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Old Hot Shot Furnace at Fort Morgan, Alabama which was used to
 heat cannon balls red hot for the purpose of sinking the
 enemy’s ships before the day of high explosives. It repulsed
 an attack by British warships in 1814, sinking the Flagship
 “HERMES”. It was installed under James Madison’s
 administration by a French General Simon Bernard, who had
 experience with hot shot furnaces under Napoleon. It rests in the
 middle of the little original Fort built by the Spanish in the
 middle of the 16th century with ten old gun mounts still intact.
 The oldest Fort in America. By Hatchett Chandler
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Doby’s Tourist Court, 3 Miles Southwest on Highways 31 and
 80, Montgomery, Alabama. 28 beautifully furnished red brick
 cottages with tile baths, carpeted floors, Beautyrest mattresses,
 bed lamps. Air cooled. Steam heated.
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Five sheep resting, but one on the alert. Alaskan Dall Sheep
 (white sheep with long curved horns), a coveted trophy by the
 hunter, roaming the high Alpine slopes they are hard to bag.
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Alaska mountains, water, and town. Dyea, where the great gold
 rush trail of ‘98 began and over which thousands traveled the
 Chilkoot Pass. Just a few miles from Skagway where visitors can
 still get the feel of the gold fever.
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St. Michael’s Russian Orthodox Cathedral, Sitka, Alaska.
 The Iconostasis with original 18th and 19th century Icons painted
 in Russia. Center altar dedicated to St. Michael, right altar to
 St. Innocent, left altar to Sitka, Mother of God.
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Full view of St. Michael’s Russian Orthodox Cathedral,
 Sitka, Alaska. National Historic site. Built 1844-restored
 1976. The first Eastern Orthodox Cathedral in the New World.
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Arizona. Giant Cacti (Sahuaro) on the desert.
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Arizona. Daybreak on the desert showing giant cacti.
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Arizona. Species of giant cactus.
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Arizona. Sahuaro cactus on the desert.
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Arizona. The prickly pear or “Opuntia Wootoni” in full
 broom.
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Arizona. The Cholla or Buckhorn in full bloom.
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Arizona. The desert and snow-capped mountains.
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Santa Anita Park Race Track, Arcadia California. (five hundred
 acres) cost $3,000,000. The grandstand, almost a quarter of a mile
 long, affords excellent view of the whole track. The Santa Anita
 Handicap ($100,000 the world’s richest purse) crowds the
 track to its capacity of over sixty thousand thrilled
 spectators.
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Residence of Eddie Cantor, Beverly Hills, California.
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Home of Warner Brothers Burbank, California. The Motion Picture
 Industry is one of the firsts four industries in the United States.
 More than 70% of the pictures shown throughout the world are
 produced in Los Angeles County.
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The beach, Carmel, California, built on a pine and oak forested
 slope that faces westward to the sea- Carmel fronts a mile of
 curving sand beach of dazzling whiteness. Free of amusement
 developments -just a beach without even a bath house. Carmel
 guards its beach as jealously as it does its trees.
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Business District, Carmel, California. On the south slopes of
 Monterey Peninsula, and nestled in a forest of cypress and pines,
 lies the quaint little village of Carmel, one of the most beautiful
 residential communities in the county. It is the home of many
 famous artists and writers.
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Mission San Carlos de Borromeo de Monterey del Carmelo, Carmel,
 California. Founded in 1771. On the road to Point Lobos, below
 Carmel is the second mission in the chain of twenty-one vast
 establishments-historical monuments of the great Franciscan
 adventure in California. It is further distinguished as the last
 residence and place of burial of Padre Junipero serra.
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Point Sur, Carmel-San Simeon Section, California State Highway
 No. 1 is a giant rock extending into the sea connected with the
 mainland by a low-lying isthmus of sand dunes. On the northeastern
 tip of this great island-like rock, stands Point Sur Lighthouse,
 over 200 feet above the sea.
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Carmel Highlands, five miles south of Carmel, California on the
 new Coast Highway, which when completed will connect the Monterey
 Peninsula with Santa Barbara and Los Angeles via San Simeon. Here
 mountains, forest and sea blend in an unforgettable combination of
 scenic grandeur.
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Wee Kirk of the Heather, Glendale, California, is a faithful
 reconstruction of the Wee Kirk in Glencairn, Scotland, where the
 bonnie Annie Laurie worshiped and was baptized and buried. In this
 replica may be seen authentic documents and mementos of Annie
 Laurie’s life in that far off glamorous day. Many modern
 brides married here sit in the Wishing Chair built of the very
 stones which were once in the original Glencairn Kirk (Scottish
 church).
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Vine Street from Sunset Boulevard, looking North, Hollywood,
 California. Vine Street is one of Hollywood’s most visited
 thoroughfares. It is the locale of many interesting places-on
 this street are such very well known attractions as “The Brown
 Derby,” “Tom Breneman’s,” Mike Lyman’s, C. B. S.
 Theatre, Ken Murray’s Blackouts, National Broadcasting Co.,
 Mutual Broadcasting Co., and Capitol Records.
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The Brown Derby Restaurant and Stores on Vine Street.
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Having lunch in the Farmers Market (Third and Fairfax, Los
 Angeles, California) is an exciting nonstop picnic. Many tasty
 delicacies and special dishes may be bought in the numerous food
 stalls to be enjoyed in the gay unbrellaed patios.
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Little Church of the Flowers, Forest Lawn Memorial Park,
 Glendale, California. This is an exact replica of Stokes Poges
 Church (six centuries old) in England. This was the scene of Thomas
 Grey’s immortal Elegy in a Country Churchyard and is his
 burial place. This famous church in Glendale was dedicated in 1923
 and is the scene of many weddings, including those of movie stars
 and celebrities.
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The old Plaza Church, also known as “Our Lady, Queen of the
 Angels,” is the oldest landmark in Los Angeles today. The first
 chapel was erected three years after the founding of the town in
 1781. The present church was built under the supervision of Jose
 Chapman, California’s first Yankee, and finished in 1822.
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Home of Gary Cooper, Brentwood Heights, California.
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Home of Jose Iturbi, California.
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Home of Bette Davis, North Hollywood, California.
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Home of Bing Crosby, Toluca Lake, North Hollywood,
 California.
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Home of Walter Pidgeon, California.
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Wilshire Boulevard at Westlake is one of Los Angeles,
 California’s main traffic arteries. From the center of town
 westward it passes through parks, smart shopping districts,
 beautiful residential sections all the way to the sea.
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Midway Point, 17 Mile Drive, Monterey Peninsula, California is
 probably one of the most notable landmarks in the West. The
 combination of pines, cedars and cypress that fringe this rock
 bound coast, blends into scenes of unforgettable grandeur.
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The City of San Bernardino, California, Mt. San Bernardino in
 the Distance. San Bernardino is the county seat of San Bernardino
 County, with a population of over 50,000 and is in the center of
 the Navel Orange growing district. It is an industrial jobbing and
 wholesale center. Site of the coast Santa Fe Shops. Within an hour
 of the famous San Bernardino Mountain resorts.
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Air view showing Coit Tower, San Francisco, California. Coit
 Tower on Telegraph Hill was named for one of the early San
 Francisco pioneers, Lillie Hitchcock Coit. She took great interest
 in the activities of the Volunteer Fire Department of that day.
 This beautiful monument has been erected to her memory from funds
 she left to beautify the city.
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Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco, California. San Francisco is
 famed for the beauty, variety and number of its hotels. The
 Fairmont, one of its finest, is located at the corner of California
 and Mason Streets. It was built in 1906 by Mrs. Herman Oelrichs,
 daughter of James G. Fair, one of the bonanza kings of the Comstock
 Lode.
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Alcatraz Island, San Francisco, California located in the Bay
 between San Francisco and Sausalito, Alcatraz, known colloquially
 as “The Rock,” is the Federal State Prison for incorrigibles. The
 Spanish, first settlers of this region, called it “Isla de
 Alcatraces” (Island of Pelicans) because of large colonies of these
 birds which nested on its 12 acres. It was made a Federal
 Penitentiary in 1933.
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City Hall and Civic Center, San Francisco, California is a
 magnificent edifice built of granite in the French Renaissance
 style. Its immense dome rises 300 feet from the ground, which is
 ten feet higher than the dome of the nation’s Capitol in
 Washington, D. C.
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Chinatown, San Francisco. The main artery of Chinatown is Grant
 Avenue. Oriental costumes mingle with American Pagoda-like
 structures, strange foods displayed in shop windows, gorgeous
 silks, teak wood, porcelains and all the art of the East makes this
 a veritable Oriental Dream.
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The Henry E. Huntington Library, San Marino, California. Many
 visitors enjoy the library, art gallery and botanical gardens of
 the Huntington Library near Pasadena. One of the choice treasures
 of the library is the Gutenburg Bible, the first European book
 printed in movable type. The art gallery is the home of
 Gainsborough’s renowned “Blue Boy” and many other famous
 paintings.
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The Wrigley Home, Santa Catalina Island, California.
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The Will Rogers’ Ranch House in the Santa Monica
 Mountains.
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The mission San Luis Obispo de Toloso (St. Louis, Bishop of
 Toloso, nephew of the king of France) was founded in California
 1772, and was a thriving agriculture center when the Declaration of
 Independence was signed. The church with its many interesting
 relics is still used for worship.
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Map and pictures of the 21 Spanish California missions. The
 founding of the Spanish Missions in California furnished an epic in
 history. These historical monuments are reminders of the great
 Franciscan adventure. Years of patient labor, decades of heroic
 sacrifice by Fray Junipera Serra and his Franciscan brothers lie
 behind the era of the founding of the twenty-one Missions and their
 branches, the ruins of which still stand in wonder and beauty, at
 various points along 600 miles of California’s glorious
 coastal region.
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Eighteen scenes of Carmel, California: a) San Carlos Mission; b)
 Picturesque Buildings Along Ocean Avenue; c) Del Monte Lodge,
 Pebble Beach; d) Cypress Point Club, Pebble Beach; e) 7th Hole,
 Pebble Beach Golf Course, 17-Mile Drive; f) Along the San Simeon
 Highway; g) The Beach; h) Along 17 Mile Drive, Monterey Peninsula;
 i) Carmel Highlands; j) Dolores Street; k) 16th Hole, Cypress Point
 Golf Course, 17-Mile Drive; l) Monterey Peninsula Country Club on
 17-Mile Drive; m) Midway Point, 17 Mile Drive, Monterey Peninsula;
 n) Church of the Wayfarer; o) Pinnacle Point, Point Lobas State
 Park; p) Seal Rocks, from 17-Mile Drive; q) Cypress Trees, 17-Mile
 Drive, Monterey Peninsula; r) Picturesque Business District.
Carmel, in an unusual setting of scenic beauty has a
 distinctive, picturesque charm of its own. Here is a mile-long
 white sand beach and in the direction of Old Monterey the coastline
 is rugged; a most interesting drive extending 17 miles passing Moss
 Beach, Seal and Bird Rocks, Cypress Point, Midway Point and its
 lone Cypress, and the beautiful homes of Pebble Beach.
Carmel, with its colony of artists, writers and actors, is a
 quaint crossroads of the world that retains its distinctive and
 picturesque charm. In an unusual setting of scenic beauty it has
 been kept free of commercialized amusements, a spot of unspoiled
 scenic beauty, a place to laze and relax. Here the poet, Robinson
 Jeffers, personally constructed of native rock, his home and studio
 of Tor House at Carmel.
San Carlos Mission was headquarters for Father Junipero Serra.
 Father Serra is buried under the Mission Church Altar where
 likewise rest Father Crespi and Father Lasuen. The Church, with its
 strikingly beautiful bell tower, established in 1771, is an
 excellent state of preservation.
Mt. Carmel is linked with San Simeon, San Luis Obispo, and Santa
 Barbara by the scenically picturesque Roosevelt Highway, completed
 in 1935 after seventeen years of work, at a cost of ten million
 dollars.
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Twelve scenes of Hollywood, California: a) A World Premiere
 Night; b) Hollywood Bowl; c) Earl Carroll Theatre at Night; d) W.
 M. Mulholland Memorial Fountain, Griffith Park; e) Hollywood
 Boulevard; f) Beautiful homes in the Hollywood Hills; g) Hollywood
 Bowl Entrance and Cahuenga Pass Freeway; h) Hollywood Boulevard; i)
 Radio City (new studios of CBS and NBC); j) Grauman’s Chinese
 Theater; k) Premiere Night, Carthay Circle Theater, Beverly Hills;
 l) Planetarium.
In a crook of a mountain elbow formed by the Santa Monica range,
 lies one of the most picturesque valleys in all Southern
 California-Hollywood, the city within a city. Legally a part
 of Los Angeles since 1911, the home of the Motion Picture Industry
 has retained its own distinct individuality.
For the most part Hollywood is a plain lying under high hills.
 Winding streets fringed with palm and pepper trees, and eucalyptus
 climb the sun browned hills. Farther down on the plain, older homes
 surrounded by spacious gardens are being pushed aside by huge
 apartment houses and hotels; Spanish castles and French Chateaux,
 vying with each other in luxury and magnificence. Many millions
 have been expended in architecturally beautiful buildings in the
 Film City.
Hollywood boulevard, only yesterday a village lane, is today a
 cosmopolitan thoroughfare thronging with traffic. For more than a
 mile along this street, height limit office buildings jostel huge
 department stores and smart exclusive shops. Walking along the
 Boulevard one catches glimpses of numerous famous faces. Hollywood
 is the amusement and shopping center for the entire surrounding
 territory.
The Hollywood Bowl, an amphitheater in the hills where thousands
 gather each summer evening to listen to “Symphonies Under the
 Stars.” In another hollow of the hills, the Pilgrimage
 Play-the Life of Christ in spoken drama, is given during the
 summer seasons.
A city of many churches, schools, colleges, picture studios and
 theaters which has attracted world famous writers, artists and
 musicians-a city of flowers and trees and brilliant California
 Sunshine-this is Hollywood.
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Twelve scenes of Los Angeles, California, “The Gateway of the
 Pacific”: a) Union Station; b) Echo Park; c) Wilshire Boulevard; d)
 Los Angeles County General Hospital; e) Ambassador Hotel; f) Times
 Building; g) The new Los Angeles Civic Center; h) Brown Derby
 Restaurant; i) Broadway Avenue; j) El Paso de Los Angeles “The
 Pathway of the Angels;” k) Enchanting Chinese Settlement; l)
 Planetarium.
Although the rise of Los Angeles was both recent and rapid, the
 city itself is as old as the republic. In 1871 the Spanish pueblo
 La Ciudad de Nuestra Senora la Reina de Los Angeles, The City of
 our Lady the Queen of the Angels was made a village by 144
 colonists from Mexico. In half a century the sleepy little Spanish
 town increased its population to 770 inhabitants.
In 1880, the city had a population of only 11,093, but from that
 year rapid strides were made in all lines of development and by the
 last census in 1940, the population had reached approximately
 1,500,000.
The people of Los Angeles represent the pioneers who left their
 homes in all parts of the country to become part of the fastest
 growing city in the world. The founders of Los Angeles brought
 experience gained in all parts of the earth.
The extraordinary development of Los Angeles harbor’s
 world trade has interested the maritime nations of the earth and
 all who follow the sea for a living. This admirable advance is due,
 primarily to the city’s location on one of the cross road
 points of the globe, with a magnificent tributary back country; and
 secondarily, to the co-operation and energy of Southern California
 communities. It belongs to all of them.
Nowhere in the world can be found the diversity of climate and
 scenery as in the vicinity of Los Angeles. In a few hours time a
 trip may be made from the beaches, where bathing is in progress, to
 the mountains, where all winter sports may be enjoyed. Swimming may
 be indulged in twelve months a year at a number of municipally
 owned beaches.
To the fisherman, the waters between Los Angeles and Catalina
 Island are a paradise, for in the Catalina Channel may be caught
 the giant sea bass, tuna, yellowtail and albacore. This channel is
 one of only two laces in the world where tuna are to be found. For
 those who prefer fresh water fishing, there are a number of
 mountain streams in the vicinity of Los Angeles, where trout
 abound. Fishing is one of the many sports that cen be pursued all
 year ‘round in Los Angeles.
In the mountains and foothills, a few miles from the city are
 hundreds of trails which lure hikers and mountain lovers. Many make
 it a practice to spend the Christmas holiday season in the snow
 that covers the landscape and lends an admirable setting to the
 celebrations usually given.
The visitor can reach within a short ride of Los Angeles, his
 favorite kind of scenery varying from the booming surf of the
 Pacific to the snow-clad peaks of the Sierras and picturesque
 desolation of the desert. Many miles of shore line offer surf
 bathing, motor boating, yachting and salt-water fishing the year
 around, while mountains with their miles of highways, trails and
 bridlepaths, invite alike the motorists, the hiker and the rider.
 Mountain camps are provided for the motorist, while numerous golf
 courses lure devotees of the green. Los Angeles is not only the
 climatic capital of the nation, but the year ‘round
 playground of millions.
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California Missions: a) Mission San Diego De Alcala, Founded
 1769; b) Mission San Carlos Del Carmelo; c) Mission San Gabriel
 Archangel; d) Mission San Luis Obispo De Tolosa; e) Mission San
 Juan Capistrano; f) Mission Dolores, Founded 1776, San Francisco;
 g) Mission Santa Clara de Asis; h) Mission San Buenaventura, at
 Ventura; i) Santa Barbara Mission and Grounds, Founded 1786; j)
 Mission La Purissima Concepcion, Founded in 1787; k) Mission San
 Juan Bautista; l) Mission Santa Cruz; m) Mission San Jose De
 Guadalupe, Near San Jose; n) Mission San Miguel, California,
 Founded 1797; o) Mission San Fernando from Memory Garden, and
 Father Junipero Serra Statue; p) Mission San Luis, Rey De Francia;
 q) Mission San Francisco Solano De Sonoma; r) Map and pictures of
 the 21 Spanish California missions.
CALIFORNIA MISSIONS IN THE ORDER OF THEIR FOUNDING: MISSION SAN
 DIEGO DE ALCALA was the first Mission to be established. It was
 founded July 16th, 1769 by Fra Junipera Serra, and is located in
 beautiful Mission Valley about seven miles from San Diego.
 MISSION SAN CARLOS BORROMEO DE CARMELO, Father
 Serra’s favorite, was founded June 3rd, 1770. It is located
 in the beautiful Carmel Valley overlooking the blue Pacific, and it
 was here that Father Serra died and is buried in the Chapel of the
 Church. The Mission is the shrine for thousands who desire to pay
 homage to one of the world’s greatest of missionary leaders.
 MISSION SAN ANTONIO DE PADUA was the third in the
 order of establishment, July 14th, 1771. It is the most isolated of
 all the Missions as it stands deserted and all but forgotten in a
 valley in the mountains about 25 miles southwest from King City.
 (Not pictured in this Folder).
 MISSION SAN GABRIEL ARCANGEL, the fourth Mission,
 was founded September 8th, 1771. It is located in San Gabriel about
 nine miles east of Los Angeles and is one of the most popular
 missions in California. Here is given annually the famous “Mission
 Play” attended by thousands of people.
 MISSION SAN LUIS OBISPO DE TOLOSA, the fifth
 Mission, was established September 1st, 1772 and was the first
 church built of logs. Tile roofs were first used at this mission.
 It is in good state of preservation, and services are conducted
 daily. It is located in the town of San Luis Obispo.
 MISSION DOLORES, (San Francisco de Assisi) was the
 sixth Mission and was the beginning of the metropolis of San
 Francisco. It was founded October 9th, 1776, and today the old
 structure stands by the side of a large church in the very heart of
 San Francisco.
 MISSION SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, the seventh Mission,
 was founded November 1st, 1776. It is located about midway between
 San Diego and Los Angeles. Its broken pillars and arches and parts
 of the cloisters, the oldest church in the state, as well as the
 extensive quadrangle and beautiful gardens, are the interesting
 features.
 MISSION SANTA CLARA (Santa Clara de Assisi), was
 founded January 12th, 1777. It was the eighth in the order of
 founding by the Franciscan Fathers. Due to successive catastrophes,
 all that remains of the original buildings are parts of the adobe
 walls adjoining the modern church which is on the University of
 Santa Clara campus. The present building is a replica of the
 original house of worship.
 MISSION SAN BUENAVENTURA, ninth of the California
 Missions and the last founded by Father Serra in person, stands in
 the city of Ventura. It was established on Easter Sunday, March
 31st, 1782. When this mission was built there were no metal bells
 available, so wooden bells were substituted, and the mission became
 famous for them.
 MISSION SANTA BARBARA, the tenth Mission, is
 located on a mesa overlooking the City of Santa Barbara and the
 blue Pacific. It was founded December 4th, 1786 and is one of the
 best preserved of all the missions, and is the only Mission in
 California of which the Franciscan Order has never relinquished
 control.
 MISSION LA PURISIMA CONCEPCION, the eleventh in
 order, was founded December 8th, 1787. It is located in the Santa
 Ynez River Valley near
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the town of Lompoc, and is in a fair state of preservation.
 SANTA CRUZ MISSION was founded September 25th,
 1791, the twelfth in the chain. Today no trace of the mission
 remains, but on its site,
facing the plaza in Santa Cruz is the Church of the Holy Cross,
 in which is reproduced as faithfully as faithfully as possible, the
 line and details of the original structure.
 MISSION NUESTRA SENORA DE LA SOLEDAD (Our Lady of
 Solitude) lies in ruins on a plain about four miles from the town
 of Soledad. The roofless ruin and mass of mud brick walls of this
 large mission recall the many hardships of the devout fathers who
 carried the badge of Christianity up and down the state. It was the
 thirteenth mission, founded October 9th, 1791. (Not shown in this
 folder).
 MISSION SAN JOSE DE GUADALUPE, near San Jose, was
 founded June 11th, 1797. It is located about 15 miles north of San
 Jose, on the western slope of the Diablo Range, overlooking the
 Santa Clara Valley. Of this fourteenth Mission, only one building,
 the monastery of the once extensive group, remains today.
MISSION SAN JUAN BAUTISTA
, the fifteenth Mission, was founded June 24th, 1797. The
 Mission stands on a low mesa in the town of San Juan, midway
 between Salinas and Gilroy, overlooking a fruitful valley. San Juan
 is one of the most beautiful of the Missions, and the church dating
 from 1812, was the only one of the California Missions, that had
 three aisles. MISSION SAN MIGUEL ARCANGEL, the sixteenth Mission,
 was founded July 25th, 1797. It is now a parish church and in good
 repair, with many of the original decorations still in tact. It is
 located in the Salinas Valley in the town of San Miguel, about nine
 miles north of Paso Robles. MISSION SAN FERNANDO REY DE
 ESPAÑA, the seventeenth Mission, is located about twenty miles
 northwest of Los Angeles, and was founded September 8th, 1797. This
 vast establishment is undergoing an extensive restoration program.
 Of the old buildings, the only one in fair repair, is the Convent,
 a picturesque adobe, with a long arched corridor. Visitors are
 shown the padres’ refectory and kitchens, and also the
 cellars and wine vats where Indian converts trampled out the juice
 of the grape. The old gardens are now an attractive city park, in
 which are preserved, in separate beds, examples of flowers and
 shrubs from all the other missions. MISSION SAN LUIS REY DE
 FRANCIA, was the eighteenth Mission, and was founded June 13th,
 1798. It was one of the largest of the missions and was named for
 Louis IX, King of France, who was a Franciscan. It is located in a
 beautiful valley about five miles inland from Oceanside, and is the
 seat of the Missionary College of the Franciscan order. MISSION
 SANTA YNEZ, the nineteenth Mission, is located in the beautiful
 Santa Ynez Valley. It was founded September 17th, 1804, near the
 town of Lompoc. (Not shown in this folder). MISSION SAN RAFAEL
 ARCANGEL, was the twentieth Mission, founded December 14th, 1817.
 The adobe structures erected here, none too stable, crumbled with
 time and disappeared. No trace of the Mission remains. (Not shown
 in this folder). MISSION SAN FRANCISCO SOLANO DE SONOMA was the
 21st and last of the Missions to be established by the Franciscan
 Fathers. The Mission was founded by Father Jose Altimira and
 Twenty-seven soldiers, July 4th, 1823. It is located in the town of
 Sonoma, 50 miles north of San Francisco and is the most northerly
 mission in the chain. The church is today a State Museum,
 containing an interesting collection of early days.
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Eighteen scenes of the Redwood Highway, California: a) Chandler
 Tree, Drive thru tree at Underwood Park; b) Unique Log House at
 Garberville; c) World Famous Tree House Believe it or Not, At
 Lilley Redwood Park; d) Rest Room made from a large log; e)
 World’s Tallest Tree; f) Douglas Memorial Bridge over the
 Klamath River; g) Last of the Roosevelt Elk-Prairie Creek
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Park; h) This Giant Redwood was 320 ft. high, diameter 13.8 ft.
 Age 1250 years. Richardson Grove; i) The poem The Redwoods written
 by Joseph B. Strauss, building of the Golden Gate Bridge; j)
 Nature’s Cathedral in the Redwoods; k) The Redwood Burl
 Growth, Prairie Creek State Park; l) Entrance to the Stump House,
 Eureka; m) Big tree, 345 ft. high, 72 ft. in circumference, Upper
 Bull Creek Flat; n) The “Elephant Tree,” Trees of Mystery Park; o)
 Lane’s Redwood Flat; p) The “Del Norte Wonder Tree”, 9 ft
 across, estimated age 500 years; q) Trail through the Giant Ferns,
 Prairie Creek Park; r) Trinidad Head. The Redwood Highway traverses
 the Redwood Empire, “America’s newest National Playground.”
 San Francisco is the southern terminus while Grant’s Pass,
 Oregon is the northern terminus, covering some 469 miles.
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Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun, Broadmoor-Cheyenne Mountain
 Highway, Colorado Springs, Colorado.
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Seven Falls, near Colorado Springs, Colorado. Only 10 minutes
 from downtown Colorado Springs is this beautiful series of falls
 situated in a highly scenic canyon country. A stairway allows easy
 walking to the top of the falls.
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Vista of the Broadmoor Hotel across the lake, Colorado Springs,
 Colorado.
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Indian Ceremonies in Garden of the Gods, Colorado
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Garden of the Gods, by Moonlight, Colorado. The Pike’s
 Peak Region is Nature’s Picture Gallery and its pictures are
 on a majestic scale. One of the delightful nooks of the bast
 gallery is the Garden of the Gods with nature creating an ever
 changing variety of effects. Many paintings have been made of the
 light and shadow effects upon the weird rocks, and every period of
 the day presents new changes. By moonlight the Garden is more
 wonderful than ever, with the great masses of rock dimly outlined
 and moonlight gleaming over its bright surfaces.
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Garden of the Gods, Colorado. In this unusual park, huge masses
 of white dakota sandstone rise to heights of 200 to 300 feet.
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Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun on Cheyenne Mountain,
 Broadmoor-Cheyenne Highway, Colorado Springs, Colorado. The Shrine
 is one of the most striking and original memorials ever conceived.
 Towering high up on the steep slopes of Cheyenne Mt. it is an
 enduring monument to the great American humorist as well as the
 resting place of its creator, Spencer Penrose.
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Garden of the Gods, Colorado.
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Pikes Peak from Ute Pass Highway above Woodland Park, Colorado.
 The Monument of the Continent. No term could be more fitting. Back
 in the fifties, Pikes Peak was the beacon by which the hardy
 pioneers steered their prairie schooners across the plains to
 search for the precious metals yet undiscovered in the Golden West.
 Today this same sentinel, towering to a height of 14,110 feet,
 beckons thousands of tourists annually to enjoy the unrivaled
 mountain air and scenery to be found in such abundance in the
 vicinity of this mountain.
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Hidden Inn, Garden of the Gods, Colorado. The Indian Pueblo
 shown herein was erected by the Park Commission of Colorado Springs
 for the purpose of providing visitors to the Garden of the Gods
 with a resting place, where light refreshments could be served. The
 structure fits in between ledges of rocks, which appear to have
 been thrown up for the purpose. The building is of brick and
 concrete, covered with plaster made from the red sand and rocks,
 which are peculiar to the Garden of the Gods.
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Bust of Will Rogers at the Shrine of the Sun on Cheyenne
 Mountain, Broadmoor-Cheyenne Highway, Colorado Springs,
 Colorado.
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Nearing the top, Broadmoor-Cheyenne Highway, Cheyenne Lodge at
 the top.
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Cheyenne Lodge from observation point, top of Cheyenne
 Mountain.
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Balanced Rock, Garden of the Gods, Pike’s Peak Region,
 Colorado. The Balanced Rock is one of the wonders of the
 Pike’s Region. It is located just west of the Garden of the
 Gods in the section of peculiar rock formation known as Mushroom
 Park. The huge boulder, weighing many tons, rests on a base of but
 a few feet seemingly almost ready to topple but continues to
 stand.
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Kissing Camels on North Gate Rock, Garden of the Gods, Pikes
 Peak Region, Colorado. The Kissing Camels are among the most
 notable formations of the Garden of the Gods. They are located at
 the top of the north gate rock, are visible from both sides of the
 garden, and are noticed in nearly all views of the gateway.
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Pillars of Hercules, South Cheyenne Cañon-Colorado Springs,
 Colorado.
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Six Miles of Switchbacks that Climb over 3,000 Feet, Colorado
 Springs, Colorado. The Broadmoor-Cheyenne Highway climbing up
 Cheyenne Mountain.
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Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Park of the Red Rocks, Denver Mountain
 Parks, Colorado. This is the theatre as seen from the top looking
 down on the serried rows of seats and the stage. In the background
 loom the Hogback and Green Mountain.
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Tunnel, Creation Rock Drive, Park of the Red Rocks, Denver
 Mountain Parks, Colorado. This is part of Denver’s system of
 mountain parks. The Park of the Red Rocks is a great area of
 fantastic red sandstone formations carved into weird shapes by
 erosion. This tunnel is located on the drive to Creation Rock.
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Manitou Cliff Dwellings, Phantom Cliff Cañon, Manitou
 Springs, Colorado.
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Watch Tower in the Ancient Ruins of the Manitou Cliff Dwellings,
 Manitou Springs, Colorado.
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Pikes Peak, Alt. 14,110 Feet from Rampart Range Road, showing
 Cascade and Beginning of Pikes Peak Auto Highway. The Rampart Range
 Road offers some of the most fascinating views of lofty Pikes Peak
 to be found anywhere. Cascade is the first reached summer colony in
 te Pass, a charming village with a unique chapel and many fine
 mountain homes.
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Snow-Covered Pikes Peak, Colorado. Reaching an altitude of
 14,100 feet, this famous peak can be reached by a highway which is
 open from June to October.
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Narrows in Williams Canon, Manitou Springs, Colorado.
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Eighteen views of Pikes Peak Highway, Colorado: a) Ute Pass and
 Manitou Springs, Colorado; b) Rising Out of Utre Pass, Pikes Peak
 Highway; c) Pikes Peak from Ute Pass Highway above Woodland park,
 Colorado; d) Glencove Inn, Halfway up Pikes Peak Auto Highway; e)
 Pikes Peak Highway, Near Timberline, Altitude, 11,425 Feet; f)
 Serpentine Trail, Pikes Peak Highway, Colorado; g) Bottomless Pit.
 Pikes Peak Auto Highway. Colorado Springs in distance; h) Pikes
 Peak Auto Highway, Showing Seven Elevations; i) Summit House, Pikes
 Peak, Colorado. Altitude, 14,110 feet; j) Sunrise from Pikes Peak;
 k) The W’s or Switchbacks; l) Pikes Peak above the clouds; m)
 Panorama from Mile 14; n) Pikes Peak, Colorado, from Cascade; o)
 Gateway, Garden of the Gods, Colorado. Pikes Peak in the distance;
 p) Ancient Cliff Dwellings in Phantom Cliff Canon, Colorado, as
 seen
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75
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from Manitou Springs Skyline Drive; q) Seven Falls, So. Cheyenne
 Canyon, Colorado Springs, Colorado. 267 wooden and 20 stone steps
 lead to the top, a height of 300 feet; r) Pikes Peak Avenue,
 Colorado Springs, Colorado. Pikes Peak in the distance.
Pikes Peak, Sentinel of the Rocky Mountains, is America’s
 most famous mountain. It was the landmark of the pioneer and
 continues to be the magnet which attracts thousands of people to
 the Rocky Mountain region. It rises abruptly from the plains and
 its Summit towers more than tow thousand feet above its highest
 neighbor. There are no other peaks that approach its height within
 a radius of ninety miles.
Lieut. Zebulon Montgomery Pike was the discoverer of the famous
 mountain in November 1806, but never ascended to its Summit.
 Thirteen years later, Major Long and his exploration party found an
 easier approach and reached its top. Today thousands of visitors
 from all parts of the world ride in comfort to the top of this
 mountain, 14,110 feet above sea level.
The Summit is reached by the picturesque Pikes Peak Highway
 comprising eighteen miles of unexcelled scenic beauty. The grandeur
 of this road winding through the Pike National Forest, and climbing
 by easy grades to the very top of the world’s most famous
 peak, is beyond description.
From the Summit of Pikes Peak one has a wonderful panorama view
 in all directions. Sixty thousand square miles of Colorado are
 spread out before you. To the west and north, two hundred and fifty
 miles of the Continental Divide, a line of towering peaks clothed
 in perpetual snow; to the east is a vast ocean of plains, superb
 and placid, extending to the dim horizon. Colorado Springs,
 fourteen miles distant as the crow would fly, lies like a garden
 patch on border of the plains.
In the spring of the year, when the highway is first opened,
 cars often drive between banks of snow that are ten to twenty feet
 deep extending from timberline to the Summit, some six miles in
 distance. These huge snow banks disappear in summer but there are
 places on the mountain where snow is perpetual and it is not
 uncommon to experience a real snow storm on the Summit in
 midsummer.
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Nineteen scenes of the Pikes Peak Region Colorado: a) Will
 Rogers Stadium at Broadmoor; b) Vista of Broadmoor Hotel from the
 Lake; c) Front vista of the Broadmoor Hotel; d) Will Rogers Shrine
 of the Sun, High up on Cheyenne Mt.; e) Cheyenne Lodge, on Summit
 of Cheyenne Mt., Alt. 9,500 Ft., at the terminus of
 Broadmoor-Cheyenne Mt. Highway; f) Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun,
 on Cheyenne Mt.; g) Broadmoor-Cheyenne Mt. Highway; h) Will Rogers
 Shrine of the Sun at night with the loghts of Colorado Springs in
 background; i) Seven Falls, South Cheyenne Cañon; j) Helen
 Hunt Falls, North Cheyenne Cañon; k) Bruin Inn, North Cheyenne
 Cañon; l) Helen Hunt Falls, North Cheyenne Cañon; m) Mine
 Hill, North Cheyenne Cañon; n) Vista in the Cañon; o)
 Helen Hunt’s Grave, Seven Falls; p) Crags in South Cheyenne
 Cañon; q) Bridal Veil Falls; r) Pillars of Hercules, South
 Cheyenne Cañon; Seven Falls, South Cheyenne Cañon.
Scenic Broadmoor-Cheyenne Mt. District, Colorado Springs:
 Broadmoor is a fine residence district at the foot of Cheyenne
 Mountain adjacent to Colorado Springs. In the midst of this
 district stands the Broadmoor Hotel lying in beautiful grounds at
 the edge of a lake.
The Broadmoor-Cheyenne Highway starts at the hotel, skirting the
 great golf-course, to reach the top of Cheyenne Mt., 9,500 feet
 high, in a series of scissor-like switchbacks up the face of the
 mountain. The road is a marvel of road construction blasted thru
 great slopes littered with boulders as large as a house, along the
 face of solid rock cliffs, and cut thru slopes where gashes forty
 of fifty feet deep had to be dug in the side of the mountain. At
 the top stands Cheyenne Lodge a charming place built in massive
 pueblo style of creamy stucco. From the Lodge one may look over the
 “Devil’s Horns,” solid spurs of rock projecting up from the
 mountain, to obtain sweeping views of the plains below and the
 mountains all about. Although the road give the thrill of a
 lifetime in climbing the dizzy heights of the mountain, it is wide
 and secure, bordered by steel fences and thoroughly safe.
The Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun, a solid stone castle-like
 structure, high upon a promontory of Cheyenne Mt. was finished and
 dedicated in 1937. It captured the imagination and interest of the
 public as no other feature has for years. Here also are the ashes
 of Spencer Penrose, the builder of all these great features.
It is a perpetual memorial to the memory of the great humorist.
 Illuminated each night with a perpetual beacon burning in its
 spire, with chimes sounding each quarter hour. It is one of the
 most unusual memorials ever constructed.
The Zoo at the foot of the mountain with one of the greatest
 collection of wild animals in this country and the miniature cog
 railway from the Broadmoor to the Zoo are also unusual
 features.
North and South Cheyenne Cañons emerge from the mountains
 in the valley just behind the Broadmoor district and are two of the
 most remarkable and charming cañons in the Rockies.
South Cheyenne Cañon cannot be equaled for sheer depth and
 beauty with great walls of richly colored granite rising straight
 up from the narrow bottom. The Cañon terminates in the
 wonderful spectacle of Seven Falls where the dainty stream drops
 down an almost sheer cliff in seven beautiful falls.
North Cheyenne Cañon is longer than its sister to the
 south. It is a favorite outing spot and is part of the municipal
 park system. Several beautiful water falls occur in this Cañon
 of which Hellen Hunt Falls is the most noted. Close by these falls
 stands Bruin Inn, a picturesque mountain inn. From the upper part
 of North Cheyenne Cañon the High Drive leads over the hills to
 Bear Creek Cañon and back to the city in a circle trip.
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Eighteen scenes of Buffalo Bill Museum, Lookout Mountain,
 Colorado: a) “Johnny” Baker, Foster Son of “Buffalo Bill;” b)
 Pa-Ha-Ska Tepee, Buffalo Bill’s Memorial Museum; c) Grave of
 Buffalo Bill; d) Upper Hairpins and Windy Point on the Lariat
 Trail; e) Sensation Point on the Lariat Trail; f) Golden and Table
 Mountains as seen from Buffalo Bill Memorial Museum; g) Sunset over
 the Lariat Trail; h) Denver at night from veranda of the “Buffalo
 Bill” Memorial Museum; i) Clear Creek Cañon from Windy Point
 on the Lariat Trail; j) The last portrait of Wm. F. Cody (Buffalo
 Bill); k) “Buffalo Bill” on his favorite horse Isham; l) Buffalo
 Bill and Sitting Bull, Buffalo Bill Memorial Museum; m) Interior,
 Pa-Ha-Ska Tepee; n) Interior, Pahaska Tepee Coffee Shop; o) Art
 Gallery; p) Aeroplane view of Lariat Trail to Lookout Mountain,
 Colorado; q) Double Hairpins on Road to Lookout Mountain; r)
 Wildcat Point on Lariat Trail to Lookout Mountain; s) “Buffalo
 Bill’s” Grave on Lookout Mountain, Colorado.
Buffalo Bill: A Brief Biography of a Strenuous Life. William
 Frederick Cody was born in Scott County, Iowa, February 26th, 1846.
 His parents were Isaac and Mary Cody, descendants direct from
 Revolutionary patriots. In 1854 the Codys migrated to Salt Creek
 Valley, in Kansas, through which the famous Salt Creek Trail led
 the early pioneers toward the Pacific. It was here that life opened
 strenuously for young Will Cody, for the “Free Soilers” were making
 things lively in those parts, and Isaac Cody took an emphatic stand
 on the subject of anti-slavery. While still in his teens young Cody
 engaged as a “extra man” with Russell Majors & Waddell, and was
 in the saddle as part of the guard for one of their supply trains.
 He was next employed as a pony express rider for the same firm. As
 trapper and guide he next came into prominence. On the day of his
 mother’s funeral, he rode to Fort Leavenworth and enlisted in
 the U. S. Cavalry. This was November 22, 1863. As a member of the
 Seventh Kansas known as “Jennison’s Jayhawkers” he marched to
 Memphis and Shermans forces, and was assigned to special duty under
 General A. J. Smith. In the Campaign of the Seventh Kansas young
 Cody was first actively engaged in a battle,-Pilot Knob,
 September 24, 1864, against the Confederate General Price. Special
 duty engaged him until the war was over when he again returned to
 the plains. Driving the Overland Stage Coach between Fort Kearney
 and Plumb Creek, in Nebraska, was his first employment after he
 left the Army. Next he engaged in Scout duty, one of his
 assignments being guide to Custer long before the Big Horn
 catastrophe. Later he contracted with the promoters of the Kansas
 Pacific Railroad to supply their workmen with buffalo meat, and in
 this service he acquired the title of Buffalo Bill,” having killed,
 in seven months, 4280 buffaloes. Scouting for General Sheridan was
 his next duty, and as bearer of dispatches between Fort Hayes and
 Dodge he created the unparalleled record of riding three hundred
 and fifty miles in sixty hours. He was then detailed to Fort Hayes
 and made Chief of Scouts, by Sheridan for the Fifth Cavalry, later
 being assigned to Gen. E. A. Carr’s command who made him
 Chief of Scouts. In June 1868, at the battle fo Summit Springs, he
 killed Chief Tall Bull and turned the scales of battle to complete
 victory. He was assigned as guide for General Sheridan and the
 Grand Duke Alexis on their grand Buffalo hunt, and served in
 various capacities when a horseman of experience was called into
 requisition. In 1872 he was elected to the Nebraska legislature and
 later received his title of Colonel of the State National Guard
 from the late Governor Thayer. During interims between scouting
 activities, Cody in 1872, made his debut as an actor in a border
 drama entitled “Scouts of the Plains,” with successful results. The
 Indian uprising of Centennial year brought Buffalo Bill again into
 prairie activities and his service as Scout were again employed by
 General Carr with the Fifth Cavalry. While on the campaign which
 resulted in the death of Custer and, following the sad event, he
 came across Yellow Hand, who had detached himself from the other
 Indians for the purpose of disposing of “Pa-has-ka” as Cody was
 known to the Indians, and in the hand-to-hand combat that followed
 Yellow Hand was killed. The First Scalp for Custer. These known
 instances where Cody has disposed of Indians are cited to prove
 that never wantonly and without provocation has he taken life:
 there has always been ample cause and abundant necessity. In 1891
 as Colonel of the Nebraska National Guard, under General Dolby, he
 did effective service during the Indian Ghost Dance War, and
 assisted materially in bringing about peace. He originated the Wild
 West Show, 1882, and with it toured the civilized world. He not
 only often achieved “Honorable Mention” but won that greatest prize
 to the soldier: “The Congressional Medal.”
Mourned by millions he passed over the Great Divide, January 10,
 1917. In the Rotunda of the Capitol Building of Colorado his body
 lay in State and Mayor Speer arranged, by deed from the City of
 Denver, that the remains of this great Western-American shall
 forever rest in the rocky fastness of Mount Lookout, overlooking
 the vast plains he helped to subdue and make habitable.
Sleep on old Pioneer! Under the aegis of the old flag, our
 hallowed Stars and Stripes, may he rest forever and a day. “Johnny”
 Baker.
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Washington Monument and cherry blossoms, Washington, D. C. One
 of the beautiful scenes at Washington is at the time when the
 Cherry Blossoms are in bloom, along the Riverside Drive at Potamac
 Park. These Cherry Blossom trees were presented to the U. S.
 Government by the Japanese. The camera cannot do justice to the
 beautiful vistas which present themselves from almost every angle
 at this point.
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Japanese Cherry Blossoms, Riverside Drive, Potamac Park,
 Washington, D. C. Washington Monument in background
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Lincoln Memorial and Japanese Cherry Blossoms, Washington, D. C.
 The Lincoln Memorial, modeled after a classic Greek Temple, is
 situated on an eminence in Potomac Park on the banks of the Potomac
 River. From the far side of Tidal Basin, the view as pictured here
 is very beautiful and attractive especially in the early spring
 when the Japanese Cherry Trees are in bloom.
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Lincoln Memorial from across the Potomac, Washington, D. C.
 Design adopted by the Lincoln Memorial Commission on the site of
 Potamac Park, near the River on the axis of the Capitol and the
 Washington Monument. Design by Mr. Henry Bacon. It is a monumental
 structure, standing in a broad plain, surrounded by an amphitheater
 of hills. Statue of Lincoln is in the center of Memorial, while
 smaller halls at each side of central space contain second
 inaugural and Gettysburg addresses. Surrounding the walls, incasing
 these memorials is a colonnade of 36 columns for each of the 36
 states in the Union at the time of Lincoln’s death.
82 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Lincoln Memorial from the Potomac, Washington, D. C.
83 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The new Bureau of Engraving and Printing overlooking Potomac
 Park and Speedway is a branch of the U. S. Treasury and it is here
 where all of Uncle Sam’s paper money, bonds, revenue stamps,
 postage stamps, military, naval and diplomatic commission,
 passports, etc. are made. The Washington Monument can be seen on
 the left of the picture.
84 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Washington Monument and Bureau of Printing and Engraving,
 Washington, D. C. Washington Monument, a stupendous shaft of
 granite, 555 feet 5 1/8 inches in height. It is 55 feet square at
 the base, 24 at the top, and terminates in a pyramid of pure
 aluminum. The foundation of rock and cement is 36 feet deep, 126
 feet square. The cornerstone was laid in 1848, the monument was
 finished in 1885. It is the highest work of masonry in the
 world
85 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Washington Monument, Washington, D. C.
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The White House was designed by James Hoban. Washington selected
 the site and the cornerstone, October 13, 1792 and lived to see the
 building completed. John Adams was the first occupant in 1800.
87 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The White House has been the home of the Presidents from the
 time of John Adams to the present. Washington selected the site,
 laid the corner-stone in 1792, and with his wife inspected the
 finished building in 1799. The building is of Virginia freestone.
 After the house had been fired by British troops in 1814, and only
 the walls were left standing, the restored exterior was painted
 white to obliterate the marks of the fire.
88 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
White House, South Front. The President’s grounds, with
 the graceful colonnaded balcony, flanked with shrubbery and
 foliage, the White House is here as seen in one of its most
 pleasing aspects.
89 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
U. S. Treasury, Washington, D. C. is here seen from Pennsylvania
 Avenue. The solidity of the massive building is in keeping with its
 office as a treasure house-the Bank of the Nation. The total
 length is 450 feet and the width 250 feet. The view shows the south
 front with its portico and the Ionic columns of the 15th street
 front.
90 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
New National Museum in the Mall is a massive and dignified
 structure of granite. 561×365 feet in area, being greater than any
 other government building except the Capitol.
91 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The American Red Cross, between the Corcoran Art Gallery and
 Continental Hall is dedicated to the memory of the heroic women of
 the Civil War. The beautiful assembly room is entirely in white and
 crimson hangings, the colors of the Red Cross. The structure of
 white marble cost $800,000. It houses the administrative
 departments of the American Red Cross.
92 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The United States Capitol, sets on a height overlooking the
 amphitheatre of the Potomac, is one of the largest and stateliest
 buildings in the world. It is 751 feet in length and 350 feet in
 width, covering three and a half acres. The Statute of Freedom on
 the dome towers 307 feet above the esplanade. The cornerstone was
 laid by President Washington in 1793; the central building was
 finished in 1797; and the extensions were first occupied by
 Congress in 1857.
93 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The United States Capitol.
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The United States Capitol.
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Hall of Representatives, U. S. Capitol. In the southern wing of
 the U. S. Capitol is the U. S. House of Representatives. The Hall
 of the House occupies the main floor. It is 139 ft. in length, 83
 ft. wide and 30 ft. high. The members’ desks are of mahogany,
 the Speaker’s desk of white marble, elevated below which are
 the desks of the clerks and official reporters of the House. The
 visitors’ galleries are entered from the floor above. A
 ceiling of glass panels having the Coat of Arts of each state
 painted upon them diffuses a soft light throughout the chamber.
96 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Second Floor, Congressional Library, Washington, D. C.
97 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Library of Congress justly celebrated as the culmination of
 architectural achievement of the day, was completed in 1897 at a
 cost of over $6,000,000. The Library is here seen from the Capitol.
 The dome and lantern are finished in black copper, with panels
 gilded with thick coating of gold leaf; and the cresting of the
 dome terminates in a gilded finial representing the torch of
 science ever burning.
98 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Members of the famous porpoise colony at Marineland, Florida,
 are the aquatic stars of the daily feeding programs as they leap
 out of the water to take a fish very gently from the
 attendant’s hand. Because of their playfulness and
 gentleness, porpoises are almost the ‘trade-mark” of Marine
 Studios.
99 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
St. Augustine, Florida, America’s Oldest City. Old slave
 market and plaza, and Castillo De San Marcos, oldest masonry fort
 in the United States.
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Treasure Island Causeway to the Gulf Beaches, St. Petersburg,
 Florida
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Midway Motel, U. S. Hwy. 17, 30 Miles South of Savannnah,
 Georgia.
100B 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The Eugene Talmadge Memorial Bridge, Savannah, Georgia is
 dedicated as a memorial to the late former Governor of Georgia, was
 built at a cost of $14,600,000. The structure is 6,034 ft. long,
 with a vertical clearance of 135 feet over the Savannah River.
 Rising above the congested area it affords a beautiful panoramic
 view of Savannah, while providing a time and mileage saving route
 for local or through traffic.
100C 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Adler Planetarium, Chicago’s 1933 International
 Exposition.
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Pioneer Schoolhouse where McGuffy taught at Ashland, Kentucky.
 The “Traipsin” woman is holding a McGuffy Chart from which his
 famous readers developed. The American Folk Song Festival is held
 here each year.
101 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
The Historical Evangeline Oak, on Bayou Teche, “America’s
 most famous Tree.” The spot where Evangeline met Gabriel (Louis
 Arceneaux), and where the exiled Acadians landed in 1765.
102 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
White Birches, Rangeley Lakes Region, Maine.
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Down East, Windjammers off the Main coast.
104 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Nubble light at York Beach, Maine. This famous landmark on the
 Maine Seacoast was established in 1879. Its powerful bean can be
 seen 15 miles out to sea.
105 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
York Harbor, Maine.
106 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
A day at the lake, Michigan.
107 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Burton Memorial Carillon Tower on the Mall of the University of
 Michigan Campus. The Rackham Building may be seen in the distance.
 Ann Arbor, Michigan.
108 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Angel Hall, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
109 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The Michigan League Building, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
 Michigan. Known as the “Women’s League,” this building houses
 the principle activities of the women on the campus. The Lydia
 Mendelssohn Theater is in this building. There are also a limited
 number of guest rooms.
110 3 ½ x 5 ½ 2 Color Postcard none
University of Michigan Hospital, with new addition, Ann Arbor,
 Michigan. Built in 1924 at a cost of over $4,000,000. In 1931 the
 new addition of 100 beds for Tubercular patients was opened. The
 hospital now has capacity for 1,325 patients.
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110A 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Booklet none
A booklet about Cranbrook, an educational center comprising six
 institutions which occupy three hundred acres of rolling land in
 Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, ten miles north of Detroit’s city
 limits. Sixteen photographs and a description of each.
111 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Public Library, Rochester, Minnesota. Rochester is world famed
 because of the Mayo Clinic which is founded here. It is also the
 center of an important dairying section. It has a population of
 about 28,000 and an altitude of 989 feet.
112 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Old Warren County Court House, Vicksburg, Mississippi. The court
 house completed in 1861, was built by slave labor, and during the
 Siege of 1863 was often struck by cannon balls. It stands on a
 block of ground donated to the county by Newet Vick, the founder of
 the City of Bicksburg. At the present time, it is used to house
 various and sundry governmental agencies.
113 3 ½ x 5 ½ 2 Color Postcard none
Horseshoe Drive, National Military Park, Vicksburg, Mississippi.
 This drive comprises a portion of the 30 odd miles of driveway
 through the National Military Park, following in a general way one
 line of the siege and defense used during the Siege of Vicksburg.
 This is an extremely picturesque drive and the winding road over
 its entire length forms the letters U. S.
114 3 ½ x 5 ½ 2 Color Postcard none
Administration Building, National Military Park, Vicksburg,
 Mississippi. There are 32 miles of well kept roads in the Park; 16
 bridges, impressive drives such as The Horseshoe” and “The U. S.”
 which winding road forms those letters; 898 tablets authentically
 located, and 468 bust portraits, statues, monuments and
 memorials.
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United States Waterways Experiment Station, Vicksburg,
 Mississippi. Model of Harbor, Port Washington, Wisconsin. The
 United States Waterways Experiment Station, five miles south of
 Vicksburg, is established to investigate problems which arise in
 the regulation and improvement of the rivers and harbors of our
 entire country. The river or harbor is reproduced in miniature and
 on this model experiments are made to find the best and most
 economical solution to the problem. Between 200 and 400 persons are
 employed continuously at the Station, which occupies a federal
 reservation of about 250 acres.
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Magnolia Motor Hotel, Hwy. 61 & 80 at the Bridge, Vicksburg,
 Mississippi.
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Sagmount Pools, between Joplin and Neosho, Missouri, near Camp
 Crowder
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Calvin H. French Memorial Chapel, Hastings College, Hastings,
 Nebraska.
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Silver Cascade, Crawford Notch White Mountains, New
 Hampshire
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Jackson Falls and Wildcat Brook, located in the mountain village
 of Jackson, New Hampshire.
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Fall comes to Pinkham Notch on Route 16 with the famous Mt.
 Washington in the background, White Mountains, New Hampshire.
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A hiker pauses as the Wildcat Mt. Gondola Tramway passes
 overhead, Rt. 16, Pinkham Notch, Jackson, New Hampshire.
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Mt. Washington in New Hampshire, 6,288 feet, highest peak in the
 Presidential Range of the White Mountains shown in the majestic
 dress of brilliant autumn foliage.
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Mt. Chocorua-A study in composition by Winston Pote. This
 lovely lake and mountain are an important asset to the scenic
 splendor of New Hampshire.
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Heritage-New Hampshire. A fascinating journey through 300
 years of New Hampshire history all under one roof, located on Route
 16, Glen, New Hampshire.
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Bird’s-Eye view of U. S. Custom House and Delaware River
 Bridge between Philadelphia, Pa. and Camden, New Jersey.
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Pizzeria Alla Napoletana, 147 W. 48th St., New York City.
 Rendezvous of famous Radio, Screen and Stage Stars and managed by
 the great “Luigino.”
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A little bid of old New York. German American Rathskeller
 (formerly Scheffel Halle) at 17th Street and 3rd Avenue.
 Established 1879, one of the oldest German Restaurants in New
 York.
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Main Dining Room, Sardi’s, 234-36 West 44th St., New York.
 The Home of the Celebrities.
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Approach to Amphitheatre thru the Ravine, Chautauqua
 Institution, Chautauqua, New York.
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Little Church around the corner in winter, New York City.
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The Church of the Transfiguration, better known as “The Little
 Church around the Corner”-1 East 29th Street, New York City.
 Many prominent people from all over the country including
 theatrical people, are married here. It has an important collection
 of rare paintings, wood carvings and statues and is noted for its
 charm and quiet.
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Little Church around the corner, New York City.
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Interior of Trinity Church, New York. On this spot for two and a
 half centuries Old Trinity has served our Lord Jesus Christ,
 proclaiming His Word, and providing His Presence. Thousands pray
 here, before and after and during their work, in the Chapel of All
 Saints and before the high altar. It is God’s House, free and
 open for the use of all. Here, with services every day, clergy
 ready for informal consultation or sacrament, the Intercessions
 Box, the Tract Case, shelves of selected reading, and twice-weekly
 organ recitals, God’s “Welcome” calls His children.
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St. Eustace Episcopal Church, Main Street, Lake Placid, New
 York. St. Eustace Window. St. Eustace saw the crucified Christ in
 the horns of the stag and was converted. The middle panel shows
 Whiteface Mountain and Lake Placid in a Tiffany style stained glass
 window-dated 1900.
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U. S. Military Academy from Hudson River, West Point, New
 York.
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The Chapel, U. S. Military Academy, West Point, New York.
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Dress Parade, U. S. Military Academy, West Point, New York.
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Brink of the American Falls, Niagara Falls. The American Falls
 are properly speaking, two distinct falls, the lesser being known
 as Luna Falls, which divides Luna Island from Goat Island and
 behind which is the celebrated Cave of the Winds. The view here
 given is taken from the east side of the Falls at the base of the
 precipice above which is Prospect Park. The American Falls are 167
 feet in height and the width is 100 feet.
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Old Well, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC. It is
 located in the heart of the Campus. It is a symbol and a shrine and
 for years was also the only source of water supply for the
 students.
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Charles T. Woolen Gymnasium, University of NC, Chapel Hill,
 North Carolina.
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Kenan Stadium, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North
 Carolina.
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New Women’s Dormitories, University of North Carolina,
 Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
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Venable Hall, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North
 Carolina.
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Davie Hall, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North
 Carolina.
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Gimghoul Castle, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
 North Carolina.
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Playmakers Theatre at night, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
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Graham Memorial, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
 north Carolina.
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Campus View of Library and Bell Tower, University of North
 Carolina, Chapel Hill, north Carolina.
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Bell Tower, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, north
 Carolina.
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Graham Memorial, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
 north Carolina.
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First Presbyterian Church, University of North Carolina, Chapel
 Hill, north Carolina.
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Spire of the University Methodist Church, University of North
 Carolina, Chapel Hill, north Carolina.
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Carolina Inn, Chapel Hill, north Carolina.
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View from Battle Seat, Chapel Hill, north Carolina.
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Arboretum Walk, Chapel Hill, north Carolina.
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Mt. Mitchell, Blue Ridge Parkway, North Carolina, Elevation 6,
 684 ft. Mt. Mitchell, which is the highest peak in the East, is one
 of the prominent features along the Parkway.
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Looking Glass Falls, Pisgah National Forest, Western North
 Carolina. The Forest is located in Western North Carolina and has a
 gross area of 1,178,000 acres of which 465,000 acres have been
 acquired by the Government or approved for purchase.
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A scene from Paul Greens most famous of all outdoor pageants
 “The Lost Colony,” presented in Waterside Theater on Roanoke
 Island, North Carolina. The theater located in historic Fort
 Raleigh is on the exact spot from which the first English
 settlement in this country disappeared without a trace.
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A day’s catch of rainbow trout. In the heart of the Blue
 Ridge Mountains.
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Lambert Gardens, Portland, Oregon. A close-up picture of the
 beautiful Blue Spanish Pool and the large white foliage tree, often
 called the Ghost Tree, which stands in the brilliant Zinnia
 Gardens.
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Spanish Pool and Zinnia Gardens, Lambert Gardens, Portland,
 Oregon. This garden is ablaze with color throughout the summer.
 Beautiful trees and flowers, wide walks and restful garden seats
 make this famous beauty spot a delight to visitors.
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Court of Rose Festival Queen, Lambert Gardens, Portland, Oregon.
 Each year Portland’s Rose Festival Queen and her royal court
 visit the Lambert Gardens Rose Court-dedicated to all Rose
 Festival Queens. The queen leaves her royal foot print embedded in
 concrete for posterity.
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Italian Court, Lambert Gardens, Portland, Oregon. A picture of
 charm is this spring scene in the Italian Court, with its gay beds
 of tulips complemented by early spring flowers.
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Nineteen scenes of Oregon: a) Wizard Island, Crater Lake, Crater
 Lake National Park, Oregon; b) U. S. S. Portland Passing under St.
 John’s Bridge, Portland, Oregon; c) Mt. Hood, from Portland,
 Oregon; d) End of the Oregon Trail-Turn Around, Beach at
 Seaside, Oregon; e) Oregon timber; f) The Ox Bow on the Deschutes
 River, Oregon; g) Willamette Falls at Oregon City, Oregon; h)
 Shepperd’s Dell, Columbia River Highway, Oregon; i) Three
 Sisters and Mirror Lake, Oregon, North Sister 10,034 ft, Middle
 Sister 10,053 ft., South Sister 10354 Ft. Altitude; j) The Oregon
 Coast Highway on the Shores of the Pacific; k) Indians have
 Perpetual Fishing Rights at the Falls; l) Crater Lake, Oregon; m)
 State Capitol, Salem, Oregon; n) Timber Line Lodge, Mt. Hood
 National Forest, Oregon, Altitude 6,000 feet; o) Mt. Hood Oregon.
 Hood River Valley in foreground; p) Multnoma Falls, Columbia River
 Highway, Oregon. Queen of all American Cataracts. Second Highest
 Falls in U. S.; q) Crown Point and Vista House, Columbia River
 Highway, Oregon; r) Bonneville Power and Navigation Dam, Largest
 Life Navigation Lock in the world, Columbia River Highway, Oregon;
 s) Mitchell’s Point Tunnel, Columbia River Highway,
 Oregon.
OREGON: One-fifth of the standing timber in the United States
 grows within the borders of Oregon. Embedded in the setting of a
 mountain range, Crater Lake ranks among the scenic wonders of the
 world. Offering Year-round sports to those who love the out-doors
 is Mt. Hood and her sister peaks of the Cascade Mountains,
 presenting a snow-topped skyline of rugged grandeur.
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Nine scenes of Crater Lake National Park, Oregon: a) Crater Lake
 Lodge is directly on the rim of the lake; b) Wizard Island Breaks
 the blue of the lake; c) From the shores of Crater Lake; d) The
 beautiful “Phantom Ship”; e) Crater Lake is Cradled in the top of
 an extinct volcano; f) Wizard Island lookout point; g) The phantom
 ship towers more than 165 feet about the lake; h) Crater
 Lakes’s Sapphire Blue Reflects the sky in its depth; i)
 Outstanding beauty from every viewpoint.
A great eruption tore the top from Mount Mazama, once 12,000
 feet high, to form beautiful Crater Lake, a thousand feet deep, 20
 miles in circumference, its water formed from melted snow. Its
 beautiful rich blue is unique, and it is surrounded with
 multi-colored cliffs which rise from 500 to 2,000 feet above its
 rim. Stocked with rainbow trout, Crater Lake is a fisherman’s
 paradise. In Winter, snow falls to a depth of sixty to eighty feet,
 yet the Lake never freezes, but remains close to freezing the year
 round. Discovered less than 100 years ago, Crater Lake is a
 favorite spot for vacationers who love nature. Trails lead to high
 points on the rim, and to the shore. Launches and rowboats are
 present for fishing or scenic trips, and a good road presents many
 enthralling views of the lake.
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St. Michael’s Church, Charleston, South Carolina, located
 on the corner of Broad and Meeting Streets, was opened for worship
 in February 1761 just 9 years after the corner stone was laid. The
 bells of this church were brought from England in 1764 and have
 crossed the Atlantic five times since then. The building is of
 brick and it is believed that the plans were drawn by a designer
 named Gibson, a successor of Sir Christopher Wren.
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St. Michael’s Church-Corner stone laid in 1752. The
 bells and clock brought from England in 1764 and the organ in
 1868.
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First (Scotch) Presbyterian Church-Present edifice erected
 in 1812, but the “Old Scotch Church” dates back to 1731.
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Interior of Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Old Church Street South and St. Philip’s Church,
 Charleston, South Carolina.
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Outdoor Art Exhibit by St. Phillip’s Churchyard,
 Charleston, South Carolina.
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St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, 1706, St. Andrew’s
 Parish, Charleston, South Carolina.
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St. Andrew’s Church, near Charleston, South Carolina.
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St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Summerville, South
 Carolina.
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St. James (Goose Creek) Church, 1713, Charleston, South
 Carolina.
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Doorway of Russell House built in 1811 by Nathaniel Russell
 whose initials are worked into the wrought iron balcony.
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The Sword Gates Gateway of Simonton House, Charleston, South
 Carolina.
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These hand-wrought iron gates, known as the “Sword Gates” guard
 the entrance to a beautiful old home on Legare Street in
 Charleston.
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Ashley Hall, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Old Slave Quarters on plantation, near Charleston, South
 Carolina.
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Middleton Place Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Interior of Mansion House, Middleton Place, near Charleston,
 South Carolina.
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Reflection Pool, Middleton Gardens, Near Charleston, South
 Carolina.
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The Mausoleum Tomb of Arthur Middleton, one of the signers of
 the Declaration of Independence, Middleton Place Gardens,
 Charleston, South Carolina.
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Bank of Azaleas near Tall Cedar, Middleton Place Gardens,
 Charleston, South Carolina.
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The Great Oak, Middleton Place Gardens, Charleston, South
 Carolina.
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Path in Axis of Garden, Middleton Place Gardens, Charleston,
 South Carolina.
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Great Lake, Middleton Place Gardens, Charleston, South
 Carolina.
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Looking across Terraces, and Butterfly Lake, and Ashley River
 from Live Oak near House, Middleton Place Gardens, Charleston,
 South Carolina.
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Looking across Lake from Live Oak near house, Middleton Place
 Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Magnolia Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Scene in Magnolia Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Cypress Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Cypress Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Rustic Bridge in Cypress Gardens, Charleston, South Carolina. At
 Dean Hall, situated about 23 miles from the city, these unique
 water gardens attract scores of delighted visitors yearly.
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Cypress Garden, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Cypress Gardens, Berkeley County, South Carolina. Known as one
 of the three famous Charleston gardens, Cypress is well named from
 the towering trees which form a canopy for the azaleas and
 camellias which are mirrored in the lake. “Low Country” Negroes
 paddle the visitor’s boats through inky waters that were once
 a rice reservoir. The gardens are part of a plantation that was
 established before 1725 by Sir John Nisbett of Dean, Scotland.
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Church Street looking south from Atlantic-One block from
 both South Battery and East Battery. This is a typical street
 scene. Charleston, South Carolina.
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Old Market House and U. D. C. Museum-erected in 1880, it
 extended from Meeting Street to the Cooper River. Fish and
 vegetables were brought in by boat and marketed here. Charleston,
 South Carolina.
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Old Powder Magazine built about 1700, it is probably the oldest
 piece of masonry in the city. Now owned by the Colonial Dames.
 Charleston, South Carolina.
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Point of Battery and Statue, showing junction of Ashley and
 Cooper Rivers, Charles, South Carolina. The Battery (White Point
 Gardens) is a beautiful drive and promenade along a sea wall 1500
 ft. long. Overlooking Charleston Harbor, and offering the visitor a
 magnificent view of the historic harbor fortifications, and beyond
 the Atlantic Ocean.
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Cooper River Bridge, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Carolina Low Country Avenue of moss covered trees, near
 Charleston, South Carolina.
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Dock Street Theater, Charleston, South Carolina. S. W. Corner of
 Church and Queen. Originally opened 1736. Restored, together with
 the Planters Hotel, and dedicated in Nov. 1937, with the
 presentation of George Farquhar’s, “The Recruiting Officer,”
 the play with which the original theater was opened two hundred
 years ago. This was a W.P.A. Project of $300,000.
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Foyer of Dock Street Theater, Charleston, South Carolina.
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Francis Marion Hotel, Charleston, South Carolina. The first
 tangible monument to General Francis Marion, valiant soldier and
 courageous idol of the state during the period between
 Charleston’s Revolutionary surrender at Middleton Place and
 the end of the war. The hotel decorators have used the
 General’s outstanding feats and various scenes of his life as
 a theme for their work.
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Fort Sumter Hotel, Charleston, South Carolina. This hotel on the
 famous Battery, was named after historic Fort Sumter, located on a
 tiny island in Charleston Harbor, easily visible from the
 waterfront rooms of the Fort Sumter Hotel.
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Winyah Indigo Society and Public Library, Georgetown, South
 Carolina. The Winyah Indigo Society, organized in 1740 by Indigo
 planters, was given a Royal Charter by King George in 1758. Members
 paid dues in Indigo, which was sold for funds to educate children
 as for South as Charleston, South Carolina, up to the North
 Carolina State Line.
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The Dining Room, Poinsett Hotel, Greenville, South Carolina.
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Isle of Palms Pavillion and Amusement Center from the air, Isle
 of Palms, South Carolina. It has a wide, smooth beach, fine, white
 and clean sand, water clear and without dangerous currents and
 undertow.
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The Hotel Marion, By The Sea. Isle of Palms, South Carolina.
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Boscobell Lake, Pendleton, South Carolina, showing gang-walk and
 part of the huge crowd of bathers.
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St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Summerville, South
 Carolina.
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St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Summerville, South
 Carolina.
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St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Summerville, South
 Carolina.
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Sumter Avenue and Colored Baptist Church, Summerville, South
 Carolina.
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White Gables, Summerville, South Carolina.
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One of the Flower Town’s lovely residences, Summerville,
 South Carolina.
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Pine Forest Inn, Summerville, South Carolina.
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Adventure School, Summerville, South Carolina.
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House with a lot of trees around it. One of the many beauty
 spots in Summerville, South Carolina.
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Church of the St. John Beloved, the quaint little Catholic
 Church, built in 1898, is one of the most picturesque churches in
 the “Flower-Town in the Pines, Summerville, South Carolina.
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Cypress Gardens, near Summerville, South Carolina.
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Wisteria, Summerville, South Carolina.
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Mateeba Gardens, formerly Ashley Barony in Azalea Time,
 Summerville, South Carolina.
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Wisteria in its glory, Summerville, South Carolina.
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Squirrel Inn, Summerville, South Carolina.
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Pine Ridge House, Summerville, South Carolina.
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Pike Hole, Summerville, South Carolina.
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Dogwood among the long leaf pines, Summerville, South
 Carolina.
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Cherokee Rose in the Tea Gardens, Summerville, South
 Carolina.
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Confederate Monument, erected by the Daughters of the
 Confederacy, dedicated July 21st , 1910, Walhalla, South
 Carolina.
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Mile High Overlook, Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This
 overlook is a short distance from Soco Gap on the Heintooga
 Overlook Road. The range in the distance is the crest of the Great
 Smokey Mountains, Tennessee.
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Black She Bear leading her brood of four cubs along the Newfound
 Gap Highway and begging for tidbits from passing motorists, Great
 Smokey Mountains National Park, Tennessee.
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Barton’s Spring Bathing Resort, Austin, Texas. Barton
 Springs pavilion and a swimming pool fed by springs that flow over
 12,000,000 gallons of pure, crystal clear water daily.
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Hotel Cortez, El Paso, Texas.
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The Barter Theatre, Abingdon, Virginia, is the State Theatre of
 Virginia and is the oldest and largest legitimate summer theatre
 south of the Mason-Dixon Line. This theatre was founded during the
 depression on the theory that drama and food could be bartered.
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Arlington House Estate. The lands comprising this estate or
 property are a part of an original grant of 6,000 acres from
 William Berkeley, Governor of Virginia to Robert Howsen, in October
 1669, in consideration of the said Howsen having transported a
 number of settlers into the colony. In the same year Howsen
 conveyed these lands to John Alexander, the consideration being six
 hogsheads of tobacco; and on December 25, 1778, Gerald Alexander,
 to whom the property had descended,
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238
 Continued
conveyed the Arlington Tract about 1,100 acres to John Parke
 Custis, the consideration named being 1,100 pounds in Virginia
 currency.
John Parke Custis was the son of Martha Washington by her first
 marriage. He was aide-de-camp to Washington during the Revolution,
 and upon his death, November 5, 1781, of camp fever contracted at
 Yorktown, Washington adopted his two youngest children-George
 Washington Parke Custis and Eleanor Parke Custis.
George Washington Parke Custis, who inherited the Arlington
 Estate from his father, was a member of Washington’s family
 until the death of Washington in 1799, and soon after removed to
 Arlington where he resided until his death, October 10, 1857.
By his will, bearing date of March 26, 1855, he devised the
 “Arlington House Estate: to his daughter and only child. Mary Ann
 Randolph Lee, wife of Lieut. Col. Robert E. Lee, U. S. Army, for
 her use and benefit during her natural life, and on her death to
 his eldest grandson, George Washington Custis Lee, to him and his
 heirs forever.
By an executive order by the President of the United States
 dated January 6, 1864, the entire tract of 1,100 acres, more or
 less, was “selected for Government use for war, military,
 charitable, and educational purposes.” under the provisions of the
 Acts of Congress of June 7, 1862, and February 6, 1863. By the same
 order it was directed that the property be sold to meet the payment
 of $91007, direct taxes due thereon. This was done January 11,
 1864, and the property was bid in for the United States for the sum
 of $26,800.00. Mrs. Lee, having died in 1873, legal proceedings
 contesting the legality of the tax sale were instituted by George
 Washington Custis Lee, as heir under the will of his grandfather,
 George Washington Parke Custis. The cause was heard in the United
 States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, and
 verdict rendered in his favor, which, upon appeal, was affirmed by
 the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, December 4,
 1882.
Congress, by act of March 3, 1883, appropriated the sum of
 $150,000 for the purchase of this property and on March 31, 1883,
 George Washington Custis Lee conveyed to the United States by deed
 the title to the property in question for the sum appropriated.
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Custis Lee Mansion, Arlington, Virginia. The mansion is
 preserved as it was in the days of Custis and Lee. During the Civil
 War the Arlington Estate became a military cemetery.
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Custis-Lee Mansion, Arlington, Virginia.
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Arlington Memorial Amphitheatre, Arlington, Virginia
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Tomb of unknown soldier, Arlington, Virginia. It is a beautiful
 marble sarcophagus directly in front of the Memorial Amphitheatre
 overlooking the Capital of the Nation. In the distance may be seen
 the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, U. S. Capitol and
 Library of Congress.
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243 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Tomb of unknown dead.
244 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Interior of Lee Memorial Chapel, Washington and Lee University,
 Lexington, Virginia.
245 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Stonewall Jackson Monument, Lexington, Virginia.
246 3 ½ x 5 ½ 2 Color Postcard none
General Robert E. Lee on “Traveller” his war horse taken from
 Life in Lexington, Virginia.
247 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Bowling Green entrance.
248 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, east front.
249 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, barn.
250 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, family kitchen.
251 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, family dining room.
252 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Miss Custis’s music room.
253 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Mrs. Washington’s sitting
 room.
254 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Library.
255 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, banquet hall.
256 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, West Parlor.
257 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, room in which Mrs. Washington died.
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258 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Main Hall.
259 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Flower Garden.
260 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Summer House.
261 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mount Vernon, Virginia, Tomb of Washington.
262 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Washington Tomb, Mt. Vernon, Virginia. The tomb is a plain brick
 structure, the severity of whose lines have been softened by
 festoons of vines. The marble sarcophagus of Washington is seen
 within on the right, that of Martha, his wife is by its side. The
 tablet above read: “Within this enclosure rest the remains of
 General George Washington.”
263 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Touring along highway No. 11 in Beautiful Virginia.
264 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Penn-Daw, A first class hotel on the highway.
265 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The Lost River at Natural Bridge, Virginia is a small body of
 water flowing under a mountain side. No one knows where this stream
 comes from or goes to. A genuine curiosity of nature.
266 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Old St. John’s Church interior, Richmond, Virginia. In
 1775 a convention was held in this historic church to deliberate
 upon the oppressive measures adopted by the British Government for
 enforcing the collection of taxes levied upon the Colonies. Many
 members of the convention hesitated to commit Virginia to any act
 of resistance, but Patrick Henry, though only 39 years old, flashed
 the electric spark which exploded the colony in revolution, when he
 exclaimed with fiery eloquence. “Is life so dear, or peace so
 sweet, as to be purchased at the price of slavery? Forbid it,
 Almighty God. I know not what course others may take, but as for
 me, give me liberty or give me death. During the delivery of this
 immortal speech Henry stood in pew 72.
267 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mt. Ranier from Sluiskin Falls, a short hike from Paradise Inn.
 With a few of the hundreds of wild flowers in the park in the
 foreground. Washington state.
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268 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mt. Rainier and Tipsu Lake as the tourist views it from his car.
 Located in Rainier National Park, Washington. The park service has
 provided camping facilities to accommodate the many parties who
 choose this as an overnight stopping place.
269 3 ½ x 5 ½ 2 Color Postcard none
Fairy Lake, in Paradise Valley, Rainier National Park,
 Washington, one of the many delightful little lakes that add to the
 charm of this alpine wonderland.
270 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
On the way to Pinnacle Peak. Party under guide direction making
 a climb from Paradise Inn, seen at right. Summit of Mountain six
 miles from camera. Rainier National Park, Washington.
271 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
A party with guide on the rugged ice of Nisqually Glacier,
 Rainier National Park, Washington. This is but a short walk from
 Paradise Inn and is a regular trip made under the direction of
 guides.
272 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
A party under the direction of guides entering an ice cave in
 Paradise Glacier, Rainier National Park, Washington. The walls of
 these caves are of crystal clear ice and in places the light of day
 filters through in beautiful blue and green colors.
273 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Mid-winter on Alta Vista, near Paradise Inn, Rainier National
 Park, Washington. Snow at this point sometimes reaches a depth of
 twenty feet in February.
274 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
A tree framed vista; showing the southern exposure of the
 mountain, taken from Plummer Peak. Rainier National Park,
 Washington.
275 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Where the flowers and the glaciers meet, Rainier National Park,
 Washington. The Nisqually Glacier slowly crushes down the
 mountainside from its origin at the summit. Among the wild flowers
 in the foreground are Indian Paint Brush, Blue Lupine, Purple
 Aster, Dock, and Giant Helibore.
276 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Flower fields in Paradise Valley, Blue lupine, showing southern
 exposure of Mountain and glacial system. Rainier National Park,
 Washington.
277 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The Tatoosh Range from Timberline Ridge, Rainier National Park,
 Washington. Bear grass, or Indian basket grass, borders the trail
 in the foreground.
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278 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Looking south on Fourth Avenue, Seattle, Washington.
279 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Library, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. This
 building is typical of the beautiful architecture which make the
 University of Washington campus one of the most beautiful in the
 world.
280 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Women’s gymnasium, University of Washington Campus,
 Seattle, Washington.
281 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Home Economics Hall, University of Washington Campus, Seattle,
 Washington.
282 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Air view, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
283 3 ½ x 5 ½ 2 Color Postcard none
Canal Locks Second to Panama, Seattle, Washington. The Canal is
 about eight miles long from Puget Sound to Lake Washington. It adds
 more than ninety miles to Seattle’s water frontage and gives
 access for ocean shipping to the non-tidal fresh water harbors of
 Lake Union, in the heart of the City, and Lake Washington,
 twenty-five miles long and four wide on the east boundary of
 Seattle. The right-of-way is 300 feet wide, the channel 100 feet
 wide, and the depth 36 feet. The locks are capable of lifting
 larger vessels than any government locks outside the Panama
 Canal.
284 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Pacific Seacoast. Nowhere in America will there be found scenic
 beauty to surpass the marine grandeur of Highway 101.
285 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Town-O-Tel Motor Court, Princeton, West Virginia.
286 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Teton Mountains and Jackson Lake were photographed from the
 highway in Grand Teton National Park, south of the Yellowstone,
 Wyoming. The Grand Teton (left) is 13,766 feet high.
287 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Hundreds of small symmetrical biscuit-like knobs of geyserite
 suggest the name of this area containing a number of quiescent hot
 springs. Outstanding among them is Sapphire Pool, the water
 resembling the color of the gem after which it is named.
288 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Oblong Geyser Crater, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming at Old
 Faithful, is in size 20 by 48 feet and was sounded to a depth of
 nearly 36 feet. The Oblong Geyser erupts several times each
 twenty-four hours to heights varying from twenty to forty feet,
 displays lasting from six to nine minutes.
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289 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Sylvan lake and Top Notch Peak are east of Sylvan Pass in
 Yellowstone National Park about six miles east of Yellowstone Lake
 on the east entrance highway. Sylvan Lake has an elevation of 8,414
 feet and Top Notch Peak 10,000 feet, above sea level.
290 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Old Faithful Inn Lobby was photographed by artificial light.
 Notice the huge clock and fireplace, and the crowd of sightseers.
 Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
291 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Old Faithful Inn Dining Room is a new addition to the dining
 room of the original log structure, together affording ample
 accommodations for the many guests of the Park Hotel system.
 Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
292 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The beautiful Dragons Mouth Spring of hot, clear water contrasts
 with its near neighbor the Mud Volcano which belches boiling mud.
 These are two contrasting types of thermal springs of which
 Yellowstone has many. Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
293 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Grizzly bear family, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. There
 are about 300 in the park and are rightfully the most respected of
 all the wild animals. The average bear is 8 to 9 feet long and
 weighs about 600 pounds. The mating season is in July; hibernation
 is from October or November until about the middle of April.
293A 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
A boat in the water named Sea Crest.
294 4 x 6 20 Color Postcard Book none
Twenty scenes from Washington State: a) Apple Blossom Time; b)
 Floral Gardens and State Capitol Building, Olympia, Washington; c)
 Grand Coulee Dam; d) Mt. Rainier mirrored in Lake Spanaway; e)
 Harvesting wheat in the pacific north west; f) Mt. St. Helens from
 Spirit Lake, elevation 9,600 feet; g) Famous Snoqualmie Ski Bowl
 high up in the Cascade Mountains on the Milwaukee Road; h) Virgin
 forest in the Cascade Mountains; i) Lake Washington floating
 bridge, Seattle, short route to Snoqualmie Pass; j) Vista of Mt.
 Rainier from Highway 99; k) Along the Washington seacoast; l) Mt.
 Baker skyline with wild flowers in the foreground; m) Spokane,
 Washington through the pines; n) Scenic vista on Hood Canal; o)
 Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River between Washington and Oregon;
 p) Seattle’s famous harbor; q) Mount Spokane, Washington; r)
 Bridge of the Gods on the Columbia River between Washing and
 Oregon; s) Picking daffodils, Puyallup Valley; t) Air view of
 Bremerton and Bremerton Navy Yard on Puget South. WASHINGTON,
 Evergreen Playground; Bounded on the north by the Dominion of
 Canada, on the west by 2,600 miles of salt water shore line, on the
 south by the mighty Columbia River and on the east by the states of
 Idaho and Montana, the great state of Washington, in the very
 northwest corner of the United States, offers within its far- flung
 boundaries sixty thousand miles of unspoiled recreation land.
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 Continued
Two great mountain ranges, the Cascades and the Olympics, the
 inland sea of Puget South, thousands of lakes, Grand Coulee Dam,
 and the countless other attractions of the Evergreen Empire.
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Twenty scenes of Seattle, Washington: a) Air view of Seattle; b)
 Seattle business district; c) Scenic grandeur along the Lake
 Washington Boulevard showing Mount Rainier; d) M. F. Kalakala on
 beautiful Puget South, Washington, Olympic Mountains in the
 background; e) Seattle Art Museum and Gardens at Volunteer Park; f)
 University of Washington and Seattle Yacht Club with Mt. Baker in
 the background; g) Seattle skyline by night; h) Lake Washington
 Ship Canal and Industrial Ballard, Olympic Mountains in the
 background; i) A view of the main business district with Mt.
 Rainier in the background; j) Totem Pole, Pioneer Square; k)
 Section of Metropolitan Seattle; l) Famous Canal Locks; m) Entrance
 to tunnels from the Lake Washington Floating Bridge; n) Second
 Avenue, Smith Tower with Mt. Rainier in distance; o)
 Seattle’s waterfront with business district in background; p)
 Mt. Rainier mirrored in Lake Spanaway; q) Lake Washington Pontoon
 Bridge; r) Only concrete pontoon bridge in the world; s) A section
 of Seattle’s shopping and business district.
296 4 x 6 20 Color Postcard Book none
Twenty scenes of Puget South, Washington: a) Vista on Puget
 Sound; b) Sailboating on Puget Sound with Mt. Rainier in the
 background; c) Kalakala, leaving Seattle harbor on moonlight
 cruise; d) Air view of the Puget Sound area; e) A section of the
 shopping and business district; f) Huge Hammer Head Crane, one of
 the largest of its kind, U. S. Navy Yard; g) Chuckanut Drive along
 Puget Sound; h) Virgin forest in the Olympic Mountains; i) Floral
 gardens and State Capitol Building; j) Ocean vessel loading lumber
 at a Puget Sound dock; k) Air view of Seattle; l) Deception Pass
 Bridge; m) Mt. Seattle, Olympic Mountains; n) Sunset on Discovery
 Bay; o) Gull flying among the breakers; p) The new flagship of
 Puget Sound, M. V. Chinook; q) Scenic vista on Hood Canal; r) Mt.
 Rainier mirrored in Lake Spanaway; s) World famous Canal Locks; t)
 Air view of Bremerton and Bremerton Navy Yard on Puget Sound.
Puget Sound, a winding arm of the sea, cuts deep into
 Northwestern Washington and breaks up into numerous inlets and
 channels forming hundreds of island and peninsulas. Outstanding
 amound the islands of Puget Sound are Vashon, Bainbridge, Whidby
 and the islands of the San Juan group. Narrow passages and broad,
 sheltered bays and harbors form a yachtsman’s paradise, and
 Puget Sound is crossed and recrossed by passenger boats and fast
 automobile ferries offering trips of from an hour to a day or more.
 Circled by snowy peaks, ever-changing in her mood, Puget Sound is a
 sparking gem of unusual scenic interest.
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Eighteen scenes of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming: a)
 Liberty Cap, Mammoth Hot Springs; b) Gibson Falls; c) Old Faithful
 Inn and Geyser; d) Oblong Geyser Crater; e) Grizzly bear family; f)
 Dragons Mouth Spring; g) Grand Canyon from Grand View; h) Lower
 Falls from Moran Point, 308 feet; i) Bull Elk, Tower Fall area; j)
 Northern Entrance Arch; k) Osprey and Aerie; l) Jupiter Terrace; m)
 Daisy Geyser, 70 feet; n) Twin cub bears; o) Old Faithful Geyser;
 p) Chimney Rock, Cody Highway; q) Lower Falls from below; r) Needle
 in Grand Canyon near Tower Fall.
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Yellowstone National Park although essentially a geological
 park, is also remarkably well suited to the students of wild life
 and scores of other lines of study, who find in its 3,472 square
 miles an inexhaustible field for research. Elevations range from
 about 5,000 to 11,360 feet above sea level. The Grand Loop Road of
 the Park, 142 miles, is one of the most magnificent scenic tous in
 America.
298 4 x 6 19 Color Postcard Book none
Nineteen scenes of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming: a) Golden
 Gate Canyon; b) White Dome Geyser, 18-30 feet; c) Old Faithful
 Geyser, 166-171 feet; d) Chimney Rock, Cody Highway; e) Lower Falls
 of the Yellowstone, 308 feet; f) Black bear in tree; g) Lower Falls
 of the Yellowstone, 308 feet; h) Tower Fall, Tower Creek, 132 feet;
 i) Petrified tree; j) The Holy City, Shoshone Canyon, Cody Road; k)
 Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces; l) A Bull Moose; m) Norris Geyser
 Basin; n) Yellowstone Lake and Mt. Sheridan; o) Sylvan Lake and Top
 Notch Peak; p) Grizzly bears; q) Lower Falls and Point Lookout from
 Moran Point; r) From the summit of Mt. Washburn, elevation 10,317
 feet; s) Buffalo (American Bison) Stampede.
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK established on March 1, 1872 by an act
 of Congress of the United States of America, is mostly in
 northwestern Wyoming, but extends also into the states of Montana
 and Idaho. It was set apart not only to preserve the unique
 geysers, terraces, and other thermal features, but to protect the
 entire area and its wild life in order that people from all lands
 may benefit by seeing and enjoying its countless attractions. In
 its 3,471.51 square miles are large numbers of wild animals
 including bison, moose, wapiti, deer, pronghorns, and both grizzly
 and black bears, all living in their native environment. There are
 at least 10,000 separate and distinct thermal features of all kinds
 in the park.
Yellowstone Lake is about 20 miles long from north to south and
 is 14 miles across from West Thumb to the opposite shore of the
 lake. Its shoreline has been measured at more than 100 miles and
 its area computed at 139 square miles. The Grand Canyon of the
 Yellowstone extends for 24 miles to the mouth of the Lamar River.
 It is from 800 to 1,200 feet in depth, the deepest part being east
 of Mt. Washburn. There are only two places below the Lower Falls in
 this vicinity where it is safe for human beings to climb down the
 canyon walls to the river-by Uncle Toms Trail and at the Seven
 Mile Hole, a fishing hole.
299 4 x 6 18 Color Postcard Book none
Eighteen scenes of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming: a) Eagle
 Nest Rock, Gardner Canyon; b) Castle Geyser, 65-100 feet; c) Mule
 Deer Fawn; d) Old Faithful Geyser, 116-171 feet; e) Upper Falls of
 the Yellowstone, 109 feet; f) Lower Falls from below, 308 feet; g)
 Madonna of the Wilds (bears); h) Lower Falls from Red Rock, 308
 feet; i) Overhanging cliff near Tower Fall; j) Electric Peak,
 elevation 11,155 feet; k) Mammoth Hot Springs Terraces; l) Mother
 bear and cub hiking; m) Grotto Geyser, 20-30 feet; n) Yellowstone
 Lake and Colter Peak; o) Elk (Wapiti) stalled in snow, Hayden
 Valley; p) Fishing Bridge, Yellowstone River; q) Grand Canyon from
 Artist Point; r) Buffalo (American Bison) Bull.
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK: Elevations in the park range from
 about 5,000 feet near the Yellowstone River at the north to 11,360
 feet, the summit of Eagle Peak, near the southeast corner. The park
 roads range in elevation from 5,314 feet at the North Gate to
 10,317 feet on the summit of Mt. Washburn.
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300 4 x 6 21 Color Postcard Book none
Twenty one scenes of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming: a) Old
 Faithful Geyser, 116-171 feet; b) Riverside Geyser, 80-100 feet; c)
 Giant Geyser, 150-180 feet; d) Grand Geyser, 180-200 feet; e) Daisy
 Geyser, 75 feet; f) Castle Geyser, 65-100 feet; g) Old Faithful
 Geyser at sunrise; h) Lone Star Geyser, 25 feet; i) Kepler Cascade,
 Firehold River; j) Grizzly bear family; k) Old Faithful Inn; l)
 Morning Glory Pool; m) Upper Geyser Basin; n) Giant Geyser Cone; o)
 Oblong Geyser Crater; p) Punch Bowl Spring; q) Emerald Pool; r)
 Crested Pool and Castle Geyser Cone; s) Sponge Geyser.
301 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
A row of horses and buggies along a fence.
302 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The ship Ryndam on the water.
303 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The ship S. S. Independence, American Export Lines on the
 water.
304 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Indian symbols and their meanings, as interpreted by modern
 Indian craftsmen.
305 7 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Color Postcard none
Blackfeet Chiefs at Glacier Park (5 chiefs).
306 4 x 6 19 Color Postcard Book none
Nineteen scenes of Indians in the West: a) Indian girl at
 Umatilla Indian Agency (several Indians on horses); b) Shoshone men
 in ceremonial attire; c) Blackfeet Indian showing his newly
 acquired war bonnett; d) Indian women and their handcraft; e) Sign
 language for Indian Kill Buffalo; f) Indian symbols; g) Indians in
 ceremonial attire; h) Papoose; i) Indian man; j) Kootenai Indian in
 full regalia; k) Three little Taholah Indian children; l) Yakima
 Indians and their tepees; m) A native American; n) Horse-drawn
 travois used in parade at the annual crow Indian fair; o) Navajo
 nursery; p) Indian with drum; q) Santiago Naranjo of Santa Clara;
 r) Ceremonial cave; s) Navajo baby and baby lamb.
INDIANS OF THE WEST: Before the coming of the white man, the
 usual costume of an Indian man was a small skin attached to a belt.
 Later on decorated skin shirts for display on dress-up occasions
 became popular. Between 1650 and 1750 the Spaniards came from the
 south and brought the horse, probably then some of the Indians
 abandoned agriculture entirely and became nomadic hunters. This
 roving equestrian life seemed to engender a warlike spirit. It was
 not long before the western tribes, expanding their hunting
 territory, began to press back upon the more peaceful earth-lodge
 farmers, forcing them farther and farther toward the east.
Indians have always had a love of costume, colorful and ornate.
 In early days warriors bronzed and painted themselves and their
 ornamented weapons. Much care was given to dressing the hair,
 usually they arranged their locks in two braids, resting them
 across the shoulders. Weird and savage is the famous Apache “Devil
 Dance,” once the most war-like of Indian tribes in the Southwest,
 the Apaches are slowly adapting civilization. An Indian Ceremonial
 Dance cannot be described, they must be seen. The dancing is
 violent with primitive intensity and earnestness; the singing
 emphatic and meaningful, calling upon the Unseen; the costuming
 audacious, prompted by innate artistic fearlessness. The whole is
 an emotional orgy, drawing out an elemental response from its
 audience, stimulating and in explainable.
Women were literally the homemakers among the American Indian
 tribes. They made, erected and transported the tepee. The tepee was
 considered to be her property. Today’s Indian women are
 artists in various types of handicraft. We see women weaving
 baskets; men and women weaving blankets-the Hopi man, the
 Navajo woman; silversmiths, sitting on the floor tapping out their
 ware from Mexican pesos, which are practically sterling. The more
 northerly and easterly Shoshoni were horse and buffalo Indians, and
 in character compared favorably with most western tribes.
307 4 x 6 19 Color Postcard Book none
Nineteen scenes of Indians in the Southwest: a) Typical Pima
 Indian; b) Pima Indians at Home, Arizona; c) Papago boy stringing
 chili peppers near San Xavier Mission; d) Papago Indian making
 pottery; e) Papago squaw weaving a grain-storage basket; f) Little
 Papago girl carrying water, showing olla in burden basket; g)
 Apache Indians at home on San Carlos Reservation; h) Apache Indians
 building a wickiup; i) Apache woman exhibiting her handicrafts; j)
 Hopi Indian Pueblo, Oraibi; k) Yuma Indian squaw; l) Chemehuevi
 basket maker, making splints, Arizona; m) typical Navajo Indians;
 n) Navajos at “The Mittens’ in Monument Valley, “Navajo-Land;
 o) Navajo Rug Weavers in Summer Type Hogan; p) Navajo silversmith
 plying his trade; q) Navajo girl pround of her jewelry; r) The Hopi
 Indian Village at Walpi, Arizona; s) Hopi maiden in formal
 hair-do.
INDIAN LIFE IN ARIZONA: The southwest enchanted land, comprising
 Arizona and New Mexico, is probably the oldest region in the United
 States. Before the coming of the Spaniards in 1540, doubtless
 thousand years before, populous Indian Pueblos overflowed the
 valley and topped the heights. The Indian Pueblo exists today,
 peopled by a brown race whose ancestors lived in the same place for
 centuries. Here and there are ruins of some prehistoric pueblo or
 cliff dwelling. All these tribes are civilized and many are
 educated, and even earn a living from flocks and herds or by
 cultivating the soil. Various crafts, such as blanket weaving,
 basketry, making of pottery, bead-work, and silverwork, are an
 important part of their livelihood.
The Navajos or Desert Nomads wander over sections of three
 states, embracing an area from 20,000 to 25,000 square miles,
 larger than Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts and New
 Hampshire combined. This is the largest Reservation in the U. S.
 and lies in Northeastern Arizona, extending slightly over the Utah
 and New Mexico lines. The Navajos are known as the most thrifty and
 industrious of all the tribes. They raise sheep and goat with most
 of the wool being used in the making of blankets for which this
 tribe is famous. Living in their native Hogans, there are close to
 30,000 Navajos still in Arizona.
Perched on the lofty mesas, overlooking the Painted Desert, are
 the sky-cities or pueblos of the Hopis. The sites of their
 villages, high up on these table lands, are historically
 attributable to their peace loving characters, for they sought
 these inaccessible spots as a refuge from the Apaches, Navajos and
 other marauding bands. The Hopi women make the finest pottery in
 the Southwest, while the men weave blankets and sashes. There are
 in the neighborhood of 2300 Hopis inhabiting these isolated
 villages, in northern Arizona, from 90 to 125 miles from the
 railroad.
In the rugged mountainous country of northwest Arizona are three
 small reservations. Here dwell the remnants of the Kaibabs,
 Havasupais and Walpai Indians, now about 710 persons. The Indians
 of four tribes inhabit 1,275,000 acres embraced by the Salt River
 and Gila River Reservations. The Pimas are the principal tribe,
 with a population of over 5000, Papagos 1760, and some Apache and
 Maricopas, making a total of 7258. Cattle and poultry are their
 chief industry, and through irrigation of the desert country, they
 raise some grain, a little wheat, some cotton and alfalfa.
The Papagos, or Desert Indians, stationed at San Xavier, number
 about 4575. Cattle raising and some farming is their mode of
 livelihood. Some 700 women are engaged in the art of basket making.
 The Mojave and Chemihuevi tribes, total 1145 inhabitants, and are
 found in Yma and Mojave counties, along the shores of the Colorado
 River, where they are engaged in small farms. The women make
 baskets and some beat work.
On the San Carlos and White River Reservations are the Tonto
 Apaches, once the wildest and fiercest of Indian tribesmen, who
 under the leadership of Cochise, Mangas Colorado and Geronimo were
 ever waging warfare. The Reservation is 95 miles long and 70 miles
 wide and contains 2,528,000 acres. Of late years, the Yaquis have
 drifted into Arizona from Mexico.
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Nineteen scenes from the Columbia River Highway, Crown Point and
 Vista House: a) Mt. Hood from Portland Oregon; b) Crown Point and
 Vista House, columbi River Highway, Oregon; c) Bishop Cap at
 Shepperd’s Dell, Columbia River Highway, Oregon; d) Mt. Hood,
 Oregon, reflection in Lost Lake; e) Bonneville Power and Navigation
 Dam, Largest Lift Navigation Lock in the World, Columbia River
 Highway, Oregon; f) Mitchell’s Point Tunnel, Columbia River
 Highway, Oregon; g) Sunset on the Columbia, Portland, Oregon; h)
 Mt. Hood, Oregon. Hood River Valley in Foreground; i) Timber Line
 Lodge, Mt. Hood National Forest, Oregon, altitude 6000 feet; j)
 Multnomah Falls, Queen of All American Cataracts, second highest
 falls in U. S.; k) Oneonta Gorge, Columbia River Highway, Oregon;
 l) Horsetail Falls, 205 feet, Columbia River Highway, Oregon; m)
 Latourell Falls, a sheer drop of 225 feet, visible from Columbia
 River Highway, Oregon; n) Bridal Veil Falls, 180 feet, masterpiece
 of scenic beauty, visible from Columbia River Highway, Oregon; o)
 Wah-Kee-Na Falls. Most beautiful and picturesque of Falls on
 Columbia River Highway, Oregon; p) Multnomah Falls; q)
 Shepperd’s Dell, Columbia River Highway, Oregon; r) Mt. Hood
 from Lost Lake, Oregon, altitude 11,225 feet; s) Beautiful Columbia
 Gorge Hotel, finest tourist hotel on Columbia River.
THE COLUMBIA RIVER HIGHWAY has carved one of the world’s
 most beautiful and majestic gorges through the heart of the Cascade
 Mountains. Along the shore of the mighty river, mile upon mile hewn
 from solid rock, is the greatest thoroughfare in the world, and
 unrivaled scenic splendor awaits the traveler.
Lovely waterfalls by the score leap from the gorge’s
 towering crags, falling hundred of feet into the river below. In
 order that no picture might be lost and so that no part of its
 marvelous scenic beauty would be marred, extreme care has been
 exercised in the locating and designing of this Highway with its
 many concrete walls, arches, bridges and viaducts. It is paved for
 nearly 100 miles east of Portland to the Dalles and 120 miles west
 of Portland to Seaside and winds from spectacular heights to the
 river’s very edge. Along its course the river is joined by
 rushing mountain torrents and gently rippling streams. At Crown
 Point, where the Vista House has been erected as a memorial to
 Oregon Pioneers, the Columbia River Highway is 850 feet from the
 river and is one of the most magnificent view spots along the road.
 In keeping with the natural beauty of the gorge are the roadside
 inns and taverns, camping grounds and picnic spots; of these the
 Columbia Gorge Hotel is one of the finest. Halfway up Mt. Hood is
 famous Timberline Lodge, erected by the Federal Government at a
 cost of $1,000.000.
Forty-two miles east of Portland on the Columbia River is the
 famed Bonneville Dam, erected at a cost of $65,000,000 and was
 completed in 1940. Here may be seen the salmon ladders (stairways
 for fish); the world’s largest single lift ship lock; the
 great lake and spectacular spillway where man has harnessed the
 mighty Columbia’s power. Bonneville Dam’s ultimate
 capacity of 518,000 kilowatts gives the Columbia Empire a vast
 reservoir of power for a new era of industrial development.
The Mount Hood National Forest now extends all along the
 Columbia River Highway, and so this virgin masterpiece of
 Nature’s handiwork will be forever preserved for the people
 in the care of Uncle Sam’s green-clad forest rangers.
310 4 x 6 19 Color Postcard Book none
Illustrated true stories from the legend and history of the
 great West.
311 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Dole Pineapple Coolers: Pineapple Julep and Summer Salad.
312 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Print none
Young boy.
313 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Gate to Canterbury.
314 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Carisbrooke Castle, Ile of Wight. Fine example of a Norman
 Castle was built on site of earlier Roman and Saxon defenses.
 Charles I walked on these ramparts during his imprisonment here
 1647-48.
315 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Carisbrooke Castle, donkey powered well.
316 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Royal Church of St. Mildred Whippingham, Isle of Wight.
317 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Royal Church of St. Mildred Whippingham, Isle of Wight.
318 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Ship on a body of water.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
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319 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Ship on a body of water.
320 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Interior of a church.
321 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Interior of a church.
322 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Interior of a church.
323 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
St. Mere Eglice, John Steele’s parachute caught on church
 steeple and he dangled for hours, but survived.
324 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
St. Mere Eglice. Paratroopers (51st and 82nd gliders) come down
 here. John Steele of Hartsville, SC, fell on church steeple and his
 parachute caught in steeple. He dangled for hours but survived.
325 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A monument with people on the steps leading to it.
326 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Pointe Du Hoe.
327 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Omaha Beach.
328 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Omaha Beach.
329 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Omaha Beach.
330 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Omaha Beach.
331 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Utah Beach.
332 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Utah Memorial.
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333 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Memorial on Omaha Beach.
334 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Memorial on Omaha Beach.
335 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Young girl standing with body of water at her back.
336 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Large group of people looking at a body of water.
337 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Body of water.
338 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Body of water.
339 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Chartwell, Churchill’s home.
340 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Normandy American Cemetery, grave of Teddy Roosevelt, Jr.
341 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Chartwell, Churchill’s home.
342 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Back view of Notre Dame de Paris.
343 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
St. Mere Eglise, window replaced after World War II.
344 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
St. Mère Eglise.
345 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A hill with trees on it.
346 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Osborne House on Isle of Wight, Queen Victoria’s summer
 home.
347 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Mary Rose ship.
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348 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Wall around Canterbury.
349 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A large building.
350 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Two women standing in front of a bus with Suzanne on the
 side.
351 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A large building.
352 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A large building.
353 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Mont St. Michael.
354 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A body of water.
355 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Monument to George Patton.
356 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Mont St. Michael.
357 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Monument to George Patton.
358 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Monument to George Patton.
359 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
American flag on a pole.
360 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Five people standing beside a stone wall.
361 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Store in Paris that had porches on window.
362 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Bastogne, monument to McAuliffs.
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363 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Bastogne, monument to McAuliffs.
364 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
USA tank.
365 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Cathedral.
366 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A house.
367 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A large building.
368 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Austrian Village at Versailles.
369 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A large building.
370 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Plaque on a building “Salle De Reddition.”
371 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A large building.
372 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
An Arch.
373 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A long line of people.
374 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Farewell dinner out from Brussels, Chateau de Limelette, July 1,
 1989.
375 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Farewell dinner out from Brussels, Chateau de Limelette.
376 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
City Hall, Bonn, Germany.
377 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Cassells on Rhine River.
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378 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
View from boat on Rhine River.
379 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Village on Rhine River.
380 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Homes along Rhine River.
381 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Farewell dinner, Chateau de Linelette.
382 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Luxembourg.
383 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Luxembourg.
384 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Luxembourg, Joanne Gay, Sherre Moore, Jessie Mueller leaned
 against a railing.
385 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Viewing map in Museum.
386 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Cemetery where Paton is buried.
387 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Cemetery where Paton is buried.
388 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Cemetery where Paton is buried.
389 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Porte Nigrea, Roman ruins in Trier, Germany.
390 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Chateau de Limelette.
391 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Luxembourg.
392 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Waterloo.
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393 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Altstadt Hotel, Hotel in Trier, Germany.
394 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
St. Peter.
395 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Garden in front of a large building.
396 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Brussels, Belgium.
397 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Group of people in front of a large building.
398 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A group of buildings.
399 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Street vendor?
400 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A statue in front of a building.
401 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A street vendor.
402 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A lot of statues on a raised platform.
403 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Interior of a cathedral.
404 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Interior of a cathedral.
405 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
A statue in front of a building.
406 4 x 6 1 Color Print none
Group of people standing in front of a building.
407 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bedroom of Emperor Francis Joseph. Schloss Schonbrunn, Wien.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
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408 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
St. Peter’s Church, the Parish Church of St.
 George’s, Bermuda; the oldest Anglican Church in continuous
 use in the Western Hemisphere; founded in 1612; Meeting-place of
 the first Bermuda Parliament in 1620.
409 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Seventeenth-century three-decker pulpit of St. Peter’s
 Church, St. George’s, Bermuda. The top deck was for the
 Sermon, the middle for the Service and the lowest for the Parish
 Clerk. Bermada’s first Parish Clerk was Stephen Hopkins,
 later one of the Pilgrim Fathers.
410 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
St. Peter’s Church, St. George’s, Bermuda. The
 original wooden Communion-table or Altar, with eighteenth-century
 Bishop’s Throne, and 1815 reredos and chandelier. H. M. the
 Queen and H.R.H. the Duke of Edinburgh knelt in prayer here on
 November 24th, 1953.
411 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
St. Peter’s Church on York Street, St. George’s
 Bermuda. Originally build in 1713. St. Peter’s occupies the
 oldest Anglican Church site in the Western Hemisphere.
412 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Eastern view of Bermuda from the air. The island is surrounded
 by a chain of reefs approximately 50 miles in circumference. To the
 north and west the reefs are several miles off shore, forming a
 barrier that protects Bermuda from the Ocean swell.
413 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Scene of Bermuda Gold Liqueur.
414 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Bruxelles, Grand Place at night.
415 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Law courts, Brussels.
416 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Royal Palace, Brussels.
417 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Grand Place, Market Place, The King of Spain, The
 Wheelbarrow, The Sack Marktplatz.
418 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Fourteen dolls posed around a statue, Brussels.
419 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Waterloo, The Hill is 45 miles high and 226 steps lead to the
 top.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
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420 3 ½ x 5 ½ 16 B&W Postcard Book none
Sixteen views of The Mystic Lamb Painting at St. Bavo’s
 Cathedral, Ghent: a) Full view of painting; b) God, central figure;
 c) Close-up of God, the central figure; d) The Blessed Virgin; e)
 Close-up of The Blessed Virgin; f) St. John the Baptist; g)
 Close-up of St. John the Baptist; h) The Adoration of the Lamb
 (central panel); i) Adam and Eve; j) Singing Angels; k) Close-up of
 Singing Angels; l) Angelic Musicians; m) Christ’s Militia; n)
 Hermits and Pilgrims; o) Out-Side shutters.
421 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Carol Purkis standing in front of Casa Loma. Casa Loma is
 operated by The Kiwanis Club of West Toronto Inc., proceeds for
 charitable work.
422 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Casa Loma, Toronto, Ontario, Canada’s Famous Castle.
423 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Parliament Buildings of the Province of Ontario, situated in
 beautiful Queen’s Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
424 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Roddick Memorial Gates, entrance to the McGill University,
 Montreal, P. Q., Canada.
425 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
St. Joseph Oratory, Montreal, Canada.
426 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
The entrance, Stanley Park, Vancouver, B. C., Canada.
427 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Vancouver Hotel, Medical-Dental Bldg., Devonshire Apts., Georgia
 Hotel, Marine Bldg.
428 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Prospect Point, Stanley Park, Vancouver, B. C., Canada.
429 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Indian Totem Poles, Stanley Park, Vancouver, B. C., Canada.
430 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Aeroplane view showing Brockton Point, Stanley Park, Vancouver,
 B. C., Canada
431 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B. C. Canada.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
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432 3 ½ x 5 ½ 21 Color Postcard Book none
Twenty-one scenes of Stanley Park, Vancouver, Canada: a) Lions
 Gate Bridge with C. P. R. Steamer passing under bridge on triangle
 run between Seattle, U.S.A., Victoria and Vancouver; b) Second
 Beach; c) In Stanley Park; d) The Big Tree; e) Siwash Rock; f)
 Along Stanley Park Driveway; g) Prospect Point; h) Beaver Lake
 Ravine; i) Lions Gate Bridge and swimming pool; j) The Golf Course,
 No. 1 Green; k) Brockton Point with C. P. R. Steamer arriving from
 Seattle and Victoria; l) The Seven Sisters (trees); m) Beaver Lake;
 n) Three Bears in a cage; o) Tulip Time in Stanley Park; p) Harding
 Memorial; q) Malkin Memorial Bowl; r) The Pavilion and Lilly Pond;
 s) Rose Gardens; t) The Fountain; u) The Entrance, Stanley
 Park.
STANLEY PARK was the first park acquired by the City in 1887.
 Originally a Dominion Government military reserve, it opened in
 1889 and was named for Lord Stanley, then Governor-General. It is
 Vancouver’s chief natural attraction. Here, with emerald sea
 surrounding, and outlook that combines towering mountains, city
 sky-line, and entrancing sea-scapes, is a park of 1,000 acres, as
 primeval in many ways as when Columbus crossed the Atlantic.
 Tangled wildwood and forest are but a stone’s throw from
 paved motor roads, while enticing trails lead to the inner
 spaces.
The Zoo at the entrance contains representatives of many animal
 tribes, and the large bear pit, with some very fine specimens. The
 Harding Memorial, erected by the Kiwanis Clubs of Canada and the
 United States, close to where the late president made his last
 public address, speaks for itself, standing as it does for those
 sentiments of international goodwill expressed by President
 Harding, and inscribed on the monument. Close by the Lumbermens
 Arch are the Indian Totem Poles which are generations old. They are
 authentic specimens of the heraldry of a disappearing race, and
 very rarely are found within such easy access. At Prospect Point
 many entrancing views are had from the look-out point perched above
 the water, while beyond is Siwash Rock, immortalized by Pauline
 Johnson, Indian Poetess, in her translations of Indian lore. The
 Seven Sisters, Douglas firs and the Lions Gate Bridge at Prospect
 Point is the longest suspension bridge in the British Empire 1,500
 feet.
433 3 ½ x 5 ½ 20 Color Postcard Book none
Twenty scenes of Vancouver, British Columbia, The Pacific
 Gateway of Canada: a) Harrison Hot Springs Hotel and Mount Cheam,
 Alt. 7,000 feet; b) Capilano Suspension Bridge; c) The Marine Drive
 at Spanish Banks; d) Lions Gate Bridge; e) View from Hotel
 Vancouver, Panorama Room; f) Granville Street; g) The B. C.
 Electric Sightseeing Car on Hastings Street; h) Marine Building and
 North Shore Mountains; i) Lions Gate Bridge; j) Hotel Vancouver,
 Medical-Dental Bldg., Devonshire Apts., Georgia Hotel; k) Hastings
 Street; l) Fraser River Bridge, New Westminster; m) Kitsilano Beach
 and Swimming Pool; n) English Bay; o) North Shore Marine Drive; p)
 Sunset from Prospect Point, Stanley Park; q) Aeroplane view showing
 Brockton Point; r) Stanley Park Pavilion; s) Lost Lagoon Bridge,
 Stanley Park; t) Indian Totem Pole, Prospect Point.
434 3 ½ x 5 ½ 19 Color Postcard Book none
Nineteen scenes of Glacier-Waterton Lakes National Park: a)
 Waterton Lake from Prince of Wales Hotel; b) Going to the Sun
 Mountain, St. Mary Lake; c) Iceberg Lake; d) Josephine Lake and
 Gould Mountain; e) Many Glazier Region; f) Many Glacier Hotel; g)
 Lake McDonald Hotel; h) Going-to-the-Sun Highway i) Heavens Peak
 and Mt. Cannon from Going-to-the-Sun Highway; j) Lake McDonald; k)
 Lobby, Prince of Wales Hotel; l) Waterton Lakes National Park; m)
 Cameron Lake; n) Waterton Lakes, Prince of Wales Hotel; o) Launch
 “International” on Waterton Lake; p) Prince of
Wales Hotel, Lake Linnett; q) Bertha lake; r) Waterton Lakes and
 Prince of Wales Hotel from Highway; s) St. Mary Lake from
 Going-to-the-Sun Chalets, Glacier National Park.
INTERNATIONAL PEACE PARK, in the U. S. it is called Glacier Park
 and in Canada it is called Waterton Lakes. But aside from a marker
 alongside the new Chief Mountain Highway-and the offices of
 the border officials-there is nothing to indicate when a
 person is passing from one country into the other. The mountain
 ranges sweep along in majestic grandeur regardless of whether they
 are called the Canadian or the Montana Rockies. The two parks merge
 into one great international playground-a monument to lasting
 peace between neighbors.
The backbone hwy. is Going-to-the-Sun Hwy. traversing Glacier
 Park. The connecting link with Waterton Lakes Park is the Chief
 Mountain Hwy. Both roads were extremely difficult to construct.
 Going-to-the-Sun Hwy., began in 1911 and completed in 1934, cost
 $3,000,000 for 52 miles. Preliminary work was done by men dangling
 from ropes along sheer rock walls. Sun hwy. crosses the Continental
 Divide at Logan Pass. It reveals a gorgeous panorama of glaciers,
 waterfalls, multi-colored mountains, green forests, alpine lakes.
 Chief Mountain Hwy. was completed in 1936 after three years of
 labor, 15 miles in Canada, 13 in the U. S. These scenic short-cuts
 bring the Prince of Wales Hotel within 52 miles from Many-Glacier
 Hotel, 85 miles from Lake McDonald Hotel, and 80 miles from Glacier
 Park Hotel at the southeast entrance to International Peace Park,
 on the Great Northern Railway main line where all trans-continental
 Empire Builders stop.
435 3 ½ x 5 ½ 19 Color Postcard Book none
Nineteen views of Glacier National Park: a) Many Glacier Hotel;
 b) Glacier Park Hotel; c) Lobby, Glacier Park Hotel; d) Two
 Medicine Lake; e) Trick Falls near Two Medicine Chalets; f) Heavens
 Peak from Granite Park Chalets; g) Going-to-the-Sun Mountains, St.
 Mary Lake; h) St. Mary Lake from the Narrows; i) St. Mary Lake from
 Going-to-the-Sun Chalets; j) Going-to-the-Sun Highway, Little Chief
 Mountain and St. Mary Lake; k) Iceberg Lake; l) Lobby, Many Glacier
 Hotel; m) Josephine Lake and Gould Mountain; n) Grinnell Mountain,
 Swiftcurrent Lake; o) Grinnell Glacier
and Lake; p) Lake McDonald; q) Going-to-the-Sun Highway; r) Lake
 McDonald Hotel; s) Lobby, Lake McDonald Hotel.
436 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Grundtvig’s Church Copenhagen.
437 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
Gokstadskipet.
438 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Egmont Hotel.
439 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Copenhagen, In the King’s Garden near Rosenborg Palace, is
 a statue of Hans Christian Andersen. His “Fairy Tales” have been
 translated into nearly every language.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
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440 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Copenhagen-Denmark. “The Little Mermaid” is the subject of this
 bronze figure by the sculptor Edv. Eriksen. It is situated on the
 favorite promenade of the people of Copenhagen, “Lange Linie.”
441 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The sculptor August Saabye’s statue of the poet Hans
 Christian Andersen, erected in the King’s Garden in 1880.
 Nearby stands Rosenborg Palace, the collections of which contain
 the Danish Regalia and crown-jewels.
442 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Copenhagen, The Royal Guard at Amalienborg Palace.
443 3 x 4 ¼ 18 Color Postcard Book none
Eighteen scenes of Copenhagen, Denmark: a) View of Langelinie;
 b) The Town-Hall; c) The Royal Theatre; d) Gammel Strand; e) The
 Entrance to Tivoli; f) The Exchange; g) The Gefion Fountains; h)
 The Royal Guard at Amalienborg Palace; i) Thorvaldsens Museum; j)
 The Town-Hall square; k) The Royal Guard at Amalienborg Palace; l)
 View over Vesterbro Passage; m) Nyhavn; n) The Entrance to Tivoli;
 o) The Exchange; p) Rosenborg Castle; q) The Grundtvig Church; r)
 Kronborg Castle.
444 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
York Micklegate.
445 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
York Minster, South Side.
446 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Imperial Hotel, Russell Square, London
447 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Interior of The Parish Church, Bladon, Oxon.
448 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Music Room, Warwick Castle, The Private Apartments, “A Royal
 Weekend Party, 1898” by Madame Tussaud. The characters depicted
 here are from left to right: Signor Paolo Tosti, Lady Marjorie
 Greville, Clara Butt, The Duchess of Devonshire, Lady Randolph
 Churchill and George Cornwallis West. Notable features are the
 grand piano, a gift from the Earl to his Countess and the very fine
 Meissen chandelier.
449 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Chartwell Westerham Kent: Home of Sir Winston Churchill. The
 house seen from across the lake.
450 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
St. Paul’s Cathedral, view from the west.
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451 4 x 6 2 Color Postcard none
Vindolanda: Hadrian’s Wall, Northumberland. Headquarters
 building and replicas.
452 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Roman Wall at Housesteads, Northumberland. The
 best-preserved section of Hadrian’s Wall at Housesteads
 (Borcovicium) shows clearly the scale and layout of the fort, one
 of 23 built into the wall at intervals of 3 to 7 miles along its 73
 miles of length. This large fort held a garrison of 1,000
 infantrymen, and on its south-side grew up a civil settlement.
 Smaller forts accommodating 50 men are found at intervals of one
 mile.
453 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Roman Wall at Housesteads Mile Castle, Northumberland. The mile
 castles were about 55 ft. sq. and garrisoned by 50 men. They were
 built at mile intervals, with larger forts for 1,000 infantrymen
 occurring at intervals of 3 to 7 miles along the 73 miles of
 Hadrian’s Wall.
454 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Dumfries, Burns’ Mausoleum and St. Michael’s
 Church.
455 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Warwick Castle: Clarence and Bear Towers.
456 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Evening sunlight on Stirling Castle.
457 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
A glimps of Loch Lomond at Tarbet.
458 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Old Kitchen, Nash’s House, Stratford-upon-Avon.
 Nash’s House overlooks the foundations of New Place and
 contains a collection of exhibits which illustrate
 Stratford’s history before and after Shakespeare’s
 time.
459 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
D-Day Museum, Portsmouth. The Museum was opened in 1984 by H. M.
 Queen Elizabeth to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Normandy
 landings. It houses the Overlord Embroidery and displays telling
 the story of the Normandy Landings.
460 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Winchester Cathedral, Lime Walk.
461 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Osborne House, Isle of Wight.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
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462 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Stonehenge, Wiltshire, Aerial view, centre from the south
 east.
463 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard
Warwick Castle from the river.
464 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Roman Bath and the Abbey, Bath: Situated in the centre of the
 city the ancient Roman Baths and the beautiful sixteenth century
 Abbey Church stand side by side. For more than 1900 years the spa
 waters of Bath, reputed to have their source in a vast volcanic
 region over a mile below the surface, have been noted for their
 curative properties. Lovely Bath Abbey dates from Saxon times and
 was restored towards the end of the last century. It is noted for
 its beautiful windows and fanvaulted roof.
465 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
At Trossachs Pier, Loch Katrine, Trossachs.
466 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Edinburgh and the Castle from Calton Hill.
467 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Salsbury Cathedral, Wiltshire, South West View.
468 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Broad Street, Oxford.
469 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bridge of Sighs, Oxford.
470 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Warwick Castle: The East Front. The great fortifications were
 constructed by the Beauchamp Earls of Warwick in the 14th century,
 with Caesar’s Tower on the left, the Barbican and Clock Tower
 in the centre and Guy’s Tower on the right. These massive
 fortifications which remain virtually unaltered to this day are
 protected on the outside by a dry moat.
471 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Stonehenge, Wiltshire from the South west.
472 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Salisbury Cathedral, Wiltshire. This aerial view shows the
 cathedral in its beautiful setting of the Close, considered to be
 the finest in the world. The octagonal Chapter House is clearly
 seen adjacent to the Cloisters.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
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473 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Salisbury Cathedral and River Avon. The Cathedral was commenced
 in 1220 and the building is almost entirely Early English style.
 From the banks of the River Avon a fine view across the water
 meadows can be obtained.
474 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Kitchen, Shakespeare’s Birthplace. Showing the
 “baby-minder” in the centre of the room.
475 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
St. Martin’s Church Bladon Oxfordshire from the south.
 Bladon Church was rebuilt in 1802 on the site of the 12th Century
 Shurch. In 1891 the chancel and sanctuary were redesigned by the
 then Rector, the Rev. Arthur Majendie, in whose memory the East
 Window was given by the parish. The window in the south aisle,
 depicting St. Michael and St. George, was given by Consuelo
 Vanderbilt Balsan, the first wife of the 9th Duke of Marlborough,
 in memory of her second son, Lord Ivor Spencer Churchill,
 1898-1956, cousin of Sir Winston Churchill. Sir Winston’s
 grave is on the north side of the tower.
476 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Churchyard showing the Churchill graves.
477 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Broadlands, Romsey, Hampshire, the home of Lord Mountbatten,
 viewed from the River Test. Open April-September.
478 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Slochd Pass, Inverness-shire. The Slochd Pass between
 Carrbridge and Inverness is here seen near its summit at 1332 feet,
 and is never more pleasing than “when purple heather sets its hills
 aflame.”
479 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Winchester Cathedral. Banners by Thetis Blacker, depicting the
 Creation, were the gift of The Friends of Winchester Cathedral, to
 celebrate its 900th anniversary.
480 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Mary Rose Ship. It was built in Portsmouth in 1511. It weighed
 700 tons and carried 91 guns. She was the flagship of Vice Admiral
 Sir George Carew and directed by Henry VIII to fight a French
 invasion fleet at Bembridge. The Mary Rose capsized off Portsmouth
 on the 19th July 1545 with the loss of 700 lives. The ship was
 named after Mary Tudor, the King’s sister.
481 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Canterbury Cathedral. Floodlit view of Cathedral from the South
 West.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
482 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Canterbury Cathedral. The North West view showing the Western
 end of the Cathedral and how it dominates the City skyline.
483 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
An aerial view of Canterbury Cathedral.
484 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
St. Paul’s Cathedral, The High Altar.
485 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Evensong at Salisbury Cathedral, Oil-painting by Michael
 Rhys-Jenkins.
486 4 ½ x 6 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Blenheim Palace, The North Front.
487 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bastogne: Le mardasson.
488 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bastogne-Bastenaken, Place Mac Auliffe et Tank.
489 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Vue Aérienne Genèye Sur les ponts et la Rade.
490 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
A drawing of two children and a dog.
491 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Map of Utah and Omaha beaches.
492 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Cathedrale De Reims. Grande Rose et Lancettes.
493 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
En Champagne, Reims (Marne).
494 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Foyer Des Lycéennes, Rue du D Blanche, Paris.
495 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Foyer Des Lycéennes, Rue du D Blanche, Paris.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
496 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Paris, View near Seine and Notre-Dame.
497 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Normandy Beaches. The famous Pointe du HOC; it is right
 against this abrupt and crumbly cliff that on June 6th 1944 the
 second battalion of Rangers launched the assault with the help of
 ropes and folding ladders, in order to reduce a battery whose
 firing could have been dangerous to the troops landing at Omaha
 Beach.
498 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Colleville-Sur-Mer (Calvados).
499 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
L’Arc de Triomphe de l’Étoile, Paris.
500 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
L’Opéra.
501 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Sacré-Coeur avec pigeons.
502 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Paris, Les Invalides Musee De l’Armee.
503 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Paris Et Ses Merveilles, Tombeau de S.M. Napoléon ler aux
 Invalides.
504 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Paris, En Flanant, L’Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel.
505 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Paris Et Ses Merveilles, Place de la Bastille et Colonne de
 Juillet (1831-1840)
506 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Foyer Des Lycéennes, Rue D Blanche, Paris.
507 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Tapisserie De Bayeux, the Norman archers.
508 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bayeux.
509 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Le Paquebot Normandie. Ship at sea.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
510 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Le Paquebot Normandie. Ship at sea.
511 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. L’Entrée de la
 Salle à Manger.
512 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. Le Grand Hall, Les
 Ascenseurs.
513 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. Le Grand Salon.
514 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. L’Escalier
 d’Honneur.
515 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. La Chapelle.
516 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. Le Guignol.
517 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. Ship at sea.
518 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Intérieur du Paquebot Normandie. Panneau décoratif du
 Fumoir.
519 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Altstadt Hotel.
520 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Der Dom zu Aachen, Nordseite.
521 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Rudesheim am Rhein, 100 Jahre Niederwalkd-Denkmal. (Statue)
522 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Rüd.-Assmannshausen, Hotel Krone.
523 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Bonn am Rhein.
524 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Beethoven-Stadt Bonn a. Rh., Beethovens Geburtshaus.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
525 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Kronborg, The West Wing.
526 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Künstlerhaus Restaurant, Café, München, Innenhof
 mit Pergola.
527 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Worms am Rhein, Lutherdenkmal Von Ernst Rietschel im Jahre 1856,
 entworfen und nach seinem Tode 1867, von seinen Schülern
 Vollendet.
528 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Mainz am Rhein, Gutenberg-Bibel, Haus Zum Römischen
 Kaisen-heute, Gutenberg-Weltmuseum.
529 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Worms am Rhein.
530 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
Bonn a. Rh., Beethovens Geburtshaus.
531 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Köln am Rhein/Cologne. Heumarkt with Cathedral and Great
 St. Martin.
532 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Köln Am Rhein.
533 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Mainz Am Rhein, Blick vom Stephansturm.
534 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Mainz am Rhein, dom mit Markplatz und Heunensäule.
535 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Frankfurt am Main.
536 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Mont-Saint-Michel (Manche), Vue aérienne.
537 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Le Mont Saint Michel (Manche 50).
538 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Le Mont-Saint-Michel (Manche 50).
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
539 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Le Mont-Saint-Michel (Manche 50)
540 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Cathedrale de Reims, Façade Ouest Illuminée.
541 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Honfleur (Calvados). Vers la lieutenance.
542 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Mainz am Rhein Der Markbrunnen. Erected 1526 by archbishop
 Albrecht von Brandenburg, in memory of the repression of the German
 peasants’ revolt in 1525.
543 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Worms am Rhein-Dom und Dreifaltigkeiskirche.
544 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Assmannshausen am Rhein.
545 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Worms am Rhein-Dom/Hochaltar.
546 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bad Aachen.
547 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Sainte-Mere-Eglise (Manche).
548 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Ste Mere Eglise.
549 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Frankfurt am Main.
550 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Vallgraven.
551 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Trädgårdsföreningen.
 Huvudrestauranten.
552 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Kungsportsbron.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
553 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborgs hamn.
554 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Stadsteatern.
555 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Stora Hamnkanalen.
556 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Liseberg, entrén
557 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Sjöfartsmuseet.
558 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Götaplatsen.
559 2 ½ x 3 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Göteborg. Kungsportsbron och Stora Teatern.
560 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Ship, Dr. C. Lely docked. Marken, Holland.
561 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Man walking on a small wooden bridge toward a town. Marken,
 Dorpsgezicht.
562 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Two young girls holding hands sitting on the end of a buggy.
 Marken, Holland.
563 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Interior of a home. Woman sitting at a fireplace. Volendam.
564 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Woman sitting in a very decorated room. Marken, Holland.
565 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Woman and three children outside of home. Gedrukt in Nederland,
 Volendam.
566 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Woman standing with her arms crossed. Volendam, Holland.
 Kleurfoto Herman Cohn.
567 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Men standing by tables of flowers. Aalsmeer, Holland, the flower
 centre of Europe.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
568 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Man on a boat with flowers. Aalsmeer, Holland, the flower centre
 of Europe.
569 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
People standing by tables of flowers. Aalsmeer, Holland, the
 flower centre of Europe.
570 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Flower garden. Aalsmeer, Holland, the flower centre of
 Europe.
571 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
People standing by tables of flowers. Aalsmeer, Holland, the
 flower centre of Europe.
572 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Man working in a hot house of flowers. Aalsmeer, Holland, the
 flower centre of Europe.
573 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Garden of flowers with a hothouse in background. Aalsmeer,
 Holland, the flower centre of Europe.
574 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Four men standing by large baskets of flowers. Aalsmeer,
 Holland, the flower centre of Europe.
575 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Windmill and pasture with three black and white cows. Aalsmeer,
 Holland, the flower centre of Europe.
576 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
A lot of hothouses with one brown and white cow in the
 foreground. Aalsmeer, Holland, the flower centre of Europe.
577 3 ½ x 5 ½ 8 Color Postcard Book none
Eight scenes of Volendam, Holland: a) Man and a woman standing
 on a dock; b) Boats docked; c) Men and women walking on the dock;
 d) Boats in the water; e) Four old men sitting on a bench on the
 dock; f) A man walking down a road; g) Two women on a dock; h) The
 town.
578 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Hawaii. Visitors board excursion boats that ferry them up the
 tropical Wailua River to the Fern Grotto, a huge cavern overgrown
 with tropical ferns. While there, visitors are treated further with
 beautiful sons of Hawaii, by employees of the boats.
579 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
The Round Tower, Flarney. Donaldson’s of Cork.
580 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Blarney Castle. Donaldson’s of Cork.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
581 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Ross Castle, Killarney Co. Kerry, Ireland. A massive ivy-covered
 keep, Ross Castle, suggestive of Anglo-Norman origin is believed to
 have been residence of the O’Donoghues.
582 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Father Matthew Church, Cork, Ireland, dedicated to the Holy
 Trinity on Charlotte Quay is striking with its lofty tower and
 contains a beautiful stained glass window as a memorial to Daniel
 O’Connell.
583 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Lady’s view, Killarney Co. Kerry, Ireland. A spectacular
 view of the lakes of Killarney.
584 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
In the Gap of Dunloe, Killarney, Co. Kerry, Ireland.
585 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bunratty Castle, near Shannon Airport. Co Clare, Ireland.
586 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Irish jaunting cars at Kate Kearney’s Cottage, Killarney,
 Ireland.
587 1 ¼ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Venezia, Chiesa della Salute.
588 1 ¼ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Venezia, Piazza S. Marco.
589 1 ¼ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Venezia, Monumento a Colleoni.
590 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Genova, Casa di Cristoforo Colombo.
591 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
Firenze.
592 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
Vicenza, Olympic theatre, interior, detail of the stage
 (Palladio 1582).
593 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
Vicenza, Olympic Theatre, interior of the loggia.
594 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
595 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Leonardo da Vinci. Detail of Judas, Peter, and John in The Last
 Supper.
596 4 x 6 2 Color Postcard none
Hotel Milano Terminus, Firenze
597 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
Bergen, Den National Scene. Sign on a large building “KJÆRE
 RUTH.”
598 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Panorama from the Mountain Flöyen.
599 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway: Norheimsund-Hardanger Fjord.
600 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Bergen. Ole Bull Statuen, The violoinist Ole Bull.
601 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway: Fantoft Stave Church, Paradis, Bergen. From abt. year
 1150.
602 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Lærdal, Norway. Borgund Stave Church.
603 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman and a girl wearing National Costumes from
 Vestford.
604 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman standing by a log cabin wearing the National
 Costume from Voss.
605 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
A woman standing in front of a log cabin wearing the National
 Costume from North Norway.
606 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman standing in front of a log cabin wearing the
 National Costume from East Agder.
607 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman standing in a kitchen wearing the National
 Costume from Hallingdal.
608 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman and man standing by a building wearing the
 National Costumes from Setesdal.
609 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman standing in a kitchen wearing the National
 Costume from Romerike.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
610 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman standing by a tree wearing the National Costume
 from Nordfjord.
611 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman standing in front of a log cabin wearing the
 National Costume from Sogn.
612 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. A woman standing outside wearing the National Costume
 from Gudbrandsdal.
613 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo. View of Vigeland Sculpture Park, The Fountain.
 There a lot of people around it.
614 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo. Holmenkollen Ski-jump during the summer.
615 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo Frognerseteren.
616 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo. From the Studenterlunden. Statue of deer on an
 island.
617 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo. The Royal palace.
618 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo. View of Vigeland Sculpture Park. The Fountain and
 the Monolith.
619 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. The Oslo City Hall seen from the harbor.
620 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. Oslo City Hall.
621 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. Oslo City Hall and part of the harbor.
622 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. Oslo, “Studenterlunden” by night.
623 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway. Oslo seen from Abel Hill at night.
624 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo. The Monolith in the Vigeland Sculpture Park.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
625 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Oslo. Folk dancing in the Setesdal court yard.
626 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Kon-Tiki Museum. Oslo, Norway
627 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Norway, Oslo. The town and the harbor seen from the Ekeberg
 Restaurant.
628 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Oslo, Norway. The Vigeland Collection, Northern Europe’s
 largest sculptural collection, is composed of a bridge with
 sculpture groups in bronze, a fountain, and Vigeland’s
 greatest work, the Monolith, a 52-foot-high granite pillar, carved
 with 121 human figures. Vigeland (1869-1943) is himself responsible
 for the design, the plans, and their execution.
629 4 x 6 2 Color Postcard none
Oslo, Norway. The Viking Ships Museum.
630 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Oslo, Norway. The Town Hall Court Yard.
631 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Oslo Rådhus. The City Hall. Oil Painting by Henrik
 Sørensen.
632 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Luxembourg: 1) Tourelle éspagnole; 2) Ville Haute; 3)
 Statue equestre de Guillaume II; 4) Panorama
633 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
El Penon Restaurant. Victoria, Tamp, Mex.
634 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Headquarters United States Army Caribbean, Fort Amador, Canal
 Zone.
635 3 ½ x 5 ½ 1 B&W Postcard none
Sailboats, Stockholm, Stadshuset.
636 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Callander Bridge and Ben Ledi.
637 4 x 6 1 B&W Postcard none
Ben Venue and the path by Loch Katrine, Trossachs.
638 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Granada, Generalife Gardens. In the background, the
 Alhambra.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
639 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Stirling Castle-the gatehouse, built in the early 16th
 Centery by James IV, and Palace Block, added during the 1540’s by
 James V.
640 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Inverness Castle is a central feature of the town of Inverness,
 from which commanding views of the surrounding countryside can be
 had, was built on the site of an old stronghold and now
 accommodates the county offices and law courts. Close to it flows
 the River Ness.
641 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Wallace Monument at Causewayhead near Bridge of Allan.
642 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Old Bridge, Stirling.
643 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
M. V. “Lomond Queen,” Loch Lomond, Scotland, with a passenger
 certificate for 80 persons, is the latest addition to our fleet.
 With large upper deck and bar, tea and coffee facilities, this
 modern cruiser has table seating and toilet. Based at Tarbet is
 available for charter.
644 4 ½ x 6 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Inverness.
645 4 ½ x 6 ½ 1 Color Postcard none
Inverness.
646 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Old Leanach Cottage at Culloden, Inverness, Highland, which
 survived the battle, is now furnished as it might have been at that
 time.
647 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Scott Monument, Edinburgh.
648 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The Scott Monument dominates Princes Street which has been
 described as Great Britain’s most beautiful street and is
 certainly one of her showpieces. Princes Street Gardens were
 originally formed by draining the Nor’Loch and creating the
 Mound which now leads up to the Castle Rock, dividing the gardens
 East and West. One of the best known monuments in Princes Street is
 the monument to Sir Walter Scott which was designed by George Kemp
 and built between 1840 and 1844.
649 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Scotland, A bagpiper at sunset.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
650 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
The well-known Brig O’Turk, Perthshire is familiar to
 lovers of the “lady of the Lake.” This bridge spans the River Turk
 which descends from Glen Finglas. Beyond the bridge stretches
 picturesque Loch Vennachar, with Ben Ledi (2,875 ft.) rising to the
 north. To the south of Loch Vennachar lies the small Loch Drunkie.
 The entire area has many associations with Scott’s
 novels.
651 4 x 6 1 Color Postcard none
Highland Cattle in Scotland.
652 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Man running with a suitcase toward a train. Card reads, “You can
 expect me soon.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La. April
 1907.
653 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Mama bear and a baby bear walking toward a church. Card reads,
 “Sunday.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La.
654 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Mama bear washing clothes. Baby bear is sitting on the ground.
 Card reads, “Monday.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La.
 April 1907.
655 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Mama bear ironing clothes. Baby bear is standing by the ironing
 board. Card reads, “Tuesday.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler,
 Roseland, La. April 1907.
656 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Mama bear mending clothes. Baby bear is sitting on the floor.
 Card reads, “Wednesday.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland,
 La. April 1907.
657 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Mama bear is baking. Baby bear is standing by table. Card reads,
 “Thursday.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La. April 19,
 1907.
658 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Mama bear is sweeping. Baby bear is dusting. Card reads,
 “Friday.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La. April
 1907.
659 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Papa bear, mama bear, and baby bear are on a picnic. Card reads,
 “Saturday.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La.
660 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Card reads, “Don’t tell me any more pipe and fish
 stories.” Signed R. E. D. Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Roseland,
 La.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
661 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A horse head in a horseshoe. Card reads, “Good Luck.” Signed R.
 E. D. Sent to Mrs. R. E. Davis, Davenport, Iowa.
662 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Three women. Card reads, “Maids are May when they are maids, but
 the sky changes when they are wives.” Signed R. E. D. Sent to Miss
 D. Himmler, Roseland, La.
663 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Thee women’s heads inside of flowers and hearts on a
 spider web. Card reads, “Hearts and Flowers.”
Signed R. E. D. Sent to Mrs. R. E. Davis, Kentwood, La.
664 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Horse in back of a truck with “Seeing” on the side of the truck.
 The horse has his tongue hanging out. Signed R. E. D. Sent to Miss
 D. Himmler, Roseland, La.
665 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Two birds sitting on a tree branch holding an umbrella in the
 rain. Card reads, “What care we for wind or weather as long as we
 two can be together.” Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La. April
 5, 1907.
666 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Man up side down in a barrel. Card reads, “I’m all alone
 but in good spirits.” Signed R. E. D. Sent to Miss D. Himmler,
 Roseland, La.
667 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A leaf. Signed R. E. D. Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La.
 February 1907.
668 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Young girl washing clothes in a tub. Card reads, “Too busy in-
 to write.” Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La.
669 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Girl in a four leaf clover. Card reads, “Dearest, I’ve
 searched the whole world over, and at last found thee, a four leaf
 clover.” Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La. April 1907.
670 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A horse head in a horseshoe. Good Luck is written on the
 horseshoe. Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La. February
 1907.
671 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Card reads, “Let me hear from you.” Sent to Miss D. Himmler,
 Roseland, La.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
672 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A man holding on to a policeman. Card reads, “Oh darling,
 I’m glad I’m home with you.” Sent to Mrs. R. E. Davis,
 Fayette, MO.
673 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A Rose. Card reads, “Moss Rose, Superior Merit.” Signed R. E. D.
 Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La. February 1907.
674 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A Chinese man sitting in a bucket taking a bath. Card reads,
 “Kentwood, La. Board of Trade Note, Watered Chinese Stock.” Sent to
 Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La.
675 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Cupid on a heart. Card reads, “Love. I asked which way is best
 to find the road to happiness. Any path he said will do that is
 just wide enough for two.” Signed R. E. D. Sent to Miss Diannah
 Himmler, Roseland, La. February 1907.
676 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
An Indian and a man with a pipe. Card reads, “The Indian with
 his pipe of peace has slowly passed away, but the Irishman with his
 piece of pipe has come prepared to stay.” Sent to __________,
 Hammond, La.
677 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A man up to bat. Card reads, “Kentwood, La., I’m still
 waiting for it.” Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Hammond, La.
678 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Card reads “Here’s to our wives and sweethearts , may our
 sweethearts soon be our wives and our wives ever our
 sweethearts.”
679 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Cupid sitting on three roses. Card reads, “Love is like a rose
 and a month it may not see ere it withers where it grows. Signed R.
 E. D. Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La. February
 1907.
680 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Woman holding the back leg of a donkey. Card reads, “This is
 what they did to me in .”
681 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A dog sitting on a step with things being thrown at him. Card
 reads, “Things are coming my way in Hammond.” Signed M. T. Sent to
 Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La.
682 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Two cupids sitting on a wire above a city. Card reads,
 “Conspiracy.” Sent to Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La.
DAVIDSON, TOM, POSTCARD
 COLLECTION-Continued
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
683 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A woman dancing and cards and dice. Card reads, “I’d like
 to-but my wife won’t let me.”
684 1906 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A meal on the table. Card reads, “Hang sorrow! Care will kill a
 cat, and therefore let’s be merry,” by S. Wittier. Sent to
 Miss D. Himmler, Roseland, La.
685 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Pigs eating at a trough with a Home Sweet Home sign hanging up.
 Card reads, “Be it ever so humble, there’s no place like
 home.” Signed H. E. B. & C. C. Sent to Mrs. Louie Groeschner,
 Bridgeport.
686 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A pig with a four leaf clover in its mouth jumping over a
 horseshoe. Card reads, “With every good wish,” Signed R. E. D. Sent
 to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La., Feb. 19, 1907.
687 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Boy and girl sitting on a hammock. Card reads, “Won’t
 leave here for a while.” Signed R. E. D. Sent to Miss Diannah
 Himmler, Roseland, La., Feb. 20, 1907.
688 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A woman and man with a cupid carrying a ladder standing between
 them. Card reads, “I’m trying to reach you.” Sent to Miss
 Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La., Apr. 9, 1907.
689 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A leaf. Signed R. E. D. Sent to Mrs. R. E. Davis, Brookhaven,
 MS.
690 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A girl’s head inside a flower with a bee coming toward it.
 Card reads, “So doth the little busy bee.” Sent to Miss Diannah
 Himmler, Roseland, La., Apr. 8, 1907.
691 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
An old man holding a bag. Card reads, “Just arrived.” Sent to
 Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La.
692 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Flower. Card reads, “Lily of the valley ‘purity.’ ”
 Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La., February 1907.
693 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Tulip flower. Card reads, Tulip “Coquette.” Sent to Miss Diannah
 Himmler, Roseland, La., February 1907.
694 1908 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
Four pigs breaking out a pen. Card reads, “Excuse haste and a
 bad pen.” Sent to Mr. H. C. Taylor, October 25, 1908.
Pix # Date of Pix Size of Pix No. of Pix Kind of image
 Negative
695 1907 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A sun coming up. Card reads, “Why don’t you write?” Sent
 to Miss Diannah Himmler, Roseland, La., April 11, 1907.
696 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Leather Postcard none
A telephone with wires attached to a baby. Card reads, “Why
 don’t you telephone your baby.” Sent to Miss Diannah Himmler,
 Roseland, La., February 1907.
697 3 ¼ x 5 ¼ 1 Color Postcard none
A little boy and girl sitting on the ground.