Displaying results 1 - 48 of 48
Descriptive guide to the grounds, buildings and collections
(4)
and driveway approaches. The house contains fifteen com-
partments, separated by glass partitions and doors.
House No. r…
(47)
family. At the junction of the brook with this pond is the
water-plantain family, including, besides the water-plantain…
(49)
are: the common blue flag of our swamps, the yellow flag
of Europe, the German iris, the Siberian iris, the Japanese…
(30)
young shoots are sometimes used as a vegetable. Closely
related to this, and just south of it, is the amaranth family,…
(51)
member of this family and a native of North America. The
tanks in the court of the public conservatories contain a great…
(52)
stonecrop family, where there will be found many of the
stonecrops (Sedun:), among the more showy and attractive
being…
e — —— — e A —————-
(55)
is the loosestrife family, represented by the purple loosestrife,
a native of Europe, but…
(36)
this is sometimes known as creeping Charlie; the fringed
loosestrife, from North America, is also here, as is the…
(57)
plants, is the water-leaf family, at the base of a large rock
on the ridge; there are the purple, the broad-leaved, and…
(58)
nums; it is to this family that the potato, tomato and egg-
plant belong. A little beyond and to the left of the mints…
(62)
buckwheat family, to which belong the climbing bindweeds
and brunnichia. On the left hand side, and beyond the…
(64)
smooth alder, common along streams and in swamps, is also
here. Following the birch family on the same side of the
path…
(65)
be found several species of the strawberry-shrub, including
the hairy one which has the fragrant flowers scented like…
(67)
illustrating the plum family, to which belong the plums,
cherries, apricots, and peaches. As many of the species of…
(68)
together with other woody members of this family. The
tanners’-tree family comes next with a single representative,
the…
(69)
chestnuts are trees, and are grown in the arboretum. Fol-
lowing this is the soapberry family, with the soapberry, from…
(70)
of Europe, the berries of which are acrid and poisonous; the
berries of several of the species of oleaster are edible;…
(72)
the path from the viburnums, and here will be found, among
others, the fragrant honeysuckle, from China, one of the…
(73)
Zus) as a collection apart, many species grown here not being
represented in the arboretum and fruticetum. Immediately…
(73)
and the butternut are both wild elsewhere in the Garden.
The pecan-nut (#zcoria pecar), wild in the south central United…
(76)
sides of the road leading to the Lorillard mansion. The oaks,
the chestnuts, and the beeches belong here. The oaks
(…
(77)
is valued in that region on account of its bark which is used
in tanning leather. The swamp oak, the scarlet oak, the…
(78)
the Bronx River. The magnolia family will be found
mainly in the swale lying between the two ridges, with a
few…
(79)
Near the eastern end of the long bridge are trees illus-
trating the senna family, the pea family, the rue family, and…
(80)
to the north of the sumac family, are the maple and buckeye
families. The maples (Acer) are represented by a number
of…
Page 12
and don’t include any documentation
besides liner notes. I don’t know who has
the information in these cases, but it cer-…
Page 26
A, U <R R R G RS SRS o e W+ S IR A eGP VR — » Ay A & oo
" L N e WO g ¢ by | SR v » S W N oy 18 P A…
Page 27
Pl S s bk s i T AP e L
causes were reconstructed. The Square
fascism, and fascists demonstrated there
during the day, with…
Page 29
: ; Page 29
17 Newsreel Stories of the 30s° ARCH | 24, Plow That Broke the Plains; The Land (Flaher-
i Noon, 2:30pm Free ty…
Page 30
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A o el
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Beginning to See the Light: Pieces of a
Decade, by Ellen Willis. Knopf.
$12.95. v
| By MATT SCHUDEL
'…
The natural history of dogs : Canidae or genus Canis of authors ; including also the genera Hyaena and Proteles / by Lieut. Col…
MEMOIR OF PALLAS, 35
French government despatched the Abbé Chappe
&’ Auteroche to Tobolsk to make the required ob-…
MEMOIR OF PALLAS. =
pearances, and excited an interest which has since
yielded an abundant harvest.*
Our Naturalist set off…
44 MEMOIR OF PALLAS.
tic birds had arrived. T have remarked, that not
only in these countries, but generally throughout…
50 MEMOIR OF PALLAS.
being trained. A Kirguis will often give a first-
rate horse for an eagle of good breed, whilst he will…
MEMOIR OF PALLAS. 7D
In 1781, he began a work which he meant parti-
cularly to dedicate to the insects of Russia (Zeones…
58 MEMOIR OF PALLAS.
the world has ever seen. China, India, Persia, and
the whole of Tartary, were nccessarily subjected to…
¢0 MEMOIR OF PALLAS.
and government, but devotes a large portion of his
work to an account of their religion, which is truly…
66 MEMOIR OF PALLAS.
disappointment :—* Were this the proper place to
inform my readers of the disquietude and hardships…
63 MEMOIR OF PALLAS.
phy. We used every endeavour to prevail upon
him to quit the country and accompany us to Eng-
land ;…
74 APPENDIX.
the Count Lacépede, 1788 ; and the other
in 8 vols. 8vo. and one of plates, with
Notes by Lamarck and Longles,…
88 INTRODUCTION.
Now, adverting to the eircumstance of the fertility
of the mixed breed between wolf and dog (one cer-…
THE WOLVES. 131
when they wish to conceal a part of their food or
the droppings about their lairs. The parent wolves
punish…
136 THE WOLVES.
rally repel the attack, killing one or more of the
enemy. Single horses fight a wolf by striking with’
the…
152 THE BLACK WOLF.
now the lobo will accompany strings of mules as
soon as it becomes dusky. They are seen bounding
from…
THE AMERICAN WOLVES. 155
fore-wrists is present. The grey about the eyes
and face, in old individuals, is likewise similar;…
THE COMMON JACKAL. 215
crooked ; the tail is straight, somewhat longer in
proportion, and more brushy than in the wolf; the…
223
CORSAC DOG-FOX.
Cynalopex corsac.
PLATE XVL
Wz think with Monsieur Desmarets, that this
species should be placed with…
Unicorn Times, May 1979
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By Gardner McFall…