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- Pictograph
The cuts show the power ot the Shamans among the Esquimgux and their belief in the presence of demons .In one we see the boat resting on posts,the winter habitation, store houses, trees in the middle, the Shaman and the hunters. In another,the Shaman stands upon his lodge,and drives back the game, the deer are seen swimming in the water. In the third we see the hunter shooting the game which has been driven up to him by the demon and his assistants. The control of the Shaman over the demon is the essential part of the pictograph. - Figure from the Liberal Arts Building
- Pictograph
The cuts show the power ot the Shamans among the Esquimgux and their belief in the presence of demons .In one we see the boat resting on posts,the winter habitation, store houses, trees in the middle, the Shaman and the hunters. In another,the Shaman stands upon his lodge,and drives back the game, the deer are seen swimming in the water. In the third we see the hunter shooting the game which has been driven up to him by the demon and his assistants. The control of the Shaman over the demon is the essential part of the pictograph. - An Opium Fiend
- Elevated Railroads
- Administration Building
- A summer Concert Garden
- Pictograph
The cuts show the power ot the Shamans among the Esquimgux and their belief in the presence of demons .In one we see the boat resting on posts,the winter habitation, store houses, trees in the middle, the Shaman and the hunters. In another,the Shaman stands upon his lodge,and drives back the game, the deer are seen swimming in the water. In the third we see the hunter shooting the game which has been driven up to him by the demon and his assistants. The control of the Shaman over the demon is the essential part of the pictograph. - Group From the Liberal Arts Building
- Moonlight Excursion
- Cheyenne Types
- A Dedicatory Scene
- Bird's Eye vie of the World's Fair
- Finis—The Author at Rest
- Driving About the Town
- Benjamin Franklin
- In the Turkish Bath
Chicago is nothing if not metropolitan. The Turkish bath is a feature of metropolitan life which should not be deprived of its proper share of attention. - Scene in the Moorish Village
- Music Hath Charms
- Scene in the Chinese Tea Palace
- The Author Moralizes
- Candies and Flowers
- Group From the Woman’s Building
- Cloud blowers
Cloud blowers. Faywood Hot Springs. (Swope collection.) The pipes from the Mimbres take the form of tubular cloud-blowers, specimens of which are shown. Apparently these pipes were sometimes thrown into sacred springs, but others have been picked up on the surface of village sites or a few feet below the surface. - Group From the Woman’s Building
- Eleazer Williams
- An Anarchist
May day of that year had been fixed upon as the proper time to inaugurate the eight hour movement. Prior to that date the anarchists had become thoroughly organized. They held meetings every Sunday afternoon on the Lake Front, when their leaders made fiery speeches, advocating the murder of capitalists and the destruction of property. On the first of May, strike after strike occurred in quick succession. - A Chicago Hussar
- A Cheyenne Fairy
- Sign on mill
- The Mill
- Basaltic Columns, Regia, Mexico
- Arrow polisher
Arrow polisher. Length 3¼″, breadth 2½″. A beautiful arrow polisher found near Deming. - Old Monomoy Lighthouse
Old Monomoy Lighthouse - Interior of mill
- Turbine installed
- Ramon Del Valle Inclan
- Otto H. Kahn
- In Europe there was a tremendous demand for beaver fur in the manufacture of felt hat
- Baxter's Mill
- The Original Turbine
- Little Turtle, or Michikiniqua
- Tecumseh
- The traders kept pushing their birch-bark canoes deeper into the wilderness
- The fur trade furnished the means of contact between widely divergent cultures
- The Guest Registering
Man registering to stay in a Chicago hotel - Ed Wynn
- Morris Gest
- Eva le Galliene
- The Pretty Manicure
The Pretty Manicure “Manicuring,” by which term is signified the treatment of the hands, is an industry that is only mentioned in this chapter by reason of its bearing on the care of the person or the toilet. The manicuring establishments are in every way respectable. For the sum of one dollar a pleasant-faced young woman washes one’s hands in a preparation of her own manufacture and so trims, polishes and fixes up one’s fingernails that the average customer does not recognize them as his own after she has finished the delicate task. Aside from the neatness imparted by the operation few men object to the sensation produced by having a pretty woman manipulate scientifically and dally with his clumsy hands for half an hour or more. - Work in progress
- Alexander Woollcott
- George Jean Nathan
- Fred and Adele Astaire
- Officers Undress 1891
- Vaulting the bar at ten feet six inches
- Over Coat 1891
- Officers Service Dress
- Eugene O'Neill
- Carlotta Monterey