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Search Results 4831 to 4840 of 7317

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0869

    Magenta

    Date: 1882

  • Old Series Trademark No. 1423b

    Samuel's Napa A. Soda Spring, natural mineral water A and B

    Date: 1887

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2538

    Don Pio Pico

    Date: 1895

  • Old Series Trademark No. 2871

    City Soda Works Eureka

    Date: 1896

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0462

    Workingmen's Store

    Date: 1878

  • Memo on Public Transportation

    Memorandum from Warren Olney regarding inquiries about refusal of Japanese onto public transportation

    Date: December 12, 1941

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0955

    Victory

    Date: 1883

  • Old Series Trademark No. 0872

    Cross Keys

    Date: 1882

  • McCarthy Album 11, Photograph 154

    Caption: "Bamboo Grows 12 to 16 Inches Per Day and 50 or 60 Feet High in 6 or 7 Weeks. Bamboo Propagating Farm, Burrows, Georgia. July 13, 1934." Grace McCarthy stands next to an automobile on the side of a road under trees. The other side of the road is flanked by rows of bamboo plants. This may be part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Savannah Plant Introduction Station, established in approximately 1919 in the Burroughs Station area southwest of Savannah. The station remained open until 1979, when it was closed by USDA budgetary downsizing. The property was subsequently deeded to the University of Georgia, in 1983.

    Date: 7/13/1934

  • McCarthy Album 08, Photograph 069

    Caption: "Port Townsend Bicycle Path.," c. 1910. Image of a rural path or road, surrounded by trees and vegetation, with a hill in the distance. The bicycle made its first appearance in the Puget Sound area in the late 1870s. Within twenty years, thousands of enthusiasts had adapted the new mode of transportation. Such enthusiasts often formed clubs, such as the Queen City Good Roads Club, based in Seattle (south of Port Townsend). These clubs advocated, constructed, and helped to maintain pathways dedicated specifically to bicycle traffic. Ironically, the efforts made by the bicyclists to generally improve roadways contributed to the rise of another new mode of transportation -- the automobile.

    Date: 1910