- Yellow-shafted Flicker
Colaptes auratus People once called this bird a Yellow-hammer. Lots of folks still do, and it’s but one of the many names applied to this beautiful woodpecker. His brown-barred back, black crescent on the throat, spotted breast, white rump patch and bounding flight, his large size, his loud drumming, his posturing and his loud calls all point to this bird or, if you live in the west, the Red-shafted Flicker. The latter shows a reddish tint to the wings and tail where this bird shows yellow. Heads of males are marked differently, in that the western bird shows a red line extending down from the mouth, while the Yellow-shafted shows black lines. A flicker prefers ants to any other food, and nature has equipped him with a long, sticky tongue which permits him to explore anthills or tunnels in trees where these insects might be lurking. When ants are not available, he turns to other insects, fruit or berries, one of his favorites the seeds of the poison ivy. - Yellowthroat
Yellowthroat The adult male of this species wears a black mask over his eyes and is only 5¼ inches long. The female lacks the mask but has a yellow throat, white belly and olive-brown head, back, wings and tail which identify the birds. They nest over a wide area, favorite habitat being bushy thickets near water. He is quick to resent any invasion of his privacy and uses a variety of scolding notes to let you know how unhappy he is. His movements are wren-like and hurried and his black eyes fairly sparkle to show his excitement. He soon vanishes into the undergrowth but you will have a chance to learn his call which sounds like “witchity, witchity, witchity,” or “witcheree, witcheree, witcheree,” usually repeated 3 times. - Yes or No
- Yes, brother, I can forgive
- Yon Hosts Report
- York in the 15th Century
To-day mediæval buildings are to be found all over England. The majority of them are examples of an architecture that has not been surpassed for majesty, beauty, size, and constructional skill. Such buildings, without the help of the literary and other memorials, testify by themselves to the greatness of the Middle Ages. - You are it
Seven little children are all pointing at one little girl - You cannot imagine how anxious the girls are to see you,
- You don’t mean to say, Estelle, that you are tired of settlement work
“You don’t mean to say, Estelle, that you are tired of settlement work?” “But, Auntie, dear, poor people are so monotonous.” - You'll take cold
- Young bedouin girl
- Young boy
- Young boy and girl looking in the bush
- Young boy eyeing fruit on a tree
- Young boy picking an apple
- Young boy playing a flute
- Young boy sitting on a gate
- Young boy standing on the street corner
Young boy standing on the street corner - Young Bucks
- Young Cape Buffalo
- Young child
- Young children playing outside
- Young Chinese Boy
- Young Chinese Divider
- Young Conifers and hardy fine-leaved Plants
- young corn plant
- Young female Bison
- Young Gentleman Louis XIII period - 1625 - 1640
Young Gentleman Louis XIII period - 1625 - 1640 - Young Gentleman of the 14th Century
Young Gentleman of the 14th Century - Young girl
- Young girl
- Young girl
- Young Girl
Young girl with outstretched arms - Young girl
- Young girl
- Young girl
- Young girl carrying a bag
- Young girl carrying bundles of brushwood
- Young girl crying
- Young girl curtseying
- Young girl holding a jar
- Young girl in bed
- Young girl in winter coat
- Young girl looking in a mirror
- Young girl looking in mirror by candelight
- Young girl lying in bed
Young girl lying in bed - Young girl reading to old lady
- Young girl taking a cookie
- Young girl with a fan
- Young girls’ hair
Newly-born infants are shaven; but as they grow up, a little circle at the crown is left untouched. At first the circle is small, but it grows larger with years; and at six or seven, boys let all their hair grow and crop them when too long, just like their elders. Girls, before they leave this “poppy-head” stage as it is called, have little queues on the crown, tied less closely than men’s in the old days. Next, at ten or more, they have their hair done in a more complicated manner; sometimes the tresses are tied together at the crown and made into bows, and sometimes the hair is gathered at the top and parted into two tresses, right and left, which are made into vertical loops, joined together at the side, the joint being covered with a piece of ornamental paper. It has of late become an almost universal custom with school-girls to tie their hair with a ribbon and let it down loose or plaited on their backs. - Young Half-breed (Buffalo-Domestic) Bull
Young Half-breed (Buffalo-Domestic) Bull - Young Hoactzins
- Young Lady
- Young lady
- Young lady
- Young lady
- Young lady
- Young lady
- Young lady
- Young lady