were daily hatched received the same treat- ment. At length, after fifteen days’ experience I had only to fight with the corners of the box. For those who have the opportunity of visiting an establishment for rearing young chickens, know full well how they will crowd into the corners; the stronger ones mount on the backs of the weaker, and these are, almost in all cases, victims to their companions. I now began to look for a box that would, in a cer- tain degree resemble the hen. Everybody knows that if she gives warmth to the chickens it is by covering them with her wings; but again, if an account was taken of the number she crushes by treading on them, of those she loses in walking round with them, you can easily see that the raiser pays dearly for the heat she gives. I will admit there are some mothers patterns of | 2B 18 gentleness, tenderness and carefulness, and quite wor- thy of the praise and admiration bestowed on them, and will allow several authors to say all they can in their favor ; but if they were like myself, daily watch- ing them and convinced of the reality, they would soon see how very many in general, destroy their young; it is by millions yearly that they could be counted. Up to the present time very few have troubled themselves about this great question, for the simple reason that this enormous loss being shared by all, it has not awakened the attention of the great poultry raisers. One of my neighbors who raises a great quantity of poultry, especially turkeys, lost in one day sixty-four chicks, their careful mothers having taken them off to a distance, when the rain came and they were lost. This man, a clever farmer, suffering so great a loss, has he ever thought he might avoid it? I don’t believe he has. / I In order that my apparatus should be good, I kept strict account of the heat given to the chickens by the mother, the movement of the wings and especially of the amount of air that penetrated under her. After several days’ labor and combinations I succeeded in obtaining all these results, and I found I had replaced the hen with great advantage, for really my apparatus is much superior to the hen. The stomach and the wings are, by a clever combination, beautifully imitated. Especially do chickens find this to be the case whilst growing up as well as when they are small. This apparatus having so admirably suecceded in raising chickens, why could it not serve also to hatch them ? To this important question I could not immediately reply; so I began another experiment, and the first trial failed, and upon my making further researches I 19 discovered that what prevented the success of the incu- bation was simply in the quality of the wood of which the boxes were made. JI then made another apparatus aiid new experiments, and at last succeeded. From this day I found I had solved an important problem, and that I could hatch and raise chickens without the assistance of any lamp, nor with any fire, and that manure alone would do it. Ah! if Keaumur could rise from his ashes how happy would he be to see these facts established, and I would wish to see present near the hatching broods those authors who have so little gratitude for this renowned man of the past century. ‘livery pen that is employed in the praise of any subject or industry does honor to the author who rend- ers justice to the merits of others, more especially when it alludes only to their memory.” The Patent Right. Possessing my apparatus, my first business was to ask of the American and European Governments the protection that the law gives to inventors, etc. In eranting me a patent every one who has seen my appar- atus has immediately recognized its importance, and the benefit each might derive :rom it. I have been advised to sell my patent to a company so that I might at once realize a large fortune, but I prefer to remain the sole owner, fearing that once the apparatus is spread over the country our poultry and egos would decrease in value in consequence of there being too large a quantity of poultry thrown on the market. Several of my friends have tried to dissuade me from this, and a gentleman of some celebrity and and of great talent made use of these words: “If I 20 had discovered this ingenious idea I would esteem my- self happy to leave it to my contemporaries as a souvenir of my passage on this earth.” I replied, if your name was not already surrounde? with glory I would propose that you add yours to mine. You have witnessed my trials, disappointments and hopes, and have not only consoled me at times but encouraged me to try again, and this share is only your right. He re- fused this offer and said if I would sell my apparatus he would buy one. Two days after I sent him one, begging him to accept it, being the only one that has left the Gallinoculture Institute, and instead of sending it to his country seat he has it for exhibition, and takes great pleasure in showing it to his friends. I will not divulge his name—not wishing to follow in the steps of a great number of venders who fill their pros- pectuses with honorable names it is true, but who, having no interest in the affair, and far from being satisfied with the merchandise sent them, perhaps are only to be pitied in having just cause of complaint. A good thing recommends itself, and there is no occasion to use any humbug to make it: sell, and I wish it par- ticularly understood that I desire the welfare of my friends and neighbors, the farmers of these United States, and work as willingly for their benefit as my profit, and any reasonable person can clearly see that the profits I derive from this book will never begin to pay me 4or my time, money or labor bestowed on this patent, but expect a great deal from the interest the public will take in a business so simple and so inter- esting, and offering such good returns for the time and attention bestowed upon it, and especially when a thing is really good the inventor generally begins to turn it to his own profit. But such is not my preseut 21 desire. What I have done at my establishment with a creat many of these apparatuses is to hatch and raise poultry of every kind—chickens, turkeys, ducks and Guinea fowls, and one reason why I have not delivered the machines to the public sooner, is that, as I before stated, I would not flood the market, and to a certain extent, put an end to the demand for poultry and eggs; but now, from the reports and statistics received on this subject, I happily find myself deceived, and find that, notwithstanding the quantity raised, buyers at a fair price will always be found. The Value of the Eggs. In a work on poultry I find that in New York and Boston alone were sold $6,000,009 worth of poultry, which exceeds the commercial value of all the swine and half the value of all the sheep, the entire value of the neat cattle, and over four times the total value -of the horses and mules. One large hotel in Boston uses an average of one hundred dozen of eggs daily, and another in Philadelphia consumes one hundred and fifty dozen daily. The New York Evening Post subse- quently set down the value of eggs and poultry at the enormous sum of $265,000,000. It is easy to understand that from such an enormous business there must be a great profit to those who busy themselves in the poultry business, and if it were possible for me to get at the daily sales, and of which no account is taken, 1 am snre we should arrive at wonderful and fabulous figures; but although these United States are so rich in grain, mineral, lumber, and the different commercial productions, the first among which may be placed the raising of cattle, ete., yet they are obliged to send to Europe for a part of the 22 necessary quantity of eggs to meet the demand, a thing almost impossible to believe, yet it is unfortunately but too true, and I could hardly believe it, until 1 had re- ceived it from the Hon. Ed. Youngs, Chief of the Bureau of the Government Statistics at Washington— several reports, which, unfortunately, are too sparsely scattered through the States—and one of these reports shows me that there was imported into -the United States during a period of eleven months in 1872, 5,025,958 dozens of eges, being worth $688,796, and during the same time in 1873, 5,467,264 dozens, and worth $732,234. This increase is again repeated in previous years, not necessary to enumerate, for it wonld make these statistics wearisome. So it can be easily seen that there is no danger of overstocking the markets, and I firmly believe that the consumers would rather have their eggs fresh than coming from Europe, as the voyage would not improve their flavor. After having read these figures, one can fancy the astonishment of my friends, the readers, that so lucrative a business is not more generally followed and better managed. Why poultry does not take its place among other industries and occupy that rank which it ought to among commercial affairs is, that the thing is too simple ; and if I was to tell a father with two sons to teach them a trade of some sort, he would very likely reply they may be doctors or lawyers, and if I was to ask him the question: “Have you any fortune? or, have your sons any disposition for those professions? he would reply: “Not much; and I don’t know if they are so inclined;” and suppose I hazarded the advice: ‘Have them taught the art of raising poultry,” I should make that man my enemy, and he might ask me if I took him for a madman. 23 Don’t get angry, my friend, I might justly say, for it is not every one who can raise poultry with profit. Gen- erally every farmer raises some poultry, and his wife and children attend to this little affair; he must go to the field and tend his corn, ete.; talk to him of these crops, it is all right ; he may have a large barn to hold his crops, while he will have some old shed, dirty, etc., for his poultry, and they must hunt for their living, or at best, are only fed once a day. If you should visit any of the farmers, how seldom do you see a pail of water for the fowls? No; the thing is very rare, and seldom the owner will spend a cent to build a fowl house; he would sooner put his money in the bank. Some will invest in railroad bonds that traverse the wilds of this vast country, and are fifty years before they pay any interest. Is it not so? While on the other hand his poultry might bring him in two hun- dred per cent. Poultry has always been a source of revenue to the French people, as the following figures will prove: In France there are about 40,000,000 hens valued at $20,000,000. One-fifth are marketed yearly for the table, bringing about $4,000,000 ; the annual production of chickens, 80,000,000, worth in the city markets $24,000,000, and $2,000,000 are added for the extra value of capons and fatted hens. The production of eggs is estimated at 40,000,000, making the total value of eggs, chickens, capons and hens annually sold, about $80,000,000, or $2 22 to every man, woman and child in France. The power to make much out of little, and to live frugally on small means and with limited re- sources to fall back upon, is the distinguishing trait of the French people and one well worth emulating. The eges imported from France to England in 1874 reprs- a 24 sented a value of $1,200,000, and from Belgium $300,000. The New York Herald was the first newspaper that published the particulars of my discovery, I was over- whelmed with letters and visitors. Several Agricul- tural Societies invited me to their fairs, and accordingly I attended Queens County, Suffolk County, Saratoga, Albany, American Institute, and New York State fair at Rochester, where the crowd of people appeared as- tonished and very much interested. At each of these exhibitions I had six apparatuses In operation, conse- quently I received a great many compliments on both my Incubator and the Mother, and I was also asked to give lectures on my system, which I was obliged to de- cline owing to my inability to speak English. The principal journals sent me their reporters who gave long and minute descriptions of my system, resulting in my being obliged to give increased numbers of per- mits to visit my establishment. It soon became very inconvenient to be incommoded every .day by visitors, even the Sabbath not being always respected ; so I was obliged to strictly limit the time of exhibiting my apparatus. During the Centennial it will be in the Agricultural Hall building, Column C. After the Cen- tennial I propose to have it on exhibition in New York. Persons interested in this can send me their address at my Box, 5470, General Post Office, New York, and I will send them an invitation. I also sent invitations to alk the fancy breeders, about 2,700 in number, many of them coming over 200 miles to see me. “I give in my circular several good extracts taken from long and interesting articles published by several newspapers most competent to judge of the merits of my invention. These articles proved very interesting 25 to the public, if Iam to judge from the thousands of letters politeness required me to answer, and it would require a book ten times as large as this to answer all the questions that were asked in these communications, and hence I am under the necessity of dilating upon many matters which to some of my readers may ap- pear trivial. The information I have sought to convey will, I trust, be eminently practical though unadorned by any literary embellishment. I think it will not be long before this state of things will change, for I find every day that the hatching and raising of poultry is receiving serious ameliorations. Already many people have adopted my system, not only in the United States, but also in Europe, from where I get orders. The New York Sun of the 3rd of July 1876, had a long editorial in reference to artificial incu- bations, and mentioned a gentleman in New Jersey who has invested $60,000 in the poultry business. The time is not very far distant when the capitalists will seek to invest their funds in this business, the only one where there are no risks to run. Our farmers also will learn to employ their time in Winter I trust, and will find more than enough profit in the sale of their Spring chickens to pay for the manure they will require in the culture of their fields for the ensuing year, and which I think they will allow is sufficient remuneration for the trouble they may have taken. The time will come when we shall see signs in all the cities, ‘Chicken Manufactory,” and every family who has a house will raise its own poultry the same as it now makes its bread, butter and cheese. I know of a good many countrymen, who, I am sure will not be sorry to give up his pork and beef. 3 26 Many of my readers may be astonished that the farmers have not thought of using manure for hatching out young chickens, since nearly 100 years have passed since Reaumur promulgated his discoveries to the world. Helas! Yes, itis true, but then you know it was such a simple thing and so easy to do that no one would bother with it, and especially as no one could be found to puff it, and nothing to be made in giving it the publicity it deserved, whilst a machine with lamps (there was some chance of making a business of it with enormous profit for the maker) received its due amount of brag. Chance, however, is sometimes the origin of many things, and now and then clears away the clouds that lead to fortune. J had just finished my experiments when I read in the Commercial Advertiser of New York, of the 25th of June, 1874, the following : ARTIFICIAL INCUBATION. “A lady residing near the Sisters’ Hospital keeps a half dozen or more hens, and has been astonished at the strange manner in which a nest full of eggs was hatched. A quantity of manure had been thrown from the stable, and yesterday the children heard young chickens in this pile. They at once called the attention of their mother to the fact, who, to solve the mystery, directed that the heap be pulled down. When this was done, a short distance from the surface a cavity was discovered in which were nine little chicks. ‘The hen had managed to make her nest in the heap, and after laying eleven eggs, the opening had been closed by the stablemen piling on more of the cleanings from the stable. The warmth generated in the heap had incubated the eggs, and nine of the eleven hatched out. This may be a discovery which some one may turn to account.”—Paterson Guardian. 27 The Inventor. I sincerely hope that all those who. have fowls will not hesitate to hatch some eggs in manure; and as I am certain they will derive a handsome profit from doing so. Before concluding this little work I ask per- mission to give the biography of the Hon. M. de Reau- mur, who was the first to make this great discovery. René Antoine Ferchault de Reaumur was born at La Rochelle, France, the 28th of February, 1682. After having graduated at Bourges, his fortune allowed him to pursue the study of the sciences to which his inquir- ing mind led him. The early part of his life was given to the useful arts, and it is to him that France owes her manufactures of steel and tin. Opaque glass was also his invention, but the work that has rendered his name immortal is called “Mémoires pour servir & Vhistoire des insectes,” 6 volumes, 1734-1742. These memories reveal in each page the exact and minute details of the caterpillar, moth, butterfly, grub, fly and bee. He was still employed on his work when he met with an accident at his estate of Brémontier, in Maine, which hastened his end, and he died October 17th, 1757. He had collected a splendid assortment of insects which he left to the Academy of Sciences, of which he was a member. Reaumur also published works upon shells, upon the artificial hatching of eggs by heat, and upon the keeping of eggs by means of ereasing them. In 1731 he constructed a thermometer, to which his name still remains. 28 The Sort of Manure—How to Use It. The manure to be used for hatching eggs or raising the young chickens must be taken from horses fed with grain, (the manure of a horse fed only on grass or hay having very little heat in it) and it ought to be several days in the manure yard, or even a month, and it might be advantageously mixed with that of the mule, which contains a great deal of heat; this is not actually ne- cessary, but as some of my readers no doubt will have mules, especially in the South, 1 have thought it neces- sary to mention this fact. The manure ought to be pure, that is to say, any extraneous matter such as old rags must be shaken out so that nothing but the fine straw and the dung well mixed, is used. That which has lain all the Winter in the yard and become frozen and full of snow and ice, cannot be used with success unless the sun has melted them and the heap has been turned over. That taken from the middle of the pile where it is not frozen, may of course be utilized. For artificial incubation the manure must be handled with as much care as a skillful gardener uses in making a hot bed for his plants, and the building best suited to place the apparatus in is one in which the air circulates freely, and without a boarded floor; the temperature ought to be as near equal as possible, a building coy- ered with glass being consequently unsuitable, that is to say that when a heap of manure is placed in such a building, the sun shining on it increases the heat con- siderably, while at night the temperature is lowered several degrees, thus causing endless trouble in regu- lating it. This difficulty I experienced at the Albany Fair where the Agricultural Society placed at my dispo- 29 sal their splendid Floral Hall, built entirely of glass, but I found the heat 120 deg. during the day, and hence it became no easy matter to maintain my appa- ratus at the desired temperature. The Society there- fore erected a special building into which I removed my apparatus, this considerate act of kindness relieving me of all further anxiety in this direction. One must therefore have as plain a building as possible, for no other heat is required than that derived from the heap of manure, and that is even more than sufficient, for it will retain its temperature for 40 or 50 days without varying a great deal, and the reader, who wishes to try my system, can place in the middle of such a building a heap of manure, six feet square, taking the precau- tion of forking it over carefully and handling it as be- fore mentioned, being careful not to tread on the manure. It ought to be packed closely, but not trodden down, and when the heap is 18 inches deep the hatch- ing apparatus is placed in the middle; a barrel or a box of any description will answer, but the wood must not be too thick (a flour barrel is as good a thing as any) and there must be a cover on it and a system of ventilation arranged to regulate the heat, after which it must be carefully covered with manure to make the heap square. After two days one ought to have about 120 deg. of heat, but it would be imprudent to place the eggs in the receptacle or box with which he wishes to make the experiment either of hatching or rearing the chicks, but care must be taken to diminish the heat to 100 deg. or 102 deg. ; then the eges may be placed in it and kept at 102 to 105 degs., care being taken to take them out every day to cool, and to exclude frost from the building, for the sudden change from hot to cold we-ild kill the bird in the shell, but still they must 3C 30 have air, for air is the life of the chick, and conse- quently if the raiser finds the hatch amounts to only five or six out of thirteen or sixteen eggs placed under the setting hen, the fault is generally from the close setting of the hen, and this malady is such that it fre- quently happens they die on the nest. It is therefore necessary that every one who makes a business of poultry raising should take the setting hen off her nest and feed her or turn the eggs. The feed- ing should not take longer than 20 minutes. It being proved that air is indispensable, one must therefore give it to the egg while in process of hatching, the same as if it were covered by the hen. Artificial hatching is only imitating nature, and therefore it is important that whatever nature requires must be imitated in the minutest details, no matter how simple it appears, for often on what appears to be but a trifle, success de- pends. I cannot too strongly recommend those who make a business of poultry, to entrust to only one per- son, and that a reliable one, the management of the Incubator as well as the care of the poultry. No other business more imperatively demands the services of an employee in whom implicit confidence can be placed. During my residence in London I have frequently known capitalists engaged in the raising of poultry. I visited one fine establishment and refused the manage- ment of it because it was too difficult to oversee the hands employed, and after spending more than $200,- 000 the stockholders withdrew. I therefore say to all those who wish to engage in the poultry business that they ought especially to work themselves, if not, suc- cess is impossible, for there are a hundred indispensa- ble points, the non-observance of which will inevitably entail failure. ol The Best Breed. I have frequently been asked what breed of hens is the best? ‘This question is very difficult to answer, from the fact that ail depends upon the purpose for which they are kept, whether for profit or pleasure. To those who keep them only for pleasure I do not wish to give any advice, as taste and color are a mere mat- ter of fancy, but to those who wish to make money out of them I would say that in a warm climate and where eggs are the main object, I would prefer the Leghorns, as they are good layers but bad setters, and even to those who wish to use incubators, the eggs of these hens give chickens difficult to fatten, and they never weigh enough, and as poultry is sold by weight, there is nothing to be made by them; but if, cn the contrary, it is desired to market them, the White Bramah or Buff Cochins should be selected, which give nice chick- ens, easily raised and readily fattened. ‘There are cer- tainly other excellent varieties, but the two that I have recommended are my choice, and I only state what my long experience has proved. I have had some of every desirable sort, and I am certain all the raisers of poul- try are of my opinion. One of the most essential points is to feed hens with the least possible expense, especially where a large number is kept; this is a very important point, and the poultry raiser will do well to keep it steadily in view. The farmer who has 50 or 60 hens is satisfied to throw them a few handsful of corn every day, but when one makes a business of 14, it becomes a much more serious affair. I can rot too strongly recommend as food, the refuse from the hotel kitchens for laying hens, but it should never be given to the young chickens, there be- 52 ing nothing so bad as meat for them. I was foolish enough to follow the advice in a contrary direction, given in a work, the name of which I withhold out of politeness, but I paid dearly for it in the loss of an in- numerable quantity of chickens. Meat does not digest quickly enough and cannot find a passage as quickly as meal; the consequence is, that after a few days the chickens die. This great mortality caused me to make many researches in other books; finally I wrote to several newspapers in Europe, and one of them sent me the foilowing: Diseased Feet in Chickens. Under the above heading we find in the London Fancier’s Gazette of Nov. 6, a communication from M. Leno, an old and somewhat famous brecder of chick- ens, in which he says: “During the last twenty-six years I nave been solici- ted by near neighbors to unravel, if possible, the mys- tery of diseased feet in chickens, which included young turkeys, pheasants and poultry. I found the toes of many completely eaten off, some crumpled up with sores, others with toes turned under the foot, and of course many deaths, as they could scarce move about. I made the most careful in¢uiries of the several indi- viduals as to the food given to them, and in every case I found a large quantity of animal food was being used. I owdered the meat to be discontinued at once, the result of which was that not a single bird feli with the disease that had not been fed with the meat, prov- ing to my mind that the disease was caused through the too liberal use of animal food; and the other cases J inspected were similarly affected to mine. My opiuion, founded on long experience as regards so-cailed cramp in young pheasants and poultry, is that it is caused by a too bountiful supply of animal food, and not by wet ground. I know many game and 33 . poultry rearers will believe me to be on the wrong scent; but when so-called cramp makes its appearance, reduce the quanty of animel food and note the result. J am not against the use of animal food, for I know, if judiciously and sparingly used, it is a very great help ; but overdo it, and the result will prove very disastrous.’ Infectious Water for Chickens. Several persons having poultry keep pigeons also. This practice is prejudicial to the hens, ete., and as it is imprudent not to take every precaution, I will quote one case. A resident of Staten Island called upon me and requested me to pay a visit to his poultry yard ; all his stock, he said, were sick, and the mortal- ity very great. I felt it to be my duty to assist him with my experience, so I-went to his house, which I must say was kept in anything but a proper manner, and I found he had seven or eight hundred hens of different kinds, and very badly chosen were they. After having examined thirty or forty of them I told this un- fortunate breeder to change the water in the drinking fountains. He took the water from a cistern and I asked him where the water came from that filled it, and he said from the roof of the hen house. Now as there were more than one hundred pigeons on it continually, it was apparent that every shower of rain washed their manure into this cistern, and that the water he gave his fowls contained a strong acid and was acting on them as a slow poison. I ordered a purgative, pure water and to change the food, and the following week the sickness had disappeared ; therefore if you keep pigeons give the fowls water from a well. Many persons believe every egg contains a chick; those who do so, labor under a great mistake. If ] wish to offer a friend a pure egg I would give him one 34 from a hen fed on corn and from a yard where no roost- ers are kept; but if on the contrary I wish to hatch them, I would take them from one where there were several and which were fed on hotel refuse, especially in the Winter season, for then only a few are fit for hatching, for two reasons. Ist. At that season nature is sluggish. 2nd. That the hens remain nearly all day on the roost and the roosters have not the same chance as when they are running in the yard. Every one who has the requisite knowledge to raise poultry with profit, takes the precaution to double the number of the roost- ers that run with their hens in winter, and every day to drive the hens out of the house to pass a few hours in a yard or piece of ground near the poultry house, covered in with glass so that the sun may enter. In. ordinary calculations twice two makes four, except in the poultry business, when nearly always twice two only make three; that is to say, any one having 100 hens will find they give them a profit, but if they have 200 they will find generally a loss unless well posted in this matter. In keeping hens there is a right way and a wrong one, and very few know the right one; the art of raising poultry with profit depends on a number of little things, essential points, which put together, lead the raiser either to ruin or a fortune, and I hope that my experience will be of use to others, for I firmly be- lieve few are disposed to make the sacrifice that I have, and the reader will find in this little book all that I have been able to collect in the way of valuable information from the principal breeders and authors, but I don’t think any of them have been able to discover a way to hinder the hen from sitting, at least. With my system they sit on!y a few days, and this is the rational of the process. 55) | Hens Sitting only Six Days. Having always eggs in my apparatus, directly a hen wishes to sit I give her those taken from the apparatus and which in consequence have passed thirteen or fif- teen days in incubation by the heat of the manure, therefore the hen has only to finish the hatching already begun. I then leave her ten days with the young chick- ens. After this time she is put back again in the poul- try house ; hence, instead of losing three months of her laying she only loses fifteen days, and for those who have a great many hens this is of great importance. The chickens are then placed in the raising department where there are hundreds of young ones of every age. To lead a regiment like this to the fields, I placed in the poultry house a mother selected for the purpose ; she guarded all my ducklings, chickens, young turkeys, every variety of breed and color, and nothing was more pleasing than to see her, a fine White Bramah walking about with four or five hundred little ones, and when she rested one might see her surrounded like a general with his staff, and at night she stretched her wings, so ambitious was she to try and cover them all; but the greater number went of themselves under the artificial mothers. I therefore advise all those who raise poultry artificially to follow this plan, and if unable to get so good a hen, when the chickens are two days in the arti- ficial mother, to place two or three young chickens a little older with them, and whether they come from the mother or the artificial one, these will act as school- masters, and will teach them to eat and drink and run in the yard. One ought never to let a hen and her young ones, or those out of the artificial mother, go out until the sun has dried up the dew with which the grass 36 is covered every morning. Another point to which I would call attention, is the method of discovering whether an egg is fertilized or not; people generally take the egg to a candle either before or after it is placed under the hen; some place it in a bowl of water and say that if it sinks it is impregnated, and if it swims, itis not. ‘The surest way is this: How to tell whether Eggs are Fertilized. After the eggs have been hatching five or six days either under a hen or in an incubator, take a lamp into a darkened room and hold the egg before the light; if it is fertilized it will show a small black speck, and in turning the egg round with the fingers you will perceive that it moves. (In about twelve hours can be discerned the commencement of organization in the gelatinous spot called the germ, which is always in the upper part of the yolk whatever the position of the egg. At the end of the first day the head and the back bone can be distinguished ; at the end of the second the vertebral and the heart; the third contributes to the develop- ment of the heart and the breast; the fourth to that of the eyes and liver; on the fifth the stomach and kid- neys are Seana the sixth the lungs and_skin ; the seventh the intestines and the beak ; ane eighth ie bladder of the gall and the verticles of cae ey the ninth the wings and legs, and on the tenth day all the parts which are necessary to complete the bird are in their place, and are developed and attain during the following days their proper size.) Jf on the contrary this speck is stationary, that is to say stuck to the shell, the chick-is dead; all eggs that have not this black speck are clear and still good to eat. You can never- theless assure yourself of this fact by breaking two 37 eges into a cup; that with the black speck will show a little blood, while that without it will not have this. This black speck will be much larger when the roosters are in good condition. It often happens that eggs are left in the nests of the hens and consequently are sat upon several days, and if these eggs are kept a day or two before being placed to hatch, this interval is suff- cient to kill the chick which has already begun to form ; therefore the eggs ought to be gathered twice a day from all the nests, care being taken not to shake them. Twenty days after being laid an egg cannot be put to hatch with any certainty of success. The dura- tion of time is the same for hatching eggs in an incu- bator as under the hen, thus—hens’ eggs take 21 days, ducks 28, turkeys 29, Guinea hens 27, pea hens 30, and geese 32. Fresh eggs are generally one or two days earlier. ) | Twenty Dollars Profit from each Hen. A savant has said that to eat an egg is like eating an unripe fruit, and I am going to try and demonstrate what truth there isin his reasoning. Let us take for example the hen; she lays, we will say, on an average, 130 eggs annually ; she sits on, say 12, and hatches out of this number, seven or eight chickens ; there remains 118 which are not sat upon and in consequence have not become flesh to eat; if the raiser has sold these eggs at two cents each, it is because he did not know how to convert them into chickens which could be sold at from 50 to 60 cents each. Now let us see the differ- ence as a business transaction: If all the eggs were turned into chickens instead of being sold as eggs at two cents each, it being understood that the hen sat upon 12 eggs, we must only place the figures upon 4 38 those that were turned into poultry; thus 118 eges at two cents each give $2 36. Now let us suppose them hatched out by means of an incubator ; there would be about 100 of them that would reach the market; allow for cost of feeding them, $10; one cannot of course expect that they would all live so we will allow 10 per cent. for deaths, etc., there still would remain 90 chick- ens at 50 cts. each, making $45 00, from which sum we must deduct their value as eggs, $2 36, food $10, and we will say for labor, etc., another $10 00, making a total of $22 386 to be deducted, leaving over $20 00 that a hen might be made to make as profit. The reader may perhaps be surprised in looking over these figures, and perhaps more astonished that we have not a larger established poultry business; but to arrive at this it will take a longer time than one would suppose. For more than twenty-five years meat might have been ‘imported into England, and yet it is only this year that a good method of preservation has been discovered. I really hope that in the next century they will call us savages for having compelled a hen to sit 21 days on ler eggs just to give her 102 deg. of heat; it certainly would be more humane and more advantageous for the raiser to let her lay eggs. My Apparatus. I would have liked in this work to have given some details about my apparatus, that is to say, its propor- tions and dimensions, how it is made, how to place the egos in it, how it is managed, and how the incubator is changed into an artificial mother that is able to cover the chicks one day old as well as those of a month, which are naturally larger, but I have not done so, be- cause with each apparatus I send out a guide which a9 fully explains all this, and I am sure that every con- scientious reader will understand that for the price at which this book is sold I cannot give every one the facility to make an apparatus to save the few dollars that he would have to pay me for my patent, while I have passed several years and expended a fortune to periect the invention. When I allowed every one to see them there were some unscrupulous persons, who after coming to see me two or three times and causing mie much annoyance and loss of time, had apparatuses made very nearly like mine. Dishonest persons are fonnd everywhere, but so are honest ones, and my thanks are due to one of the latter who informed me that his neighbor had infringed my patent right, and my lawyers made this man pay dearly for his audacity., A Mr. I. of P., after having written several letters to me, asked where he could see an apparatus in the neighborhood ; without suspecting his design I gave him the address of one person; he went twice to see him and caused him a great deal of trouble, as he had some eggs hatching at the time; by continually opening the cover he deranged the temperature ; this person wrote to tell me not to send him any more curious people as it was very disagreeable to him and contrary to my interests, as this visitor also made an apparatus after the model of the one he saw in operation. This is very discouraging and necessitates great vigilance in guarding my own interests. I have no desire to pre- vent any intelligent man from reaping the benefits of my discovery ; I shall be only too happy to assist him, providing he remembers that there are laws that protect patent rights. The number of inventors who have died poor is considerable, and I do not propose to be- come an addition thereto. I am not acquainted with * 40 . any one connected with the newspapers or in any soci- ety, neither am I indebted to any one for the awards I have received in appreciation of my labors, and if the papers have devoted whole columns to my discovery it is simply because it was interesting to their readers and not on any account because it was intended to oblige me. All the intelligent readers will see in scan- ning the lists of the papers which have commented on my apparatus, that they are journals whose managing staff of editors it is impossible unduly to influence or to buy. To the Ladies. The husband generally, is supposed to be the bread earner of the family, and I now call your attention seriously to the following: Every mother is more or less troubled for the future welfare of their families, and I would not wish them to lose sight of this fact. I have known many families who were very comfortable during their husband’s life, but at his death are placed in straitened circumstan- ces, if not in actual poverty. What business can the mother follow if she has been the wife of a merchant’s clerk and able to keep her own servants, but the re- quirements of position have prevented her from saving anything, and whenewer misfortune comes it is neces- sary to have the means of living and educating the children? How much better is it to anticipate such a crisis and to begin as soon as possible to have a certain income? Hngage in the poultry business, and when you have sold the first $500 worth your fortune is made; for should misfortune arrive all that you have to do is to increase the number of your hens. However grievous the loss of the husband may be, 4] and whenever it may happen, you may be sure he would bless you for securing the welfare of his children and driving that gaunt dog, poverty, from the door; and even should not death, but commercial panics, which are a most frequent cause of misery, cause a change of living, your poultry will supply all the necessaries of life, and I should be happy if I knew that this advice had been followed. . Already has the example been set in Europe by sev- eral ladies, who certainly would never require assist- ance from the raising of poultry, and yet are not ashamed to acknowledge that they do receive a large profit from this pursuit, and have great pleasure and satisfaction in devoting their time and intelligence to it. Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, of England, has a splendid poultry house and spends numerous days in studying, with great attention, the different remedies for ameliorating the condition of poultry, and we are indebted to her for the system of feeding which she has pursued for young turkeys, so as to avoid the great mortality that takes place when they get the red. This receipt has been regarded by those who are engaged in turkey raising, a8 a very superior remedy. But a long time before some people had presented to her Majesty the discovery of this receipt, we had made use of it and recommended it already. Further on more ex- planation will be found. We find also that the example set by Queen Victoria has been followed in France by the Countess d’Albertas and the lovely Marchioness Bugean de la Tour de Pin, Antonie Passy, Cora Millet, Marie la Barriere de St Polen Garret, etc. Madame la Baronne de Leinas, widow of an officer without fortune, and six children, became immensely wealthy in raising poultry, and al- 42 ready two of her accomplished daughters are married to men of the first rank and position. The fortune of Madame de Leinas is daily and steadily increasing from this source. Amount of Profit to be Made by 12 Hens. I have not wished by misrepresentation to sell at a high price a complicated incubator, or one that is often too difficult and dangerous for a great number of persons to direct. Many persons, especially ladies, have asked me what success and profit they might hope to attain with twelve hens and one of my apparatuses, and my reply has been, although somewhat difflcult to assume as circumstances always alter cases, and many things are to be taken into consideration, yet the following result could easily be attained: If the hens are two years old they will give altogether in a year about 1,200 egos, allowing 10 per cent. for clear eggs (eggs not fertile) the remaining 1,080, if we only allow a success of 800 hatched, and deducting 25 per cent. for deaths and accidents, there would remain to be sold as Spring chickens 600, which, if sold direct to the consumer, ought to bring at least $500, expenses deducted. Is not this money very easily and pleasantly earned ? If you think we have exaggerated in this statement we will allow you to reduce our figures, and tell us is there any lawful business that will pay so well as the poultry ? Anyhow, we may not be of sufficient weight to plead this cause, but remember, that all those who have writ- fen or spoken on this subject, and in favor of poultry, have sufficiently demonstrated the profit of it. On re- ferring to Mr. Burnham’s new poultry book (page 77), 43 I find the following account of Mr. De Sora’s estab- lishment: The quantity of eggs during the last year averaged 50,000 dozen weekly, which, with the sales made of his yearly chickens, yielded him $280,000 gross. His expenses, all told, were some $145,000, leaving him a profit of $135,000 for the year. How to Establish a Poultry Yard with $1,000 Capital. Is it wise to employ a large capital in the business? No, and I should severely blame any one who did it; hence, to those desirous of undertaking the poultry business, I would impress upon them the wisdom of limiting their investment to $1,000 or $1,200, and this amount I would dispose of as follows: To rent of farm or a country house for six mo cara ne na Hag. Sci). i sic phs, da garb oueie hla aiele $300 00 ** building a hen house...... Sana Nota ase: stat 200 00 = purchase. of 100 hens, ete; 20a. see 150 00 7‘ i i ROS TOORLET Ens oars oats weese SG 40 00 pe apparatus Or TOO eras... oi AS eae 207 50 “* carting and placing manure............. 20 00 Sige AUTOR AB OC, oOo ae Fa a0 Vascre «hil Sala Gara 50. 00 Pagmbe PMG MUSEU ths. coh 2.25 5 ake aps eet es 10 00 “Watemee, Casi ans Mane so. oss oo Oe ko ee 222 50 Miata attest oe cats $1,200 00 One hundred hens would give 40 to 60 eggs per day, and as it takes 21 days for incubation, the result is that a set of apparatuses of 1000 eggs would leave an appa- ratus of 100 eggs free every two days. It may happen that the hens do not lay regularly the number of eggs given above to keep the incubator fully employed; in that case the raiser could utilize three or four apparatu- ses as artificial mothers, which in truth would be ne- df cessary after the firsthatching ; thus I would recom: mdnd for a set of 1000 eggs, six as incubators and four as mothers ; for a set of 500 eggs, three as incubators and two as mothers. This facility of converting the apparatus either into an incubator or mother, meets the wants, of the breeder according to the season. Lancy breeders will save a great deal of money if in the hatching season they have an apparatus ready. Those who do not wish to let their hens sit 21 days might give them eggs that have been several days in the incu- bator, which is done after the eggs have been cooled. As a mother, the apparatus will render important ser- vice. Each time that a hen lets her chicks get cold or wet the apparatus would give them more comfort than a hen could by any possibility. The “Mother” is scientifically arranged so that the chicks cannot smoth- er themselves, and in it they get every part of tleir bodies warmed. PRACTICAL RULES NECESSARY FOR Making Money Acquired by Twenty Years Experience, A few rules applied to the management of laying hens will insure a full supply of eggs throughout the year. But the small number of rules and their sim- plicity makes it imperative that they be understood and applied. Hens require some care and attention. Unless their owner is willing to see to his hens he had better not have them. 1. Hens must have comfortable and convenient quarters in winter. Most people keep too many hens for the accommodations they furnish them. Hens are naturally active animals, and when confined in winter quarters require plenty of room. Fifty hens and five roosters, of all ordinary breeds, should have a house 24x16 in the clear, and 10 feet high in the clear. This will allow about 70 cubic feet of space for each fowl, which is little enough. No class of animals is so sus- ceptible to the ill effects of crowding as the feathered class. Hens will not lay when too much crowded, nox 46 will they remain healthy long if too many are kept together. The building should be well ventilated by chimney without admitting any gusts or draughts of wind. It should face the south, if possible, and have several windows in front. Where the weather gets very cold it will be well to have the whole front glazed and have a stove inside. Hens cannot lay unless they are kept comfortable, and when the temperature falls to 10 deg., or lower, they require a little artificial heat. This heat must be carefully managed ; a little fire only should be kept, and it should be as steady as possible. Uniformity of temperature is what is wanted. The houses must be kept clean and neat. The floors should be swept every day, and be dusted over with dry earth, “ ashes, chaff, short straw, or litter of any kind that can be easily removed. Every hen house should have plenty of suitable roosts. There should be a shallow box or bin in one corner—a sunny corner is best—con- taining dry earth, ashes, chip-dirt, or a mixture of them, for the hens to wallow in. They enjoy their bath in winter as much as in summer. Where oyster shells cannot be easily procured, there should be a box con- taining gravel within reach of the fowls. A sufficient number of nest-boxes with glass nest eggs in them, several shallow vessels for water, and a feed trough will complete the necessary outfit for the hen house. A very important adjunct to the hen house is an open shed where the fowls can stay at pleasure when the weather is not too cold. Such a shed should protect the hens from the prevailing winds. 2. When the house with all the necessary fixtures is ready for the stock, the next consideration is to have the right breed. Almost any breed will do tolerably well with proper usage ; but there is a great difference 47 in the laying qualities of fowls. Under the same con- ditions, some breeds will lay twice or thrice as many egos. in a given time as others. As a rule, the smaller breeds are the best layers; and of the smaller breeds the Leghorns are preferable for several reasons: They lay a full medium-sized egg, are enormous layers, are docile and easily restrained, and have a yellow skin. Of the large breeds the Brahmas are the best layers. A cross of Leghorn rooster on light Brahma hens will be satisfactory. When one wishes to make eggs a specialty, only pallets should be kept for the purpose, and the earlier they are hatched the better. Don’t keep hens over more than one winter, unless for some good reason. 3. When the proper accommodations are furnished and the proper breeds selected, the next and most im- portant step is the feeding. Egg-production is hard work for hens, especially for those that are large layers. An egg is a highly organized and complex substance. It is for the most part composed of albu- minous matters and oils and fats, together with fibrin, phosphorus, sulphur, iron, etc.,in small but appreciable quantities. An egg is a potential chicken. The hatch- ing process adds nothing to the contents of the egg, but only develops the chick from the substance already there. Thus, in an egg there is the material for bones, flesh, brain, nerves, feathers, and all the organs of life. Hence ege-production, considered physiologically, is an exhaustive process, when hens lay regularly and con- stantly. Furthermore, the shells of eggs are com- posed almost exclusively of carbonate of lime. When a hen lays freely she requires a supply of the raw ma- terial from which to secrete this carbonate, and it should be furnished to her at all times. Is it any 48 wonder, then, that hens, as they are ordinarily kept, de not lay in winter? Their food must contain the mate rials from which they secrete eggs, or they cannot lay, Probably nine-tenths of all the poultry in the country is fed on raw, whole corn. We know that corn con- tains all the elementary substances that eggs do, but in very much smaller quantities, bulk for bulk, and when a hen has no other food she cannot eat enough to afford the materials for an egg a day, or every otherday. She will get fat and lazy, but cannotlay. Hence the necessity for a variety of diet. In summer, when at liberty, the hens can find the variety of food that suits them, and generally lay well without much care; but in winter they can get only what is given them, and generally they do not lay. But if we know the wants of the hens, and supply them, we may have as many eggs in winter aS in summer. Poultry are large consumers of erass when they can get it, and to keep in good health ' they must have it, or its equivalent, in winter. Cab- bages or boiled vegetables of any kind are good sub-' stitutes. Grass, if cut green and carefully dried in the shade, when cut fine and steeped a while in hot water, is nearly as good as green grass, and is eagerly eaten in winter. Besides grass, or its equivalent, we must give a supply of lime. Oyster shells, when they can be had, are the most convenient ; when they cannot be had, ordinary stone lime from the kilns will do as well, after it has been slaked, but gravel must be supplied with the latter form of lime. Domestic poultry must be classed among the omnivorous animals. There is nothing that can be eaten that a hen will not eat if she ean have it—any kinds of odds and ends therefore will not come amiss—and much refuse matter, that would otherwise be wasted, may thus be turned to good ac- \ 49 count. Hens are very large consumers in proportion to their size, and scanty feeding in winter will not do. They should have as much as they want to eat and as often as they want it, especially when they are laying well. They should be supplied with animal food in some form—offal meat, cracklings, chandler’s scraps, sour thick milk, etc., will give the necessary supply. It thus appears that an egg is a complex substance ; that it is composed of the highest products of secre- tion; that ege-production is an exhaustive process to the hen; that to produce them in large quantities we must supply the proper variety of diet, and plenty of it; and to keep up the health and strength of the hens they must have green food and animai food in winter. I have made out a bill of fare for my hens, based on physiological princip'es, keeping in view the composi- tion of the egg itself and the health and comfort of the hen. I will not oceupy space in showing why this is in accordance with theoretical principles or analytic results. Ido not claim that itis the best or the only way to feed hens, but it has answered so well with me that I do not know how to alter it for the better. This is how I feed: Their morning feed consists of cracked (very coarsely ground) corn, wheat, oats, or corn and wheat bran, scalded, and fed warm in a trough. This is given them as soon as they can see to eat. As soon as they are fed I break up a pound of oyster shells for 35 heads. Then they have fresh water from the pump as mnch as they will drink. Fowls often suffer for water in winter. After their breakfast I give them about a pound of scraps or eracklings from the chandler’s shop. This is broken in pieces with a hatchet. It furnishes animal food and is cheap; I give two or three quarts of thick, sour 50 milk every day, with a handful or two of wheat bran stirred into it. Besides this, I feed some cabbage, or turnips, or potatoes, every day. At noon they have a little oats, or corn, as the case may be, and fresh water again, in clean vessels. At night, before roosting time, they get as much whole corn as they will eat, and fresh water again. I make it a rule to give as much as they will eat. A hungry hen will not be a laying hen. The greatest regularity should be observed in feeding and caring for flocks. Have a regular time for all the different operations, and the hens will become as me- thodical as their keepers. Eggs should be gathered punctually twice a day, or oftener in very cold weather. The morning feed should not be made too wet, and should not be given too het. In very cold weather it is advisable to put a little cayenne pepper and a sprinkle of salt in their morning food. Besides the above enumerated articles, the hens should have all the scraps from the table. They are very fond of them, and will turn them to better account than cats or dogs will. Let us recapitulate. Give your hens a reasonable share of your attention ; furnish suitable accommoda- tions ; get and keep the right breed ; save only pullets, the earliest hatch, foi laying. Furnish as great a vari- ety of diet as possible, and feed as much as they will eat. Give green food and animal food of some sort in winter. Keep the hens quiet and comfortable ; don’t allow them to be worried or frightened. Water is as important as food, and should be kept clean and fresh. These rules, intelligently applied, will secure an abund- ant supply of eggs at all times of the year. 51 Care of Sitting Hens. Ought hens to sit by themselves and apart from other sitters? This question is one to be answered rather from the standpoint of the convenience of the breeder than from any other. No doubt hens, if left to suit themselves, will choose a nest in some solitary corner ; but the habit is not one that is acquired by reason of any advantage to the constitution of the chicken, but from a dread of enemies. In the case of quiet stock, such as the Brahma, there is no need of separating the sitters, if at all inconvenient for the attendant. On the other hand, where many sitters are together, some extra care is necessary in arranging the nests so that every hen will know her own. The nests must be scattered widely about the apartment, for it will never be found that the hen which should occupy a nest in the upper right-hand corner of a room has deserted it for one in the lower left-hand corner. Also, if the nests look very unlike, the birds will observe the dis- tinction. The difference between a box open at top and a barrel turned on the side, is palpable enough to the dullest sitter. In our modern fowl houses, where a love of order prevails, the nest-boxes frequently look as much alike as two peas, and in that case wisps of straw or boughs of evergreens may be fastened in the immediate vicinity of a nest to enable the occupant to know her own. This, of course, must be done before the fowl has laid her laying out, so that the features of the vicinity may become firmly fixed in her “mind,” for birds, as well as men, have minds. The system of allowing each sitter a separate apart- ment has decided advantages in many cases. It is al- ways the best plan to follow, when the weather is warm 52 enough, to give each sitter a yard of her own, ten or twelve feet square to exercise in. By watching sitting hens at feed, when they have range and opportunity to follow their natural bent, it will be seen that they run around at a great rate, acting almost like mad, and seem determined to get as much exercise as possible in the short time allowed them. In this way their bowels are kept in good order. But when sitters, in order to keep laying hens from their nests, are confined in very small separate pens, they move around slowly, and in- stead of running and flapping their wings, they mope, and after merely satisfying their hunger, take to the nest again. Therefore, allow each sitter as large a yard as can be afforded. If you attempt the plan of separate confinement, then you will escape the evil of two hens quarreling for the same nest; layers cannot drop their eggs in a sitter’s nest, and, at the same time, the incubating hens are allowed pienty of exercise. Helving Chickens out of the Shell. It has been generally supposed that chicks that are shell-bound, or too weakly to get out without assistance, could not be saved, but an accidental discovery has put another face on the matter. Keep the egq in warm water (about 95 deg.) while the assistance is being rendered, and success may be hoped for. The shell must be cracked very gently, and the inner membrane very tenderly peeled off till the chick be at liberty, keeping all but the beak under water until nearly clear. The operation must be performed in a warm place, and tenderly, as if touching raw flesh ; and it will be found . that the water generally facilitates matters, liberating the membrane if glued to the chick, and enabling it to 53 be separated without loss of blood. The latter occur- rence, nine times out of ten, is fatal; but if the opera- tion be completed without blood flowing, suecess may _ be anticipated and the nearly dead chick may be put by the fire in flannel, or under the hen, if a quiet, good mother—under her at night, in any case—and next day may probably be as well as the others. Cooked Food for Poultry. An important question is the comparative value of raw and cooked food. That the latter is not natural is not a convincing reason, because to domestic animals the word has no application. They are in a peculiar condition in many respects, resulting from the long- continued influence of domestication. Besides, there is no objection to departing from the ordinary food of any animal, if the substitute can be shown to be as easy, or easier, of digestion. In reference to this point it must be decided by experiment. Now, the experiment has been imade over and over again. Swine have been fed with raw and with cooked corn in equal quantities, and the result, tested by weigning, is from 20 to 40 per cent. in favor of the cooked article. Some keepers are accustomed, with their fowls, to boil a part of the corn in the kernel, and they do well. However, it must be said that they soon tire of 1t, and cannot be induced to touch it if raw corn can be had. ‘The food is also sometimes steamed. However, sometimes raw food is better. The corn may be boiled upon the ear, thus saving the labor of shelling it. Itis more economical to boil corn in the kernel than when ground, as there is saved not only cost of grinding, but some labor in the cooking process ; for mush must be continually stirred, while corn in the 5E 54 kernel will not “burn down” if suffered to rest on a perforated plate for a few inches from the bottom of the kettle. It is claimed by some chemists that the food value of certain articles is increased by cooking, increasing the actual amount of nutritious substances in them. Another method of softening grains, sometimes em- ployed, is fermentation, which turns the starch of the grain into sugar, changing it into a substance more easily digested. Brewers’ grains are much given, but should be used only in alternation with whole grain, because they are too moist and purge the fowls. They are to be recommended in the rather rare cases—when costiveness is complained of. Keep the Chickens Growing. It is a mistaken policy to stint young fowls of rich food, and plenty of it, is what they need ; and no dan- ger of over-feeding, if they are growing and have their liberty. Old fowls that have their growth and are shut up, can easily be fed too much, but do not fail to feed the young ones all they will eat. A good feed of whole grain of some kind, just as late in the evening as they can see to eat it, is one of the means of making fine stock. Also give them a plentiful breakfast of soft food early in the morning. Let no food lie on the ground, or anything that will sour; it will be very likely to make the little chicks sick. A few cents worth of food, given at the proper season to a fine bird, may make several dollars difference in the price when you come to sell. It takes a certain quantity of food to keep up the waste of sustaining animal life; so every ounce of food properly digested, in addition to this actua) re- quirement, goes to increase the size of the fowl. Re- 55 member this, and never neglect the growing stock. Time lost here can never be regained. Neglect the little chicks, and you will surely see the effects of the neglect in the mature fowl. Artificial nest eggs may be prepared very simply by breaking a small hole in the round end of an ordinary egs, removing the contents and filling the shell with plaster paris, sufficiently moistened with water as to be easily poured into the shell; after it hardens, paste a piece of white paper over the hcle, or the hens will peck out the plaster paris and destroy the egg. It is easily made and will last a long time. It is advisable to always have such nest eggs, and fowls will not ac- quire the habit of eating their eggs; hens are also less liable to wander off and hide their nests when plenty of nest eggs are placed in the nests. Hens that Eat Eggs. The best way to break hens of egg-eating is to break their necks, and re-stock with birds that have not acquired the habit. Fowls that are expert in ege- eating first attack the shell with their bill. If it is a thin shell a few strokes will break it, and the rest is an easy job. If, however, the shell is a thick one, they generally fail to break it with their beak; they then begin to scratch in the nest, and, with their feet, throw the egg against the hard side of the box until it is broken. First of all, make hens lay hard-shelled eggs, so hard that they cannot be readily broken by a hen’s bill. This can be done by feeding freely with slaked lime, ground or broken bones, oyster shells, ete. To prevent breaking against the sides of the box, the nests should be high and lined upon the sides with cushions filled with hay or other soft material. Their only 56 chance then is that they may throw two eggs forcibly against each other. To prevent this take the nest egg away and gatner the eggs several times a day. It is a good plan to leave a few China eggs near the nest for them to work at, which will make their bills so sore that they will strike the real ege with less force. Evening Exercise for Yarded Fowls. During the summer, when fowls must be shut up on account of their roaming propensities, much of the ill effects of their imprisonment may be avoided if they are let out for a short period at evening. While out they may be watched, although there is little danger of their going into the garden, and they will find enough in the grass-plots to keep them busy. Indeed, it is sur- prising how beneficial this time of exercise is. The fowls, knowing that they are to have a chance to get out, are much more quiet during the day, and if regu- larity in letting them out and shutting them up be ob- _ served, they will return to their roosts without trouble. Ti is possible, also, that an hour at evening is nearly as good as a whole day, as far as the health of the flock is concerned ; for, if there is any special article of diet needed, they will hunt all the more diligently. It is for this reason that they will prefer the grass to the plowed land. By such an arrangement as this, large flocks can be kept in good condition, although shut up through the year. Dust Bath. By instinct all birds are taught the need of a dust or water bath for their well-being. They choose a shel- tered and sunny spot of fine, dry soil, in which they open their feathers and fill them with dust, which, ap- 57 plied often enough and in sufficient quantities, is death to all parasites which infest the plumage or skin. As the domestic fowl is not a native of a cold climate, it becomes necessary for us to supply the deficiency which exists during our winter season. This is readily ac- complished by the dust box, which every one who has fowls should provide. Fine road dust, coal ashes, sand, pulverized loam or clay even, are all very good, and with a sprinkling of flour of sulphur, constitutes as good a bath as can be desired. This should be placed in a sunny exposure of the room and kept dry and clean so that the fowls may enjoy its benefits when they choose. When poultry is kept in a yard, it is best to dig up a small corner occasionally, to let them hunt for worms and beetles, and then sow it in oats, and corn and lettuce. They also want a dusting place. a cure is effected, the parts should be dressed for a few days with McDougall’s Fluid Extract, diluted with three parts of water. As this affection is conta- gious, it is necessary to isolate the affected fowl. Feather Eating. This unnatural appetite, generally observed in the hen, is a source of great annoyance. It is probably the result of thirst, and also a want of exercise conse- quent upon close confinement. There seem to be no specific for this disgusting practice, as remedies which have cured in one instance have utterly failed in another. Indeed, it may be a question whether the cures which have supposed to result from the giving of remedies, have not rather been a natural withdrawing 19 of the disease itself than otherwise. External applica- tions would seem to be necessary in order to nauseate the unnatural appetite of the birds. The stumps of feathers should be extracted, and all the parts attached anointed with a stiff lather of carbolic soap. To give the birds occupation it is advisable to bury corn in the ground, or hang up a cabbage or lettuce by a string just within reach of the birds. A bran and linseed mash twice a week has been known to produce good effects. One fourth of a grain of acetate of morphia - daily, with a grain of calomel twice a week in addition is a good sedative. The drinking water should contain enough carbonate of potash to give it a decided alka- line taste. Raw bones crushed small, have been known to effect a cure and a sheaf of corn fodder thrown in the yards is said to be beneficial. It would be advisa- ble to seclude a fowl which manifests a wicked desire for this habit until the appetite becomes more natural from forgetfulness. The Poultry Bulletin says: From close observation, we very much doubt if it is the soft, bloody end of the feather that is craved for, but the light, webby portion. In all cases we find the crop filled with this portion of the feather, and we have a number of times checked the trouble by giving the fowls a supply of finely cut rowen grass or hay. Where fowls have a run on grass, winter and summer, they do not indulge in this trouble- some habit, even if they have no animal food at all ; but confine them to a yard or house, no matter how large, if there be no grass or hay within reach, the trouble scon commences. Another writer gives a rather novel method by which an incorrigible Patridge Cochin Cockerel was inadvert« 80 ently cured. After giving him up as incurable, he put him in a run with twenty or more cockerels weeded out for killing. Instead of submitting to his cannibal tastes, however, these strangers made it rather uncom- fortable for him, and to use an expressive Westernism, caused him to “gyrate round the yard like a Chinese joss with the jim-jams,” uttering doleful cries. He was completely cured, and never afterwards offered the first indignity to his hens. Perhaps, after all, a good thrashing like the above might prove a sovereign spe- cific for this offensive habit. Frost Bites. Large combed breeds especially suffer from having combs and wattles affected by frost. By oiling them with a sponge every morning, this may be prevented The best treatment of frost bite is a vigorous applica: tion of snow or very cold water, afterwards applying glycerine. Painting the frozen part with compound tincture of myrrh three times a day, is said to be ben- eficial. Turpentine is also recommended. Fledging. When the weather is bad and the chicks appear to be suffering much, the food may be seasoned with No. 3 tonic, and the addition of tincture of iron to the water. Warm milk should also be given to drink. Fractures. A broken shank may be “set” without difficulty, and secured with a splint of porous brown paper, saturated with white of eggs, which hardens as it dries. A. bro- ; Fee ee ee ee ee ae Pee SS , 81 ken wing is best cared for by putting the feathers in position and binding tightly together about an inch from the end. But unless the accident occurred to a very valuable fowl, useful to breed from, the time and care necessary to successfully treat fractures are gen- erally unprofitably wasted. Gapes. _This disease is caused by the windpipe of chickens or young fowls being infested with worms, eventually causing suffocation. How the disease is propagated is a debatable question. The worm is usually found doubled, of a pale reddish color, and rather less than three-quarters of an inch long. The number in one chicken usually varies from two to a dozen. Dirt and damp have undoubtedly a predisposing effect, as it is well known that gapes rarely ever trouble a clean and dry yard. By many itis supposed that the worm is generated in some manner by lice or a similar parasite which in- fests the head of young chicks, and as a preventive the following ointment, applied very lightly on the back of the head, on the throat, and under the wings, in a melted or fluid state, at the time of taking chick- ens from the nest, is said to remedy the evil: Mer- curial ointment, 1 oz; pure lard, 1 oz; flour of sulphur, 3 0z; crude petroleum, 1 oz. It is stated on good authority that chicks anointed in this manner have never had the gapes, while others of the same broods not anointed, have been affected. Another method of keeping the chicks free from the parasites that are supposed to produce gapes is to apply once a week, under the wings and on the breast of the hen, a 82 small quantity of carbolic soap in solution. The effect of the ointment beginning to destroy the parasites, would seem to give color to the theory that gapes are the result of the presence of lice or similar vermin, and would also tally very well with the fact that the disease is comparatively unknown in clean and com~ fortable quarters. A free use of carbolic disinfecting powder is an excellent preventive. The disease may be checked after it has entered the yard, by using fluid carbonate, camphor, or lime in the drinking water, and the affected bird made to inhale the vapor of carbolic acid by placing a few drops on a red hot shovel, and holding the lird in the fumes until it is nearly suffo- eated. This kills the worms, and is an effectual cure. The worms may be taken from the throat, also, in the following manner: Take a medium soft quill feather, pluck the web from both sides to within a short dis- tance of the tip, and wet with a solution of 20 grains carbolic acid and one ounce of glycerine. Run the feather down the windpipe, give it three or four turns and quickly withdraw. Repeat two or three times with a new feather each time. The acid paralyzes the worms, and the glycerine sticks them to the feather, | and they are thereby drawn out of the trachea. The feathers and all matter drawn from the throat of the fowl should be burnt, in order to prevent the exposure of the rest of the flock to contagion. Another remedy is to administer a kernel of black pepper to the chick affected, which is said to destroy the worm. Leg Weakness. Young fowls of the larger breeds frequently outgrow a, ae - —e 83 their strength, or from a lack of bony matter shown by constant squatting about instead of walking or standing. To prevent the occurrence of this affection, give all young fowls plenty of bone dust or broken bones and oyster shells. When first discovered it may be checked and strength restored by giving “Parrish’s Chemical Food,” a tablespoonful to a pint. of water. A little tincture of muriate of iron in the drinking water is also beneficial. Gout. This is a disease of the legs which can be distin- guished from leg weakness by the feverish condition of the legs. Remove the bird to a warm and dry place, give a dose of jalap or calomel to open the bowels, after which a half grain pill of extract of colchicum should be administered twice a day. The legs and joints may be well rubbed with sweet oil daily with benefit. Giddiness. Usually resulting from too high feeding, and likely to develop in apoplexy. Hold the head under a streara of water, and reduce the system by a dose of castor _oul, and feed on sparer diet. Lice. To guard against the encroachment of lice and other like vermin, the walls of the sheds should be regularly washed every year with strong lime-wash, containing a pound of sulphate of iron to every three gallons, ap- plied hot from the slaking. A thorough syringing either with parafine or a solution of carbolic acid will also be efficacious in getting rid of the annoyance, 84 Carbolice acid is certain death to all insects, and is an invaluable aid to the resources of the poultry keeper. Experience proves that the free use of dry, sifted coal ashes is an excellent exterminator of these pests. The ashes may be sprinkled over the roosts, and a commo- dious box filled with this material should be provided for the fowls to dust ip—a provision of which they seem to take pleasure in availing themselves. In making up nests for hatching, it is advisable to put ashes in the bottom and cover with clean straw. After the chicks make their appearance, the nests should be thoroughly cleansed and the straw and litter destroyed. In localities where coal ashes can not be easily procured, good dry sand may be substituted, in which carbolie powder or sulphur, or both, has been sprinkled. It sometimes occurs that, in spite of all precautions, the vermin accumulate to such an extent that the house becomes literally alive with them. In such cases a thorough cleansing is necessary. All the hay and straw in the nests should be burnt, the hens driven out aod the house closed tightly and fumigated with sul- phur. This may be done by putting a pound or so of brimstone in an iron pot and dropping on it a piece of red-hot iron. Keep the house closed two or three hours, after which it should be well ventilated and swept out thoroughly. The walls, inside and out—in fact every place that can be reached—should be washed with hot water,in which has been dissolved potash, one pound to every quart of water. Then fol- low with kerosene oil. Fresh hay is needed for the nests, and assurance is made doubly sure by white- washing. This radical treatment is not accomplished without some trouble, but the result amply repays the iabor. 85 To keep Lice out of the Hen-house. These pests are about the worst the poultry keeper has to contend with, and I therefore give a simple cure if not an entire preventive. Take a hot pan or iron pot, place it in the hen house and pour into it at least one pound of sulphur. Be careful not to inhale the fumes. Close all windows and doors and let the lice enjoy the atmosphere for about two hours. Then air the house and give it a good coat of whitewash, nor forgetting the roosts. Change the nests and you will find yourself free from these pests. - Indigestion. Loss of appetite, caused by feeding too highly seasoned food. ‘The diet should be restricted to soft, well cooked food, twice a day, with fresh water in mod- erate quantities, containing the “Douglas Mixture.” Where a run cannot be had, a little fresh grass cut fine is beneficial. If the disease does not yield to this treatment, give daily five grains of rhubarb, changed every fourth day for one of calomel. Liver Disease. Most generally observed in cold and damp localities. Indigestion is frequently the forerunner of this disease, and the remedies recommended in such cases should be applied. If, however, the bird should take on a sickly, yellowish look about the head and comb, there is no doubt about a serious enlargement of the liver. Alterative doses of mercury, followed by cod liver oil and Parrish’s Food, may effect cures where not deep 8 86 seated, but success cannot be expected where the morbid structures are of any considerable size. Poultry keepers should never breed from fowl affected in this way. Moulting. Moulting is the discarding of the summer coat of feathers and putting one on suitable for cold weather. Perhaps many poultry keepers have never considered the great drain upon the system of the fowl during this change of covering. Not only do the regular flesh- forming, life-giving processes of nature have to be fulfilled, but an entire new coat of feathers has also to be manufactured. These feathers consist not of flesh and blood alone, but of component parts of mineral and animal substances. These substances are assimi- lated from the food, and unless birds can obtain such food as contain the necessary qualities, the work drags, is prolonged, and the poor fowl droops and grows thinner in the vain endeavor to fulfill nature’s require- ments without the proper means to work with. ‘The moulting season is the most critical period 6f the year for old fowls; and yet, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, there is less care taken then than in the Spring, when everything is in their favor. Not only is an abundance of warming, nutritious food needed, but a tonic of some kind should also be given. Stale bread, sopped in old ale, given two or three times a week, is always beneficial; but perhaps one of the best things is to use the Douglas Mixture, in the proportion of a teaspoonful to a pint of water, in the drinking fountain, and keep it by them during the whole time of moultng. A little hemp seed given every day is also beneficial, 87 and with these aids, and a little pepper on their food, with perhaps a little extra meat, or even a little ale during the few weeks the process lasts, there will rarely be any loss. With hardy kinds and good shelter such precautions are hardly necessary but they cost little and have their effect also on the early re-commencement of laying. A tonic that is also recommended is gin and molasses, in proportion of three parts gin to one of molasses. A tablespoonful is a dose for an adult fowl, giving it before feeding in the morning; where the fowls do not appear to have an unusually hard time, twice or three times a week is sufficient. But where the fowls are in close confinement, they must have ivon in some shape. A little treatment of this kind not only benefits the health of the fowl, but shortens the period of mcult- ing fully one-third. In addition to that, the growth of feathers is stronger and heavier, and the fowls are thug better able to stand the cold of Winter. The appear- ance of the fowl is also vastly better, the feathers aye lustrous, and appear as if oiled; the bird takes on fat at once, and meets the cold weather with a vigorous health and strength which otherwise he might not have. Pip. | nf The symptoms are a short, quick, spasmodic chirrup, repeated at short intervals. On examination a dark colored, dry, horny scale will be found on the end of the tongue. This is not the disease, as many suppose, but the results of the disease. In some cases, if not checked, the beak will turn yellow at the base, and the plumage become ruffled; appetite fails, and the bird mopes around and finally dies. A little cayenne or black pepper mixed with meal and administered three 88 times a day will generally effect a cure. Another reme- dy is to apply chlorinated soda to the horny scale on the tongue. This will soften the crust, which will come off without difficulty. Feed soft food and give a dose of castor oil or other aperient. Rheumatism. Weakness of the legs, stiffness of the joints, contrac- tion of the toes are symptoms of this disease, which may be mistaken for cramps. The treatment is similar. The bird must be put in a warm and dry place, and fed with warm and rather stimulating food. The legs should be bathed in rather hot water containing some mustard, and afterwards dried. Half a grain of opium twice a day should be given internally. A little cooked meal every day is beneficial, and minute doses of oil of mustard have been of marked efficacy in some cases. Roup. Probibly the amateur, and sometimes even the ex- perienced breeder, turns more anxiously to the treatises on this disease than to any other, for the reason that it is at once the most annoying and destructive of the whole catalogue, though less to be dreaded now than formerly. Nearly all writers agree that roup results from exposure to damp, draughts and confinement in tainted coops. It is highly contagious, the germs of the disease being communicated by drinking or other contact. The symptoms of roup are at first identical with those of a severe cold; the discharge from the nostril, however, soon loses its transparent character, becoming more or less opaque, with a peculiar and 89 offensive odor ; froth appears in the inner corner of the ~ eye; the lids swell, and sometimes the eye-ball is en- tirely concealed. In very severe cases the cavity of the nose becomes filled with the diseased secretion, which cannot escape, owing to the small size and closure of the nostril, and then the face swells considerably. TREATMENT.—In this disease, nearly equal numbers recover, under various modes of treatment, so far as re- lates to internal remedies. But in all cases the bird is at once to be isolated, and the water vessels immediate- ly disinfected. McDougall’s Fluid Extract is excellent for this purpose. Warm, dry lodging and stimulating nutritious food are the first essentials to recovery. The eyes and head should be frequently bathed with warm . water and remedial agents of some kind applied to the diseased membrane. ‘This is somewhat difficult, on ac- count of the nostrils being closed up, but may be over- come by inserting the point of a small syringe into the slit in the roof of the mouth and turning it rather to the outside for each nostril. Labarraque’s solution of Chlorinated Soda is the injection most in use by a number of the best fanciers. Tegetmeier says he has used a few drops of a dilute solution (10 grains to the ounce of water) of sulphate of copper, with very favor- able results. The internal treatment is a dose of castor oil, to be followed every morning and evening by a pill of balsam copaiba, 1 oz.; liquorice, in powder, } oz.; piperine, 1 drahm, with enough magnesia added to make the mass into sixty doses or pills. A few drops of tincture of iron or McDougall’s Fluid Extract should be added to the drinking water. We also present the following remedies, all of which are said to have effected cures in particular instances. Perhaps it would be well, in case a number of fowl ara 8H ~ 90 simultaneously attacked, to try them separately on dif- ferent birds. That which acted most promptly might then be applied to all. No. 1.—Powderza suiphate of iron, } drachm; capsi- cum powder, 1 drachm ; extract of liquorice, 3 oz. ; make into 30 pills. Give one at a time three times a day for three days; then take } oz. sulphate of iron and 1 oz. cayenne pepper in fine powder. Mix carefully a tea- spoonful of these powders with butter, and divide into ten parts. Give one part twice a day. Wash the head, eyes, and inside of the mouth and nostrils with vinegar it is very cleansing and beneficial. No. 2.—As soon as the bird shows the usual symp- toms, take it to a small room or outhouse, close the door and windows, take a shovelful of red-hot coals from the stove and on them sprinkle flour of sulphur (pounded brimstone). Let the bird inhale this gas for about ten minutes—it will cause it to sneeze, and the congealed matter will be blown or thrown up through the nostrils and so relieve the poor bird and its symp- toms. No. 3.—Bathe the head and throat in warm salted. water, after which, with the thumb and finger open the. eyes and wash them well with a rag saturated with salted warm water and then give a pill made of equal parts of cayenne pepper and prepared chalk. Follow this treatment every morning, and, if there be any rat- tling in the throat, give a teaspoonful of cod-liver oil every night. No. 4.—In the first stages of the disease give a dose of castor oil, which will generally effect a cure; but if the mouth and tonsils have become ulcerated, several doses may be necessary, given twelve hours apart. 91 Use a small mop, dipped in vinegar, to cleanse the mouth, head, throat, and nostrils, after which dip a feather or mop in soft soap and touch every ulcer. No. 5.—Sugar of lead and pulverized opium, 20 grains each; mix with one pint of soft water. With a small syringe inject warm water into the nostril of the sick bird and then inject the lotion. By using a small bent tube on the syringe an injection can be forced into the nostril through the upper part of the mouth. Feed with soft food only, giving plenty of chopped vegetabley, and mix ale with the food. No. 6.—Bathe the head with tepid water and castile soap, removing all unhealthy secretions about the eyes, head or throat, and if there be any visible ulceration wash well with a strong solution of alum water, and give a bolus of lard and sulpur mixed as large as an English walnut, at the same time anointing the head well with the mixture of lard and sulphur. No. 7.—Wash the head with cresylic soap suds until the nostrils are opened and the eyes relieved. Then strip a feather to within half an inch of the end, and dipping it into diluted nitric acid, insert it into the nostril of the fowl. Two or three applications will gen- erally be sufficient. No. 8.—Five drops tincture of iron in a teaspoonful of water thrice a day. Feed the fowl with scalded food well seasoned with cayenne pepper. Undoubtedly the seeds of this disease are laid in the sudden changes from warm to cold nights, when the Summer changes to Fall, and the chickens are allowed to occupy their unprotected coops and wander about hungry and cold in the raw, early morning. This would especially tend to the development of roup if there 92 should be a continued spell of damp weather, for roup after all, is simply a chronic catarrh or cold. Upon the first indication of a change of weather in the Fall, the young chicks should be provided with warm, dry quarters, and not allowed their liberty in the morning until fed. A plentiful supply of good, nutritious food and tincture of iron added to their water, with a little sulphur in their soft food, will be found of great benefit. Prompt attention to these matters will eventually result in preventing the appearance of the roup—the dreaded scourge of the poultry yard. Rump-ail. This difficulty, occasioned by the badness and infec- tion of the hen house, has for symptoms, constipation, slowness in walk, troubled sleep, sad way, low head, drooping tail and bristling feathers. The chicken does not scratch, and finally a tumor forms around the rump. It is necessary to cut this tumor with a sharp instru- ment, and press it with the finger to expel the pus, then wash the wound with vinegar or stale wine, and feed with agreeable diet, like barley, bran, or boiled rye or lettuce. One of the first precautions to take is to purify the hen house. Scaly Legs. Under the head of Elephantiasis will be found some remedies for this disease, but having come across the following, it was decided to insert them: Dissolve a little carbonate of soda (sal soda) in water and rub the feet and legs every day with this solution until the scurf is removed. After this is done and the 93 feet and legs become dry, anoint them well with lard and sprinkle on some sulphur or red precipitate, or they be made into an ointment before they are applied. Another remedy is to use an application of cocoanut oil or tarmeric—the proportions are about one-fourth of an ounce of turmeric powder to an ounce of the oil; this forms a yellow ointment. Apply it to the parts affected, and a few appuications will be sufficient to effect a cure. , Soft Eggs. Tf of frequent occurrence, a sign of over-feeding. Beduce the food and feed sparingly on mashed potatoes, In some cases, soft eggs occur from the entire absence of any material to form the shell. The fowl should be supplied with old mortar, burnt oyster shells pounded, or similar ingredients. Lime water is highly beneficial. Wry Tail. Carrying the tail to one side, strongly hereditary, and evidence of a weakly constitution. The surest way to cause its disappearance and prevent its recurrence is to get rid of the fowl altogether. Turkeys. The best preventive for sickness in these birds as well as to help them through the red is to mix finely cut onions or chives in their food, which ought to con- sist of Indian meal mixed with either milk or water, but small potatoes boiled and mished with plenty of pepper may be used with raw onions chopped fine instead. 94 Kerosene as a Curative. We have seen, recently, testimonials from so many quarters, as well South as North, as to the efficacy of kerosene oil in chicken cholera, as to inspire a hope that an unfailing remedy has at last been found for this hitherto most desolating disease. A Woodville, Miss., correspondent of the New Orleans Home Journal says: “T tried all the remedies mentioned in your paper for cholera, but none seemed to do any permanent good until I tried coal (kerosene) oil; this has effectually arrested the disease, and I am satisfied is a good thing.” In addition to this, the editor of the Journal says: “We had a pullet which was actually on its last legs, not being able or willing to feed any more. Our better- half took some grits and mixed a sufficiency of kerosene with it to make into pills and crammed some of it down the throat of the fowl. The effect was almost instanta- neous, as, at the next feeding time it appeared with the other fowls and participated in the meal, and sinca then has been constantly improving. We now feed corn mixed in kerosene oil three times a week, and since adopting this mode have had no new case cd cholera. | A correspondent writing to the Counlry Gentleman from Habersham County, Ga., says: “I have found kerosene oil a cure for chicken cholera. Last year I lost my entire flock. This year, by soaking my corn in kerdsene, but one has died, although several have been sick.” A recent number of the Southern Homestead gives the extract which we annex, from the pen of the editor, by which it will be seen that the curative power of kero- sene has been as prompt in giving relief to an equine 95 sufferer as to the pets of the poultry yard: “The ¢ peculiarly penetrating nature of kerosene makes it one of the best external applications for bruises, sore throat, diphtheria, etc., in man that can be employed, while for diseases in horses, such as big shoulder or other lame- ness, two applications, well rubbed on, will effect a cure. Only a few weeks ago we proved its efficacy in bots or grubs. We had a fine colt violently attacked with this dangerous disease, and after trying several remedies without relief, as a last resort tried kerosene, rubbing the body thoroughly, producing an instantane- ous and permanent cure.” Chlorate of Potash. For internal administration to fowls for canker or roup, or for common colds or cough, chlorate of potash is said to be very beneficial, and is at the same time a perfectly safe remedy to use. Water only dissolves a certain proportion and no more of the salt, and it - should always be made as strong as it can be, which is making what is technically called a “saturated solu- tion.” For convenience it is better to keep it prepared ready for use, as follows: Putin a half pint bottle an ounce of chlorate of potash and an ounce of crushed sugar, then fill the bottle with soft water and shake occasionally until no more will dissolve. The sugar seems to serve the double purpose of loosening the phlegm in the throat of the fowl and to disguise the saline taste of the chlorate, making it more easy of administration. Chlorate of potash will not only remove canker and ulceration in the mouth and throat, but cools and allays fever, and by its action in the stomach, destroys all traces of canker in the system of the fowl, thus rendering the cure a permanent one. a 96 After using off the water more may be added, as long as any of the chlorate remains, adding sugar each time, as the sugar, unlike the chlorate, all dissolves the first time. Give adult fowls a teaspoonful of the solution two or three times a day, in severe cases giving it oftener if required. An ounce of the solution in a pint of water is a good remedy for cummon colds and for young chicks, to be given in plaee of drinking water, continuing for several days, or until a cure is effected. CHARCOAL.—It is claimed that a free use of crushed charcoal will prevent the disease known as the enlarge- ment of the liver. It keeps the organs in a healthy state ; their fondness for it would indicate some benefit derived from its use, the same as in the case of gravel. Corn or corn meal is the cheapest and best food for fattening fowls. Oat meal, bran, and middlings are the © best for the young, growing stock. Capsicum mixed with the food and assafcetida in the drinking water is recommended for cholera in fowls. BANAN AAA AAALIAAANANARARAAAAR A AAD a al ANTRAL RAAAARIAAS AAONAAAITN Ta, AANA AAA Danan =»: 2>2 yi an B AANA ! Poros TA AA NAAR A BAIN ANAAAR YY ATT AA NALA AANA ANAAAL AAS aA WAAC RARAARC AR i a | | . Z eay Toy \ SRA AIM INRA ALN af VY 4 aa aeigeli AANA Alaa aa snAPan aA WARN TRL ny Aaa Banas AY RANA AA RAR. 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