- Young lady walking in the countryside
- Young girl with a fan
- Young girl taking a cookie
- Young girl reading to old lady
- Young girl looking in mirror by candelight
- Young girl looking in a mirror
- Young girl in winter coat
- Young girl in bed
- Young girl holding a jar
- Young girl curtseying
- Young girl crying
- Young girl carrying a bag
- Young girl
- Young girl
- Young children playing outside
- Young boy sitting on a gate
- Young boy picking an apple
- Young boy eyeing fruit on a tree
- Young boy and girl looking in the bush
- Young boy
- William Ewing
The accompanying cut of Ewing is an excellent representation of a batter, in the act of hitting. He not only swings the bat with the arms, but pushes it with the weight of the shoulders. The position is a picture of strength. In hitting at a high ball the bat should be swung overhand, in an almost perpendicular plane, and so, also, for a low ball, the batter should stand erect and cut underhand. If the bat is swung in a horizontal plane the least miscalculation in the height of the ball will be fatal. If it strikes above or below the centre line of the bat, it will be driven either up into the air or down to the ground. Whereas, if the bat is swung perpendicularly, the same mistake will only cause it to strike a little farther up or down on the bat, but still on the centre line, and if it misses the centre line it will be thrown off toward first or third, instead of up or down. - Want another sandwich
- Waiting for the coach to come
- Unhappy girl
- Two young girls dressed the same
- Two old ladies preparing a cup of tea
- Two noisy boys
- Two ladies talking
- Two girls playing with their dolls
- Two girls kneeling
- Two girls giving to boy and girl
- Two girls dancing
- Two girls and a boy talking to old lady
- Two girls and a boy skipping in the garden
- Two girls and a boy playing with a cat and kitten
- Two girls and a boy looking at baby ducks
- Three little girls
- Three girls looking in the mirror
- Three girls in the garden
- Three girls and old lady
- Three girls and a boy
- Three children sitting in the grass
- Three children listening to old lady
- The Tube
The Tube - The Savoy
The Savoy - The Regent Canal at Maida Hill
The Regent Canal at Maida Hill - The Pub
The Pub - The Heart of the City
The Heart of the City - The Good Intent - Chelsea
The Good Intent - Chelsea - The Chelsea Arts Ball
The Chelsea Arts Ball - 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. - The Cafe Royal
- Soho Market
Soho Market - Six children
- Showing doll to mother
- Shopping
Shopping - Shepherd's Market
Shepherd's Market - Seven children
- Reading
- Putting a wreath on a animal