- London Bridge
- Machinery for raising the Portcullis, Tower of London
- Richard II. riding out of London to the War in Ireland
- Bastion of the City Wall
- Billingsgate
- Crypt of St. Michael’s
- Gateway of the Bloody Tower
- A Cell in the Lollards’ Tower
- A Tournament
- Austin Friars
- Thirteenth-century hospital interior
Thirteenth-Century Hospital Interior (Tonerre) From “The Thirteenth: Greatest of Centuries,” by J. J. Walsh This was built by the sister of Louis IX of France, Marguerite of Bourgogne, who retired to it herself to spend her life caring for the ailing poor. - Amputation below the knee
This is the first picture of an amputation known From Gerssdorff’s woodcut, reproduced in Gurlt’s “Geschichte der Chirurgie” - The Roadside Inn
- A Shadoof for drawing water from the Nile
The term sakkieh is applied to all the apparatus for raising water, but the proper name for the Egyptian pole and bucket is shadoof. The shadoof is very ancient, as it is represented on the walls of the tombs constructed three or four thousand years ago. - The Story Teller of the Desert
The Story Teller of the Desert - An Egyptian Woman
An Egyptian Woman - Our Social Club
Bunch of men all reading newspapers - A lady of the Harem
A lady of the Harem - Bread Seller in the streets of Cairo
Bread Seller in the streets of Cairo - A Nubian Belle
A Nubian Belle - Egyptian Water Carriers filling their jars
Everywhere through Egypt water is filtered in large jars, some of them holding nearly a barrel, and it is carried on the heads of women in lesser jars that contain from four to six gallons. - Egyptian Gamblers
Egyptian Gamblers - An Arab School
An Arab school is a curiosity. The pupils study their lessons aloud, and make the place about as noisy as a political meeting, and how they can learn, any thing is a surprise to a person from the Occident, where silence is considered desirable in a school-room. - Donkey Drivers of Cairo
The beast par excellence of Egypt is the donkey; he ought to have a place on the national coat-of-arms, as much so as the llama has on that of Peru. The horses of Egypt are magnificent, some of pure Arabian, and some of a cross between English and Arabian stock, and are famous for their speed and beauty. But they are a luxury that not everybody can afford, as their support requires a constant outlay, not to speak of the first cost of the property. But the donkey is universal, and everybody can have one, unless he is the poorest of the poor. At every hotel door there are groups of them ready saddled at all hours of the day, and you can hire them cheaply. If you can make a bargain in advance you can hire a donkey at three or four francs a day, inclusive of the boy, to drive him, though the latter generally looks for backsheesh in addition to the price of the beast and saddle. I have hired donkeys frequently for half a franc an hour, though the hotel keepers tell you that a franc an hour is the proper fare. - Two young girls
- Children at the water pump
- The Catcher
In catching a high ball the hands should be held in the position shown in the following cut of Bushong, the fingers all pointing upward. Some players catch with the fingers pointing toward the ball, but such men are continually being hurt. A slight foul-tip diverts the course of the ball just enough to carry it against the ends of the fingers, and on account of their position the necessary result is a break or dislocation. But with the hands held as in this cut there is a "give" to the fingers and the chances of injury are much reduced. For a low ball the hands should be held so that the fingers point downward, and for a waist ball, by crouching slightly it may be taken in the same manner as a high ball. - Pepsi-Cola 1940A
Bigger and better, with drawing showing how it came into town thirty-five years ago, on a horse-drawn wagon. Published in a 1940 issue of MOVIE STORY - Coca-Cola -1912C
Coca Cola Advertisement Published in the May, 1912 issue of MODERN PRISCILLA. - White Monoplane Plans -1918A
You can fly with a motorcycle engine and this spiffy set of plans from George D. White. Wow! From the April, 1918 issue of EVERYDAY ENGINEERING - Coca-Cola -1920A
- Duntley Washable Battery Cell
- Columbia Electric Delivery Chassis
- Divider
- Coldwell Steam Lawn Mower
- Merkel Railway Motor Cycle
- Gibbs Electric Truck
- Woods Brougham
- Tudor Knox
- Twenty-Passenger Break for the World's Fair
- White Steamer
- The Winton
- The Wolverine
- Thomas 'Flyer'
- The Rambler Runabout
- The Stearns
- The Walter Car
- The Pope-Hartford
- The Pope-Robinson
- The Press used in making Federal presses steel frame
- The Peugeot
- The Phelps
- The Pierce Transmission Gear
- The Mors Limousine
- The New Cadillac
- The Northern
- The Manhattan
- The Matheson
- The Michigan
- The Haynes-Apperson