- George Horace Lorimer
- Fred Stone
- Fritz Kreisler
- Franklin P Adams
- Fred and Adele Astaire
- Frank Crowninshield
- Eugene O'Neill
- Eva le Galliene
- Fannie Brice
- Eddie Cantor
- Ernest Newman
- Ed Wynn
- Charlie Chaplin
- Douglas Fairbanks
- Carl Van Vechten
- Carlotta Monterey
- Calvin Coolidge
- Ann Pennington
- Avery Hopwood
- Alexander Woollcott
- Al Smith
- Vultures
- Two Camels
- Seated Camel
- Map of Sahara Desert
- Rock disintegration in the Sahara
- Group of camels and riders
- Fox
- Caravan of camels
- Clay Pots
- Camels
- Camel and rider
- Camel
- Camels resting
- Arabs
- Africans working
- Arab warrior
- Africans Working 2
- African drinking
- Section through cabin of the Otis elevator
- Rope-geared hydraulic freight elevator
- Passengers changing cars
- Motor and drive mechanism of Siemens’ elevator
- Morse Elevator
- General arrangement of the Roux Combaluzier
- Final development
- General arrangement of Otis Elevator in the tower
- English direct plunger Elevator
- Eiffel Tower 1889
- Correcting erection discrepancies
- Backmann’s proposed helicoidal elevator
- Armstrong’s hydraulic crane
- Worthington tandem compound steam pumps
- Vertical cylinder
- Various levels of the Eiffel Tower
- Teagle elevator in an English mill about 1845
- Siemens’ electric rack-climbing elevator of 1880
- Spanish sailors in a storm
- The Syce on duty
One of the most novel and interesting sights which attracts the traveller's attention when he first arrives in Egypt is the syce running before the horses as they go through the narrow, closely packed streets. How the crowd scatters, and the donkey-boys hustle their meek property out of the way as one of those runners comes bounding along, shouting, in the strange Arabic tongue, "Clear the way!" The sun shines upon his velvet vest, glittering with its spangled trimmings, the breeze fills the large floating sleeves till they wave backward like white wings. - A view of Westminster
I suppose there are few boys who have not heard of Westminster Abbey, and who do not know that within its ancient and splendid walls the Kings of England are crowned, and the great, the wise, and the brave of every age are buried. But few, perhaps, are aware that the Abbey also contains the oldest and one of the most famous boys' schools in the world.