Having just gotten back from a very long car trip, I thought I'd propose a few fun things to do to pass the time.



These domestic instincts, when thus tested by crossing, resemble natural instincts, which in a like manner become curiously blended together, and for a long period exhibit traces of the instincts of either parent: for example, Le Roy describes a dog, whose great-grandfather was a wolf, and this dog showed a trace of its wild parentage only in one way, by not coming in a straight line to his master, when called.

Domestic instincts are sometimes spoken of as actions which have become inherited solely from long-continued and compulsory habit, but this is not true.

No one would ever have thought of teaching, or probably could have taught, the tumbler-pigeon to tumble--an action which, as I have witnessed, is performed by young birds, that have never seen a pigeon tumble.

We may believe that some one pigeon showed a slight tendency to this strange habit, and that the long-continued selection of the best individuals in successive generations made tumblers what they now are; and near Glasgow there are house-tumblers, as I hear from Mr.

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