- 'Hen and Chckens'
- 01- Jesus is sentenced to death
- 02 - they carry the cross
- 03 - Jesus falls first time
- 04 - Jesus finds his mother
- 05 = Simon forced to carry the cross
- 06 - Veronica wipes the face of Jesus
- 07 - Jesus falls second time
- 08 - Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem
- 09 - Jesus falls under the cross
- 10 - Jesus is stripped of his garments
- 11 - Jesus is nailed to the Cross
- 12 - Jesus dies on the Cross
12 - Jesus dies on the Cross - 13 - Jesus is taken down from the Cross
13 - Jesus is taken down from the Cross - 14 - Jesus is laid in the tomb
14 - Jesus is laid in the tomb - 15 - Resurrected
15 - Resurrected - A
A - A calf
A calf - A Chinese Actor
- A Chinese actor in a tragic part
- A Chinese Courtesan
- A Chinese Dragon
A Chinese Dragon - A Chinese Dyer at wotk
- A Chinese ferryman
- A Chinese general in his war chariot
- A Chinese Junk
- A Chinese restaurant after the repast
- A Chinese sedan chair and bearers
A Chinese sedan chair and bearers - A Clever Humming-bird
- A Cow
A Cow - A cross section of the skin
- A desperate man
- A diagram showing the life-history and migration of the Malaria parasite
A diagram showing the life-history and migration of the Malaria parasite, Laverania Malariæ, as discovered by Laveran, Ross, and Grassi. The stages above the dotted line take place in the blood of man. The oblong-pointed parasite is seen entering the blood at n just below No. 1. The circles represent the red blood-discs of man. Schizogony means multiplication by simple division or splitting, and it is seen in Nos. 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10. The stages below the dotted line are passed in the body of the spot-winged gnats of the genus Anopheles. A peculiar crescent or sausage-shaped condition is assumed by the parasite inside the red corpuscle No. VI. These are found to be of two kinds, male and female, Nos. VIIa and VIIb. They are swallowed by the spot-winged gnat when it sucks the blood of an infected man. Here in the gut of the gnat they become spherical; the male spheres produce spermatozoa No. Xa, which fuse with and fertilize the female spheres or egg-cells No. XI. An active worm-like form No. XIII results, which pushes its way partly through the wall of the gnat’s gut, and is then nourished by the gnat’s blood. It swells up, divides internally again and again, and is enclosed in a firm transparent case or cyst, Nos. XIV to XVIII. The cysts are far larger in proportion than is shown in the diagram, and are visible to the naked eye. The final product of the breaking up, which is called sporogony, is a vast number of needle-shaped spores or young (called Exotospores, as opposed to the Enhæmospores, which are formed in the human blood, as seen in Nos. 9 and 10, and serve there to spread the infection among the red corpuscles). The needle-shaped spores formed in the gnat’s body accumulate in its salivary glands, and pass out by the mouth of the gnat when it stabs a new human victim who thus becomes infected, No. XIX. - A dissection scene
A dissection scene - A Funeral procession in China
- A Gallery in the Louvre
- A gong ringer
- A Great Sea Lizard Tylosaurus Dyspelo
The finest Mosasaur skeleton ever discovered, an almost complete skeleton of Tylosaurus dyspelor, 29 feet in length, may be seen at the head of the staircase leading to the Hall of Paleontology, in the American Museum of Natural History, New York. Another good specimen may be seen in the Yale University Museum, which probably has the largest collection of Mosasaurs in existence. - A Greek Clinic of 400 BC
A Greek Clinic of 400 BC In the centre sits a physician holding a lancet and bleeding a patient from the median vein at the bend of the right elbow into a large open basin. Above and behind the physician are suspended three cupping vessels. To the right sits another patient awaiting his turn; his left arm is bandaged in the region of the biceps. The figure beyond him smells a flower, perhaps as a preservative against infection. Behind the physician stands a man leaning on a staff; he is wounded in the left leg, which is bandaged. By his side stands a dwarfish figure with disproportionately large head, whose body exhibits deformities typical of the developmental disease now known as Achondroplasia; in addition to these deformities we note that his body is hairy and the bridge of his nose sunken; on his back he carries a hare which is almost as tall as himself. Talking to the dwarf is a man leaning on a long staff, who has the remains of a bandage round his chest. - A Hind Leg of the Great Brontosaurus, the Largest of the Dinosaurs
- A horse
A horse - A June Morning
- a lecture on anatomy
a lecture on anatomy - A mandarin's house
- A marriage procession
- A Mediæval Innkeeper
- A naughty pupil
- A Pagoda
- A ring of children
A ring of children - A Sea Horse and it's young
- A Single Vertebra of Brontosaurus
- A Sixteenth-century Cooperage
- A Steam Street Railway Motor
While in Paris, President Yerkes, of the North Chicago Street Railway Company, purchased a noiseless steam motor, the results in experimenting with which will be watched with great interest. The accompanying engraving, for which we are indebted to the Street Railway Review, gives a very accurate idea of the general external appearance. The car is all steel throughout, except windows, doors, and ceiling. It is 12 ft. long, 8 ft. wide, and 9 ft. high, and weighs about seven tons. The engines, which have 25 horsepower and are of the double cylinder pattern, are below the floor and connected directly to the wheels. The wheels are four in number and 31 in. in diameter. The internal appearance and general arrangement of machinery, etc., is about that of the ordinary steam dummy. It will run in either direction, and the exhaust steam is run through a series of mufflers which suppress the sound, condense the steam and return the water to the boiler, which occupies the center of the car. The motor was built in Ghent, Belgium, and cost about $5,000, custom house duties amounting to about $2,000 more. - A street in Canton
- A street in Pekin
- A Texas Cowboy
A Texas Cowboy - A Tooth of Zeuglodon, One of the 'Yoke Teeth,' from which it derives the name
The best Zeuglodon, the first to show the vestigial hind legs and to make clear other portions of the structure, is in the United States National Museum - A woman of the people with her baby
- A young Chinese Married lady
- A Young Chinese Poet