- Our Pets
- Little girls looking with a lamb
- More feathered Pets
- Mother Robin
- Horses and Ponies
- Kitten watching a spider
- Kittens and Cats
A mother cat with her three kittens - Giving the chickens some water
- Hens and Chickens
- Horse stopping to eat.
- Friends
- German Shepherd
- Girl feeding a goat
- Dos and Puppies
- Feeding some rabbits
- Carrier pigeons in a battle
Carrier pigeons in a battle - Cat and Lunch
- Cow
- Canary Birds
- Caring for a wounded bird
- A Turkey Story
- Bird in a cage
- Boy and Pony
- A Monkey
- A hen and her chicks
- Eleazer Williams
- Jamestown as it is
- Washington rebuking Lee
- On our chieftain speeded, rallied quick the fleeing forces
- Hernando de Soto
Hernando de Soto was of good Spanish family, and started early upon a career of adventure. He was with Francisco Pizarro, and took a prominent part in the conquest of Peru. Some account of his actions while with the Pizarros will be found in Helps’s “Spanish Conquest in America.” He particularly distinguished himself in the battle which resulted in the conquest of Cuzco, and desired to be the lieutenant of Almagro in the invasion of Chili; but in this he was disappointed. Returning to Spain with much wealth, he married into the Bobadilla family, and became a favorite with the king. Here he conceived the notion of conquering Florida, which he believed to abound in gold and precious stones. Offering to do this at his own expense, the king gave him permission, and at the same time appointed him governor of Cuba. De Soto set sail from Spain in April, 1538, but remained in Cuba some time fitting out his expedition, which did not arrive at Florida until the following year, when it landed at Tampa Bay. His force consisted of twelve hundred men, with four hundred horses, and he took with him a number of domestic animals. In quest of gold, he penetrated the territory now known as the States of Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, and Mississippi, finally striking the Mississippi River, which he called the Rio Grande, at or near the Lower Chickasaw Bluffs. - Christ in an elliptical Aureole
- Charlemagne crowned
Charlemagne Crowned, a with the nimbus Painting on glass from the Cathedral of Strousbeg, XII and XIV centuries - Xavier Algara
- Willa Cather
- William S Hart
- W Somerset Maugham
- Will Rogers
Will Rogers - Theodore Dreiser
- Rudolph Valentino
- Serge Koussevitsky
- Robert Edmond Jones
- Rose Rolando
- Ralph Barton
- Ramon Del Valle Inclan
- Picasso
- Plutarco Elias Calles
- Paul Whiteman
- Pauline Lord
- Mrs. Fiske
- Otto H. Kahn
- Miguel Covarrubias
- Morris Gest
- Mary Pickford
- Leopold Stokowski
- Lillian Gish
- Lee Simonson
- Leonore Ulric
- Jose Juan Tablada
- Joseph Hergesheimer
- John Barrymore