- Mother, child and cat sitting at the table
- The Sea-slater (Ligia oceanica)
- Cook's reception by the natives
- The Fear of the Lord
- An Italian Captain, Fifteenth Century
- Mexican Wild Turkey
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). Second Stage
- Civilisation without salvation only adds to life's burdens
- Is this the cause of drought
- Ruins of the Temple of Venus, Rome
- Torch Holder, Palazzo Strozzi, Florence
- What was the difference
- Christmas Time
- Moses Bringing Water From the Rock
Ex. 17:6. - Representative Life of Western Asia
- Leaf-Cutter Bee at Work
Two Tunnels Being Filled With Leaf-Cells. You should see the little creature in her never-tiring work of preparing material for her nest. In and out among the roses she goes, examining each leaf with the most critical care, and only desisting from her labor when a suitable one has been chosen. She scans it over and over, and at last from a position on its upper or nether surface proceeds to cut a piece just fitted for her work, which, heavy as it seems, is seized between the legs and jaws and carried on swiftly-agitated wings to her burrow. Ten pieces or more, each differing in shape, are cut and borne away, which the ingenious insect tailor twists and folds, the one within the other, until is formed a funnel-like cone, whose end is narrower than its mouth. So perfectly joined are the parts, that even when dry they have been found to retain their form and integrity. A cake of honey and pollen, for the use of some yet unborn Leaf-cutter, is deposited within, and on this, in due time, is laid a single small egg. Nought now remains but to wall up the cell. A circle of leaf, of the size of the opening, is cut, and this is closely adjusted within the wall of rolled-up leaves. Sometimes as many as four pieces are thus utilized. A second cell, similarly built, is fitted to the first, and this is succeeded by eight or ten others. When all is completed, the eggs being laid and the cells all victualled, the hole of the shaft is closed with the earth that was thrown out, and so carefully, too, that not a trace of her doings remains to tell us the story. - Christ is Not here
- Jesus Falls Under the Cross
Luke 23:27, 28. - Two girls dancing
- Copilia quadrata (Female), a Copepod of the Family Corycæidæ
- Girl dancing
- Pabst Blue Ribbon Poster
- Amen-Ra, the King of the Gods
- Man carrying boy
- Cat and kitten
- A Victorian Young Lady
- The Word of God shall Stand Forever
- The Leopard by the Way. (Hos. xiii. 7)
The Leopard In the New Testament this animal is only mentioned once, and then in a metaphorical rather than a literal sense. In the Old Testament it is casually mentioned seven times, and only in two places is the word Leopard used in the strictly literal sense. - Life of the Virgin - excert from Durer etching
- Black-nosed Dace
- Northern Rattlesnake
- The finding of Moses
- Kittens play fighting
- An American Coasting Schooner
Square-rigged ships have largely disappeared because, among other things, their crews were large. These schooners, which sometimes have four or five masts, can be handled by small crews and consequently are able to continue to vie with steam. - the pine just starting out in the world, with its six seed leaves
- Wall of Separation
- Boy looking at birds through the window
- Healing the Blind
- Page Frame
- Jephthah Meeting His Daughter
Judges 11:35 - Ornament
- Title Border
Title Border - Boy and Girl in the garden
- Bay and lady picking flowers
- Young girl crying
- The Common Shrimp (Crangon vulgaris)
- Kitten and puppy faceoff
- Modernismès Deadly Work
- Welsh
- An Egyptian Peasant Woman
- Eve plucked the forbidden fruit and ate it
- Marching around Jericho
- Jesus Teaches Nicodemus
John 3:2, 3 - Jesus Crowned with Thorns
Mark 15:16-19 - Real Thanksgiving
- Golfer
- Relationship between a mature plant of Herpomyces stylopygae and the integument of Blatta orientalis
Diagram illustrating the relationship between a mature plant of Herpomyces stylopygae and the integument of Blatta orientalis. Richards and Smith have studied the life history of Herpomyces stylopygae on the oriental cockroach. The plants grow only on living cockroaches, and the infection is disseminated by contact. - Porta Tiburtina, Rome
- San Miniato, Florence
- Christ Stilling the Tempest