- KT or TK
- AA
AA - LA or AL
- AA
AA - D
- CCH or HCC
- LA or AL
- CCH or HCC
- TK or KT
- Good Fellows
Drinking Mug - The dangers of drinking
- Floral Border
Floral Border - BCC
- Ride a Cock Horse
- Little Boy Blue
- The Good Samaritan
Luke 10:30 - 36 - I Love Little Pussy
- Pussy Cat, Pussy Cat Where Have You Been
- BCC
- Pat-A-Cake
- The Three Little Kittens
- Georgy Porgy
- Girl hugging one of her dolls
- Little Miss Muffet
- Scroll frame
Scroll frame - Twinkle Twinkle Little Star
- Oh Where, Oh Where Is my Little Dog Gone
- Little Bo-Peep
- Oranges and Lemons
- Sing a Song of Sixpence
- Hush-A-By Baby
- Jack and Jill
- Girls and Boys come out to play
- The Mulberry Bush
- Little Jack Horner
- Humpty Dumpty
- What are Little Boys made of
- Mary Mary Quite Contrary
- There was a Little Man
- Hickory Dickory Dock
- Polly Put the Kettle On
- Ding Dong Bell
- Lucy Locket
- Yankee Doodle
- Three Blind Mice
- Mary Had a Little Lamb
- Baa Baa Black Sheep
- Evolution Cartoon
In the beginning God created heaven and earth - Three Girls reading a book
- Girl and her toys reading a book
- Horizontal Bar and Chest-bars, for Home Use
All that people need for their daily in-door exercises is a few pieces of apparatus which are fortunately so simple and inexpensive as to be within the reach of most persons. Buy two pitchfork handles at the agricultural store. Cut off enough of one of them to leave the main piece a quarter of an inch shorter than the distance between the jambs of your bedroom door, and square the ends. On each of these jambs fasten two stout hard-wood cleats, so slotted that the squared ends of the bar shall fit in snugly enough not to turn. Let the two lower cleats be directly opposite each other, and about as high as your shoulder; the other two also opposite each other, and as high above the head as you can comfortably reach. - Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet. Two Lovers
MASTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CABINET. TWO LOVERS Size of the original engraving, 6½ × 4⅛ inches In the Ducal Collection, Coburg In agreeable contrast is the dry-point of Two Lovers—a little masterpiece—one of his most charming designs. “The sweet shyness of the maiden, the tender glances of the lover and the soft pressure of their hands are rendered with an inimitable grace, and the work is altogether of such exceptional quality that we may count this delightful picture as one of the rarest gems of German engraving in the fifteenth century.” - Noiseless Pulley-weights
... a sketch of a pair of pulley-weights recently made, designed by Dr. Sargent, which are excellent. Their merits will be seen at a glance. Instead of the weights swaying sideways and banging against the boxes, as they are liable to do in the ordinary old-fashioned pulley-weight boxes, they travel in boxes, A A, between the rods B B. A rubber bed also prevents the weight from making a noise as it strikes the floor, while another capital feature is the arrangement of boxes, in which you may graduate the weight desired by adding little plates of a pound each, instead of the unchanging weight of the old plan. - Appliance for developing the Sides of the Waist
If one prefers to use apparatus made specially, the cut shows a simple device of Dr. Sargent's, which he made purposely to bring up and strengthen these muscles. Standing in front of it, with head and neck erect and chest out, and grasping the ends of the bar A A', the operator simply turns it, first well up to the right, then to the left, and then repeats the movements until he has enough. As he turns, the rubber straps B B stretch more and more, of course getting stiffer the farther the bar is turned. It would scarcely be possible to hit upon a [p.218]better appliance for improving these valuable side muscles, and yet without fear of overdoing them. - Evolution Cartoon
- Evolution Cartoon
Another Great Image that will soon be smitten! - Portrait of Columbus
- A Chest-widener
Dr. Sargent's ingenuity has provided a simple and excellent chest expander. He rigs two ordinary pulleys over blocks some feet above the head, and from five to six feet apart, and attaching weights at the floor ends of the ropes, puts ordinary handles on the other ends, and has the ropes just long enough so that when the weights are on the floor the handles are about a foot above the head. Now stand between and directly under them, erect, with the chest as full as you can make it, and keeping the elbows straight, and grasping the handles draw your hands slowly downward out at arm's-length, say about two feet. Next, let the weights drop gradually back, repeat, and so go on. This is excellent for enlarging the whole chest, but especially for widening it. A better present to a consumptive person than one of these appliances could hardly be devised. - Lexington
April 19th 1775 Birthplace of American Liberty - A Correct Position for Fast Walking