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- Jamestown as it is
- Scene at Cape May
- Scenes and Incidents on Coney Island
- Bathing costume, from The Delineator, July 1884
- Bathing costumes from a supplement to The Tailor’s Review, July 1895
- How she came out
- How she went in
- The Bathe at Newport
- Dancers dressed as wolves
Transformation Ceremony and Dancers Dressed as Wolves. In some of these dances, the attitudes of the animals whose totems were worn by the clans were imitated, and the spirits of the animals were supposed to have taken possession of the dancers. . - John Harvey Kellogg
John Harvey Kellogg - Strike Zone
Strike Zone - An 'Out-curve' - the beginning
An 'Out-curve' - the beginning - An 'Out-curve' - the end
An 'Out-curve' - the end - Articles of a base-ball outfit
Articles of a base-ball outfit - Base-runner keeping on to third
Base-runner keeping on to third - Batting for fielders' practice
Batting for fielders' practice - Catcher running for a 'Foul Fly'
Batting for fielders' practice - Catcher signalling to pitcher
Catcher signalling to pitcher - Catcher throwing down to second
Catcher throwing down to second - Diagram of pitcher's curves
Diagram of pitcher's curves - Diagram of the field
Diagram of the field - 'Jump in front of the ball'
'Jump in front of the ball' - Fielder catching a fly
Fielder catching a fly - First baseman catching a high ball
First baseman catching a high ball - First baseman taking a low throw by reaching forward
First baseman taking a low throw by reaching forward - First baseman taking a low throw on the long bound
First baseman taking a low throw on the long bound - First baseman throwing to second for a double-play
First baseman throwing to second for a double-play - Lamar after passing Yale's Twenty-five-yard line
Lamar after passing Yale's Twenty-five-yard line - Lamar dodging the Yale tacklers
Lamar dodging the Yale tacklers - Laying out an amateur field
Laying out an amateur field - Making sure of a catch - left-fielder catching
Making sure of a catch - left-fielder catching - On the alert
On the alert - Out!
Out! - Pitcher at practice in the 'Cage'
Pitcher at practice in the 'Cage' - Pitching a 'Drop' Ball
Pitching a 'Drop' Ball - Playing a trick on the base-runner
Playing a trick on the base-runner - Practising throwing with the 'spool'
Practising throwing with the 'spool' - Running to first base
Running to first base - A Fair tackle
A Fair tackle - A pitcher's victim. Out on strikes
A pitcher's victim. Out on strikes - A runner caught between third base and the home plate
- A Touch-down
A Touch-down - A wild throw and a safe slide to second
A wild throw and a safe slide to second - The Catcher
The Catcher - The body protector and Catcher's mask
The body protector and Catcher's mask - Short-Arm throw, the beginning
Short-Arm throw, the beginning - Short-Arm throw, the end
Short-Arm throw, the end - Shutting off a runner at the Home-plate
Shutting off a runner at the Home-plate - Sliding to base
- Stopping a grounder
- The umpire did not see Gardner at all
The umpire did not see Gardner at all - Third baseman intercepting the slide of a runner from second
Third baseman intercepting the slide of a runner from second - We crossed the home-plate within three feet of each other
We crossed the home-plate within three feet of each other - Grover Cleveland
Elected by the “Common People,” November 8, 1892, to Represent the Interests of the Masses against the Classes. - Ward MacAllister
Self-Appointed Leader of the “Four Hundred” of New York. “A Prince of Cooks and Coats.” It was not much: it was rank presumption; it was nonsense, absurd. “There’s no such thing possible in America as class distinction; in fact, it does not exist, cannot exist; the ‘Four Hundred’ of New York is a joke, a by-word, a stupendous folly.” - Benjamin Harrison
Benjamin Harrison will long be remembered as an exemplary President, if patriotism and the performance of those pledges made to the people who elected him, entitle a President to remembrance. The sympathy of the whole nation went out to President Harrison when he sustained the loss of that example of virtue and womanly excellence in the death of his wife. It was so deep and strong, that had the “Common People” not seen the party he represented through a glass clouded by the smoke and soot of sham aristocracy, he would have been re-elected - Mrs. Benjamin Harrison
The sorrow occasioned by her death inspired even poets to place a wreath woven by their art, upon her tomb. It is well for the country that the President’s wife should have been one[Pg 129] furnishing such a noble example to the women of America - Andrew Carnegie
A “Self-Made” Man. A Multi-Millionaire. Made $20,000,000 in America; Lives in Scotland. - Henry C. Frick
Manager Carnegie Works, Homestead, Pennsylvania. - William H. Vanderbilt
Author of the Famous Speech, “The Public be Damned.”