Torreya, Volume 8Torrey Botanical Club., 1908 - Botany |
From inside the book
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Page 17
... Professor Kellogg well expresses our present statu quo when he says , " we are immensely unsettled . " In addition to winning the battle for evolution , by whatever method , the above - mentioned controversy has taught us the fund ...
... Professor Kellogg well expresses our present statu quo when he says , " we are immensely unsettled . " In addition to winning the battle for evolution , by whatever method , the above - mentioned controversy has taught us the fund ...
Page 18
... Professor Kellogg's book is its candid and , so far as space has permitted , adequate statement of both sides of the question , and of the other theories now struggling for recognition . Especially has the author rendered a service in ...
... Professor Kellogg's book is its candid and , so far as space has permitted , adequate statement of both sides of the question , and of the other theories now struggling for recognition . Especially has the author rendered a service in ...
Page 20
... Professor Underwood , vice - president of the Club , and a motion was made and carried that a committee of three be appointed by the chair to draw up suitable resolutions , and arrange for a memorial program of the Club , to be given as ...
... Professor Underwood , vice - president of the Club , and a motion was made and carried that a committee of three be appointed by the chair to draw up suitable resolutions , and arrange for a memorial program of the Club , to be given as ...
Page 23
... professor of botany to succeed Dr. William L. Bray , now of Syracuse University . Dr. Burton E. Livingston , of the department of botanical research of the Carnegie Institution , has been granted a year's leave of absence , which he ...
... professor of botany to succeed Dr. William L. Bray , now of Syracuse University . Dr. Burton E. Livingston , of the department of botanical research of the Carnegie Institution , has been granted a year's leave of absence , which he ...
Page 24
... Professor Charles E. Bessey . The subject of the address of the retiring chairman , Dr. D. T. Mac- Dougal , before Section G , was " Heredity and Environic Forces . " Professor Herbert M. Richards was elected chairman of the Sec- tion ...
... Professor Charles E. Bessey . The subject of the address of the retiring chairman , Dr. D. T. Mac- Dougal , before Section G , was " Heredity and Environic Forces . " Professor Herbert M. Richards was elected chairman of the Sec- tion ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant Agriculture American appointed biology Boletus botanists botany Buitenzorg carpels cedar cells cent character collected College color common commonstalk course Crataegus described entirely epigean epiphytic experiments fact feet ferns field flora flowers forest forms fruit fungi genera genus given glabrous groups growing growth habitat herbarium high school hygrometers Hymenium hypocotyl illustrated interest Jamaica John Hendley Barnhart known laboratory lamina leaf leaves liverworts Long Island matter methods mosses mountain Murrill N. L. Britton natural North organic paper physiology Pileus pitchers plants present professor of botany protein pupils question radioactivity rare region roots Sarracenia Sarracenia purpurea scientific secretary seeds sessile soil species specimens spores sporophyl starch stem stomata STUART GAGER student surface swamp teachers tion Torrey Botanical Club Torrey Club TORREYA trees tubes University usually vegetation vernation Vries wood yellow York Botanical Garden
Popular passages
Page 21 - Whereas it has been found, by experience, that the blasting of wheat and other English grain, is often occasioned by Barberry Bushes...
Page 21 - Bushes are, first giving three months' notice of his intention so to do, to the owner or occupant thereof, and to cut them down, or pull them up by the roots, and then to present a fair account of his labour and charge therein to the owner or occupant of the said land ; and if such owner or occupant shall neglect or refuse, by the space of two months next after the presenting...
Page 124 - Women announces the offer of a second prize of one thousand dollars for the best thesis written by a woman, on a scientific subject, embodying new observations and new conclusions based on an independent laboratory research in biological, chemical, or physical science.
Page 152 - We urge the continuation and extension of forest policies adapted to secure the husbanding and renewal of our diminishing timber supply...
Page 289 - ... Custom-house the officers, who are always suspicious of smuggling, wished to empty the hat, for they would not believe but that something more valuable in their eyes lay hid beneath the moist mould. They thought of lace or of diamonds, and began to thrust their fingers into the soil. But our poor traveller implored them so earnestly to spare his tree, and talked to them so eloquently of all that we read in the Bible of the Cedar of Lebanon, telling them of David's house and Solomon's Temple,...
Page 39 - For the best memoir presented a prize of sixty dollars may be awarded ; if, however, th« memoir be one of marked merit, the amount may be increased to one hundred dollars, at the discretion of the committee. For the next best memoir, a prize not exceeding fifty dollars may be awarded.
Page 237 - Hillia parasitica of Jacquin, though perhaps not meant, is an equally just one upon our pompous Sir John Hill. I mean not to approve of such satires : they stain the purity of our lovely science. If a botanist does not deserve commemoration, let him sink peaceably into oblivion. It savours of malignity to make his crown a crown of thorns ; and if the application be unjust, it is truly diabolical.
Page 233 - Cupressus disticha stands in the first order of North American trees. Its majestic stature is surprising; and on approaching it, we are struck with a kind of awe, at beholding the stateliness of the trunk, lifting its cumbrous top towards the skies, and casting a wide shade upon the ground, as a dark intervening cloud, which, for a time, excludes the rays of the sun.
Page 21 - Province, he or they shall cause the same to be extirpated or destroyed on or before the thirteenth day of June, Anno Domini One Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty. ' ' Be it further enacted that if there shall be any Barberry Bushes standing or growing in any land within this Province, after the said...
Page 22 - ... and another, that then an action may be brought, as aforesaid, against the owner of said fence, or the person occupying the land to which such fence belongs ; and if the fence in which such bushes grow is a divisional fence between the lands of one person or community and another, and such fence hath not been divided, by which means the particular share of each person or community is not known, then an action may be brought, as aforesaid, against either of the owners or occupants of said land...