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Search Results 3771 to 3780 of 5019

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0153

    Medicated Fig Paste

    Date: 1869

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2072

    Blue Seal

    Date: 1891

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2340

    Horseshoe, Walters Napa County Soda

    Date: 1893

  • Old Series Trademark No. 3194

    O. K.

    Date: 1898

  • Old Series Trademark No. 3660

    Egyptian Cigarettes

    Date: 1900

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2734

    Half Moon Bay Creamery

    Date: 1896

  • McCarthy Album 08, Photograph 186

    Caption: "Seattle Times, Copy." Photograph of the front page and an additional page from the Seattle Daily Times, April 20, 1906, in regard to the earthquake and fire that destroyed much of San Francisco on April 18, 1906. The primary headline reads "CITY WIPED OUT! Fire Still Raging!" See also 96-07-08-alb05-020 and 021.

    Date: 4/20/1906

  • McCarthy Album 06, Photograph 143

    No Caption. A view of the Benicia Arsenal, with the store house in the distance. William McCarthy began his career as an inspector of armaments for the U.S. War Department at the Benicia Arsenal in 1903. The arsenal was established in 1851 as the first Ordnance Supply Depot in the West, from which it supplied and supported U.S. troops, from the Civil War through WWII and the Korean War. It was deactivated in 1963. Benicia Arsenal store house in the distance, c. 1905.

    Date: 1905

  • McCarthy Album 10, Photograph 030

    No Caption: Shows a group of adult African lions in a enclosed area of Gay's Lion Farm in El Monte, Los Angeles. Charles and Muriel Gay opened the farm in 1925 and operated it until 1942 as a popular tourist attraction where lions were selectively bred and trained for the Hollywood film industry. It was closed during WWII due to wartime meat shortages, and the lions were loaned to zoos around the country, c. 1935.

    Date: 1935

  • McCarthy Album 05, Photograph 216

    Caption: "Totem Pole -- Seattle, Wash.," c. 1915. View of the Tlingit totem pole in Seattle's Pioneer Square. The totem pole was stolen in 1899 by a group of businessmen, and erected in the square, then known as Pioneer Place. An arson destroyed this pole in 1938, but it was later replaced by another carved by the Tlingit tribe (who were also finally paid for the original pole).

    Date: 1915