"London City and Midland Bank, Ludgate Hill Branch." — The Encyclopedia Britannica, 1910
"A digitigrade carnivorous mammal of the cat kind, peculiar to the American continent. It attains a…
"Anatomy of the Oyster. A. Hinge or anterior umbonal end of the left valve of an adult oyster, upon…
"Ten-Oared Lifeboat. the 33-feet, double-banked, ten-oared, self-righting, and self-emptying lifeboat…
"Sheer Plan of a Ten-Oared Lifeboat. the 33-feet, double-banked, ten-oared, self-righting, and self-emptying…
"Deck Plan of a Ten-Oared Lifeboat. the 33-feet, double-banked, ten-oared, self-righting, and self-emptying…
"Diagrammatic vertical section of the head and proboscis of a mosquito. l, labium bent as when the other…
"Amaeba proteus; B, Amaeba radiosa. n, nucleus. c, contractile vacuole. a, food engulfed. ec, one of…
A white or brown arthropoda. Has a pair of cirri, which form a net used to scoop food particles out…
All this time John Lacklands cruelty and savageness were making the whole kingdom miserable; and at…
A tropical tree of the legume family, whose pods are used in the production of food and drinks.
From a Fresco in the " Sala di Constantino, " in the Vatican, Rome. The scene is laid on the left bank…
While the Federal "Land Grant Act of 1862" mandated a college structure at the University in Columbia,…
A native of America, is extensively cultivated from the southern part of Chili to high latitudes in…
Thought to be native to Southern Asia. They are extensively cultivated throughout the tropical zones,…
Bread-Fruit is the pulpy fruit of a tree which grows only in the tropics. The tree yields fruit during…
Sugar Cane is probably a native to India, but is now extensively cultivated throughout the tropical…
Tea consists of the dried leaves of a number of evergreen shrubs, natives of China or thereabouts. Tea…
Coffee is the berry of a tree found native in Abyssinia. The tree attains a height of 15 to 20 feet,…
"The scaup (Fuliguia mariula) is a winter visitor to the United States and Southern Europe.…
Right triangle ABC with angles A, B, C to be used for finding distance across a river. This is a trigonometry…
Teeth of a frugivore (fruit-eating animal). Animals that live on soft fruits do not need such grinders…
The stomach of a grain-eating bird, which has a gizzard that functions to crush the seeds to pieces…
Hard Times Token (unknown) US coin. Obverse has a right-facing image of Andrew Jackson with the inscription…
Leaves - simple; alternate; edge coarsely and somewhat irregularly toothed; or, at times, unequally…
Image depicting a post office with a parcel post and a postal savings bank which President Taft put…
"Diagrammatic representation of a block of pine wood highly magnified. a, Early growth; b, late growth;…
"Diagram to show the intake of carbon dioxide by the palisade cells from the intercellular spaces, the…
"Diagram to show path of stored food upward through the tracheal tubes, and through the phloem portion…
"Showing the effect of cutting across the veins on the removal of food from the leaf. A, all of the…
"Diagram illustrating the descent of food from the leaf into the stem, and its circulation upward and…
"Diagram showing how, in Indian corn, the food from the upper and lower leaves finds its way into the…
"Diagram showing the transport of food through the sieve tubes, medullary rays and tracheal tubes, and…
"Diagram to show the relation of the food-conducting tissues of the leaf to those of the stem; and in…
"Diagram to show food from the leaves descending through the sieve tubes and being stored in the medullary…
"The digestion of the stored food and its ascent through the tracheal tubes when growth is resumed in…
Illustration of woman selling food in dozens that can be used to write mathematics story problems involving…
Illustration of a child buying groceries. It can be used to write mathematics story problems involving…
"The 'replete' workers, with their social stomachs distended with the sweet exudations of oak galls,…
"Ant guest or parasite (Atemeles) soliciting food from a worker Myrmica." -National Geographic, 1912