- Frame 2
- Divider
- Title
- Title
- Title 2
- Long Title
- Frame
- Supper
- Menu
- Breakfast
- Dinner
- Wine List
- P
- The babies in the sweet marjoram beds
- Baby
- Course of light in telescope from star to focus
For direct photography or visual observations at the focus of the 72-inch mirror, the reflected cone of star light from the mirror B, is intercepted by a plane mirror also silvered on the front surface, 19·5 inches diameter and 3·25 inches thick placed at 45°. This form of reflecting telescope was first used by Newton, hence the name. The focus is then formed, as shown, at the side of the tube, and if a plate is placed there and accurately guided by small eyepieces with cross wires, photographs of any desired small region in the sky can be obtained, or visual observations may be made. The oculars can easily be reached from the observing platform for any position of the telescope. - The Dominion Astrophysical Observatory - from the south
- Diagram Showing Adaptation to the 'Large-Wheeled Tractor' Idea
The genesis of the “large-wheeled tractor” was as follows: Trenches with a parados and parapet about 4 ft. high were being constructed by the enemy in Flanders. The engineers consulted by the Land Ship Committee gave it as their considered opinion that if these obstacles were to be crossed, a wheel of not less than 15 ft. diameter would be necessary. Machines with these gigantic wheels were actually ordered, but the wooden model that was knocked together as a preliminary at once convinced even its best friends that the design was fantastic, and that any machine of the kind would be little better than useless on account of its conspicuousness and vulnerability. However, the “big wheel” idea did not utterly die, for in the upturned snout of the Mark I. Tank we have, as it were, its “toe” preserved, the track turning sharply back at about axle level, instead of mounting uselessly skyward, as would have been the case had not the old wheel idea been supplanted by that of the sliding track. - Map of Tank Operations, August–November, 1918
- General Arrangements of Mark V. Tank—Front View
- General Arrangement of Mark V. Tank—Sectional Plan
- General Arrangement of Mark V. Tank—Sectional Elevation
- A Mohammedan Chief
- Mohammedan Sword and Shield
- Knight of the Order of St. Iago
- The Cid
- Count Alvaro Nuñez de Lara
- Queen Berengaria, Spain
- A Spanish King of the Fifteenth Century
- Pedro the Cruel
- A Royal Attendant, Spain
- Blanche of Castile
- Spanish Nobleman, Fifteenth Century
- Henry of Castile
- Don Juan II
- Henry IV
- Queen Isabella
- A Spanish Noblewoman of the Fifteenth Century
- A Spanish Nobleman of the Fifteenth Century
- A Spanish Merchant, Fifteenth Century
- A Man of Granada
- Spanish Cavalier of the Fifteenth Century
- Isabella
- Armour of Isabella
- Isabella’s Crown
- A Spanish Gentleman, early Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Cavalier of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Gentlewoman of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Penitent of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Captain of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Captain, Time of Philip II
- A Spanish Gentleman, time of Philip II
- A Spaniard of the Seventeenth Century
- Costume of a Young Spanish Woman, early Seventeenth Century
- A Spanish Captain
- Spanish Noblewoman
- Charles IV
- Divider - The time of moslem domination
- The Alhambra
- A Spanish Flagellant