(iv) 



velt. Open daily from September 20th to about October 18th, 1909, from 

 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Special Loan Exhibition by the National Arts Club, 

 in cooperation with the American Scenic and Historic Preservation 

 Society, under the management of the New York Zoological Society. 



Three centuries of New York City: Special Exhibition of Paintings, 

 Photographs, Drawings and other interesting materials, illustrating the 

 growth and progress of New York from the time of Henry Hudson to 

 the present day. (Catalogue for sale.) 



Take Fourth or Madison Avenue surface cars to corner of Fourth Avenue 

 and Twentieth Street, one block west of Club-house. Subway Station at 

 Eighteenth Street and Fourth Avenue, three blocks away. 



NEW YORK AQUARIUM, in Battery Park. Open daily, including 

 Sundays, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. until October 15th. (October 16th to April 

 14th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.) This building was erected in 1807 by the United 

 States Government as a fort and after the War of 1812 was called Castle Clin- 

 ton ; later, as Castle Garden, it was the scene of Jenny Lind's triumphs and 

 from 1855 to 1890 it was the portal of the New World for 7,690,606 immi- 

 grants. This is the largest aquarium in the world and contains a greater 

 number of specimens and species than any other. All tanks containing 

 fish indigenous to the Hudson River will be so marked. 



Take Elevated Railway to Battery Place Station, or Subway to Bowling 

 Green Station ; also reached by all surface cars which go to South Ferry. 



NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN, Bronx Park. Museums open 

 daily, including Sundays, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Conservatories from 10 

 a.m. to 4 p.m. Grounds always open. In the Grounds and Conservatories 

 exhibits of Plants, Shrubs, Trees, and Natural Woodland; in the Mu- 

 seums, Plant Products utilized in the Arts, Sciences and Industries. 

 All trees growing on Manhattan Island and in the Hudson River 

 Valley at the time of Hudson's arrival are marked with the letter " H." 

 (Special illustrated catalogue for sale.) 



Take Third Avenue Elevated Railway to Bronx Park (Botanical Garden). 

 Subway passengers change at 149th Street; also reached by Harlem Division 

 of the New York Central Railroad from Grand Central Station, Fourth 

 Avenue and Forty-second Street. 



NEW YORK GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SO- 

 CIETY, 226 West Fifty-eighth Street, between Broadway and Seventh 

 Avenue. Open daily, except Sundays, from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m., until 

 November 1st. Special Exhibition of old Deeds, Manuscripts, Books, 

 Portraits, etc., relating to the history of the United States up to and 

 including the War of 1812. (Catalogue for sale.) 



Take Broadway surface cars to corner of Fifty-eighth Street. Subway 

 station at Columbus Circle (Fifty-ninth Street), two blocks distant; Sixth 

 Avenue Elevated station at Ninth Avenue and Fifty-ninth Street, three blocks 

 away. 



NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY, corner of Seventy-seventh 

 Street and Central Park West. September 25th to October 30th, open daily 

 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Robert Fulton Exhibition of the New York His- 

 torical Society, in cooperation with the Colonial Dames of America. 



(Catalogue for sale.) 



Take Sixth Avenue Elevated Railway to Eighty-first Street and Columbus 

 Avenue, or surface cars traversing Central Park West; also reached by any 

 Columbus Avenue surface car to Seventy-seventh Street. 



NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, Lenox Branch, Fifth Avenue and 

 Seventy-second Street. Open daily, except Sundays, from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m. 



