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Tinchy Stryder launching the vinspired National Awards 2009. To find out more head to www.vinspired.com/nationalawards

Sheep Pen Creek, Redwood Nationl Park. Hiouchi, California USA

Titleist - the #1 ball in golf.. (Pro V1x)

chúc mừng sinh nhật G Dragon / Kwon Ji Yong aka Long handsome, number1 idol của mình, too fast to live too young to die nên anh hãy ra thêm nhiều track nhé ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ HPBD to you!! ♥♥ 18/08/1988 - 18/08/2011

Nikkormat FT2. Nikkor 105mm f2.5 non-AI. +2 diopter. Fuji Superia X-tra 400.

“Joan Shirning, the daughter of a scientist, is discovered as a stowaway when the spaceship Gloria Mundi is en route from Earth to Mars. Ace aviator Dale Curtance, pilot and designer of the spaceship, together with engineer Burns, journalist Froud, Doctor Grayson and Geoffrey Dugan, are attempting the two-way trip to the Red Planet in an attempt to win a million pound prize offered by a rival aircraft company.

 

“Curtance does not believe Joan’s story that her father has been in communication with intelligent life on Mars, although she tells him that they had been visited on Earth by a strange many-tentacled machine which taught her the Martian language, and that she has stowed away to vindicate the ridicule and scorn heaped upon her father’s head.

 

“Seventy-four days after leaving Earth the Gloria Mundi lands safely upon the arid Martian desert and the occupants are then thrown into a series of suspenseful adventures that will keep you on the edge of your chair wondering what will happen next. The arrival of two other spaceships – one Russian and one American – complicate the International situation. Add the semi-sentient mechanical life of Mars and the discovery of one of the few remaining Martians living, plus the imaginative writing of one of Britain’s outstanding science fiction authors, and it adds up to a top-notch Nova Science Fiction Novel.”

 

Strasburg Railroad's Plymouth No. 1 sat on a siding, dwarfed by the tender of a steam locomotive. From what I can tell on Strasburg's equipment roster, Engine 1 is apparently an "original" engine to the Strasburg Railroad. Pretty wild for a small gasoline engine that was built back in 1926.

 

This picture was taken during a visit to Strasburg back in 2013. I decided to go back through some old shots to see what other hidden gems I might have tucked away.

The Scottish Motor Racing Club (SMRC) Meeting saw Scottish Classic Sports & Saloon Car Championship races at Knockhill Racing Circuit, Fife, October, 2018.

 

Here Number 1, a white Fiat X1/9 entered by Alastair Baptie is seen.

 

Any additional information clarifying the vehicle's make, model, modifications made and its specific history will be welcomed.

 

Press "L" to view large.

With the leaves starting to change and a brisk wind, it was a chilly morning to wait for the CMQ's number one. PRLX 2856, CMQ 9023, PRLX 2858, LTEX 2558, and CMQ 9010 cross the Onawa trestle with 99 cars.

Inveraray Highland Games 2019

No M. G. Campbell was not a Postmaster - he was a Postal Clerk...at Kamloops and then New Westminster, B.C. He was also the first door-to-door postal carrier at Kamloops.

 

- / KAMLOOPS, B. C. / MAR 4 1933 / M. G. CAMPBELL / - oval handstamp in purple ink on small piece.

 

Matthew Geddes Campbell

(b. 22 October 1892 in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, Scotland, United Kingdom - d. 6 October 1940 at age 47 in New Westminster, British Columbia)

 

His wife - Jeanie (nee Davidson) Campbell

(b. 21 January 1889 in Glasgow, Scotland - d. 13 April 1969 at age 80 in New Westminster, British Columbia) - LINK to her death certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/42...

 

NOTES ON GRYLLOBLAITA AT KAMLOOPS - By the late MATTHEW GEDDES CAMPBELL, presented by G. J. SPENCER - University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. - In the autumn of 1938 it was my good fortune to get into correspondence with Mr. M. G. Campbell who worked in the Post Office at Kamloops. Mr. J. D. Gregson of the Dominion Entomological Laboratory had told me that Campbell was a keen amateur entomologist who had become interested in Crylloblatta, which Gregson had recently found at the foot of Mount Paul, Kamlcops, so I wrote to him in connection with this insect. For one reason and another, the correspondence lapsed until September, 1940, when Campbell happened to listen to a broadcast in which I had mentioned Crylloblatfa, and wrote again, this time from New Westminster where he had been transferred for over a year. A letter came from him on October 7th and in the evening paper of that day, appeared a notice of his death. The notice read: "New Westminster, Oct. 7. - Fatally injured in a traffic accident shortly after midnight Saturday at Sixth Street and Eighth Avenue, Matthew Geddes Campbell, 47, Postal Clerk, of 1009 Fourteenth Ave., Burnaby, died in the Royal Columbian Hospital at 6:55 a.m. Sunday." LINK to the complete article - file:///C:/Users/DH/Downloads/pkpadmin,+45-001-005.pdf

 

Other forgotten heroes and unexpected discoveries - I can’t help but mention one more favorite figure in ice crawler research. The tale involves a quite modest Canadian postal worker, Matthew Geddes Campbell (1892-1940). It’s also a nice opportunity to acknowledge the sizeable contributions of dedicated folks who simply love natural history (such as the ‘Entomology Enthusiasts’ championed by the Entomological Society of Canada). Campbell was a Scottish émigré who, post-World War I, moved to Canada in 1921. He became the first door-to-door postal carrier in Kamloops, working and living there for several decades. As it happened, Campbell had a keen interest in entomology and became acquainted with J.D. Gregson, an entomologist at the Department of Agriculture lab in Kamloops. Gregson had found an unusual Grylloblatta campodeiformis population in the foothills of Mt. St. Paul in Kamloops in 1937 (unusual because of the semi-arid climate, as it sits at the northwestern edge of the Okanagan Region) and sparked Campbell’s interest in this unusual insect. LINK to the complete article - esc-sec.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Bulletin-Volume52-n...

 

Clipped from - The Vancouver Sun newspaper - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada - 7 October 1940 - Burnaby Man Fatally Hurt While Cycling - Royal City Juvenile Faces Manslaughter Charge - NEW WESTMINSTER, Oct. 7, 1940 - A verdict of accidental death with no blame attached to anyone was returned by a coroner's jury in Paterson Funeral Home today at an inquest on Matthew G. Campbell, 48, of 1009 Fourteenth Avenue, Burnaby, fatally Injured when he was knocked from his bicycle shortly before midnight, Saturday. A charge of manslaughter, laid against the alleged driver of the auto, will be referred to the attorney general, police said. The driver, a juvenile, has been released on $2000 bail. Police said that Campbell was riding his bicycle north on Sixth Avenue and was attempting to turn west on Eighth Street, when he was struck by the auto, allegedly driven by the youth, who is 17. He suffered a double fracture of the skull, a fractured back and a broken leg and died in Royal Columbian Hospital early Sunday morning. An inquest was conducted in Paterson Funeral Home here today. Mr. Campbell was a clerk in the New Westminster, Post Office. He was born in Scotland and came to Canada 21 years ago, after serving with the 2nd Battalion, Highland Light Infantry during the First Great War. He leaves his wife, two sons and a daughter.

People stroll near the Yangtze Number 1 Bridge as viewed from the Wuchang shore of the Yangtze River in Wuhan, China.

Decoration and ornament at Severn Cottage, just below Highley Station on the Severn Valley Railway.

- c.m ũng hộ ngen :) .....

 

- đey là angel ngồi đàn piano ;)) . nhung k thích kai' vòng trên đầu nên kju nó k có vẽ hjhj.......

 

- e traj nhung number1 ;))

 

............................................................................................................

  

- CẤM PHÁ , CHỌC , TRÊN MỌI HÌNH THỨC NHA .

Day 213/365 - Here is one for the first day of August.

the new project is going to be a unique look at 2013/2014

50+ images showcasing life

 

they won't all be portraits

they won't be a week apart

this is a free form way for me to harness my creativity

 

follow my work if you DARE: espressoDOM

twitter | facebook | tumblr | 500px | Google+ | Instagram | Pinterest | Youtube

  

11/16/2019 Mike Orazzi | Staff

Woodstock Academy's Sierra Bedard (1) during the 2019 State Girls Volleyball Tournament Class L Quarterfinals at BEHS in Bristol Saturday.

A lone street hooker, sits at a back street bar. drinking shots of whiskey and flicking ash into her hand.... totally lost in her own world

Butter cake with white chocolate ganache and fondant covering.

 

Animals and decorations hand modeled from modeling paste.

(from - Wrigley's 1918 British Columbia Directory) - DEPARTURE BAY - a Post Office and settlement on the east coast of Vancouver Island, 3 miles north of Nanaimo, in Alberni Provincial Electoral District, reached by auto road. The Dominion biological station is located here. Local resources: Farming.

 

The DEPARTURE BAY Post Office was established - 1 July 1891 - it closed - 1 July 1901 - reopened - 1 July 1913 and closed - 30 August 1920.

 

LINK to a list of the Postmasters who served at the DEPARTURE BAY Post Office - www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/postal-heritage-philately/...;

 

James Harper was the first Postmaster at DEPARTURE BAY and served from - 1 July 1891 to - 1 July 1901.

 

James Harper

(b. abt 1857 in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada - d. 1 June 1918 at age 61 in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada)

 

The Harpers kept the hotel and Post Office at Departure Bay, and many colorful tales centre around the hotel.

 

His obituary clipped from - The Vancouver Sun newspaper -

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada - 10 June 1918 - James Harper, a life-long resident of the city, who was born here 61 years age, died suddenly of heart failure when on his way home from a shopping expedition to town with his wife. He had for many years lived at Departure Bay and was one of the oldest and most trusted of the employees of the Canadian Explosives works here. He is survived by six children three sons and three daughters. One of tho sons is a resident of Vancouver, as is also Mrs. N. Casch, the eldest of the daughters. The funeral took place on Wednesday afternoon, Rev. S. Ryall officiating, and was attended by one of the largest concourses of mourners which has been seen here for a very long while.

 

His wife - Josephine (nee Canessa) Harper

(b. 3 February 1870 in Olympia, Washington, USA - d. 20 March 1958 at age 88 in Nanaimo, British Columbia / Departure Bay, British Columbia) - they were married - 22 May 1888 in Nanaimo, British Columbia - they six children -

 

Her obituary - MRS. JOSEPHINE HARPER - Requiem mass was celebrated in St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church on Monday morning for the late Mrs. Josephine Harper by Rt. Rev. Msgr. A. G. Baker. Mrs. Harper, a well-known pioneer resident of Nanaimo and Departure Bay passed away at her home on Christie street, Departure Bay, on Thursday last, aged 88 years. LINK to her death certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/29...

 

- sent from - / DEPARTURE BAY / JUL 21 / 16 / B.C. / - split ring cancel - this split ring hammer (A1-2) was proofed - 23 May 1913 - (RF D).

 

- sent by - T. B. Kurata / c/o Biological Station / Departure Bay / Nanaimo, British Columbia (addressed to his wife)

 

Takatsuna Bailey Kurata

(b. about 1880 in Nagano, Japan – d. 6 November 1962 at age 82 in Toronto, Ontario)

 

On 29 June 1913, on route by train to Vancouver Island for the Royal Ontario Museum, two scientists stepped off to collect some insects in Banff. By fluke of luck, they boarded a bus to lodgings at the Upper Hot Springs, midway up the slope of Sulphur Mountain. Heading to the top on an excursion, the two men searched for insects. Lo and behold, “T.B. Kurata called me to see an insect he had found under a stone... I knew at once that this creature was something new – unlike anything ever found before.” Edmund M. Walker (1877-1969), quoted here, would go on to describe the first ice crawler species (and family, and order), and make significant additional contributions to the field of entomology throughout his career. But I’d like to note that the search image and collecting effort that led to the discovery of the first ice crawler was that of T.B. Kurata.

 

Takatsuna Bailey Kurata (1880-1962), a Japanese immigrant from Nagano, Japan, first moved to Coe College in Iowa to study ornithology (the name Bailey was taken from Bert Heald Bailey, his mentor, in a custom to honor him following Bailey’s early death in 1917). In 1911, T.B. took a position at the University of Toronto, moving permanently to Canada. In 1912, he became the first full time employee (a “preparatory”) at the brand-new Royal Ontario Museum. You might ask, how would an ornithologist find the first ice crawler (wouldn’t he be looking up)? In fact, it was an interest in arachnids that led him to look down and turn stones on the side of Sulphur Mountain. Over the course of his career, T.B. would contribute more than 60,000 arachnid specimens to the museum, and would author its handbook on Canadian spiders. LINK to the complete article - esc-sec.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Bulletin-Volume52-n...

 

Clipped from - The Sault Star newspaper - Sault St. Marie, Ontario, Canada - 7 November 1962 - University Of Toronto Loses Leader - TORONTO (CP) — Takatsuna B. Kurata, 82 of Toronto former assistant professor of the department of zoology at the University of Toronto who was responsible for introduction of life-like models to the Royal Ontario Museum died here Tuesday. A native of Japan he emigrated to the United States at the age of 18. He graduated in science at Cedar Rapids, Iowa and came to Toronto in 1911, where he worked In the department of anatomy at the University of Toronto and joined the Royal Ontario Museum. It was then that Prof Kurata evolved a technique to cast models from living fish. Stuffed and pickled fish had been found to lose much of their naturalness in a short time. In 1921 the professor accompanied Sir Edmund Walker to the Far East where they completed a collection of Japanese prints. During the Second World War he translated Japanese scientific papers for the Canadian government as well as medical documents for the Canadian Red Cross.

 

Addressed to his wife - Mre. T.B. Kurata / 304 So.1 35th St. West / Cedar Rapids / Iowa / USA /

 

His wife - Bessie Aletha (nee Stoddard) Kurata

(b. 21 December 1884 in Linn, Iowa, United States – d. 31 October 1977 at age 92 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada)

 

Clipped from - The Gazette newspaper - Cedar Rapids, Iowa

24 June 1910 - STODDARD - KURATA. The following announcement has been sent out: "Mrs. Mary Stoddard announced the marriage of her daughter Bessie Aletha to Mr. Takatsuna Bailey Kurata on Wednesday the twenty-second of June, 1910, in Chicago, Illinois.

© | S K | P H O T O G R A P H Y all Rights Reserved

5/11/2013 Mike Orazzi | Staff

Megan Jaswell the first place Female 5K winner during the annual CT Race in the Park held inside New Britain's Walnut Hill Park on Saturday.

Like me here: www.facebook.com/mikeorazziphotography

 

Slideshow here with way too many images: youtu.be/CW6Zws16DVU

Explored at number 1, number one!!!

 

It's dropped straight out, but it had 15minutes of fame :-)

 

Another under-wing shot, i'm afraid.

Well, I like them. The green metallic spots on this are astounding

This was in the same flower patch as the Peacock in my last uploads

 

Don't you love the way this butterfly has drooped its antennae, like divining rods finding the sweet nectar

 

Please click on all sizes. You know you want to :-)

 

NO GROUP INVITES PLEASE

Especially, 'The Biggest Goddam Shiny Award on Flickr'

I don't want it, thank you

Nope, not even if it spins :-)

 

Now that it made Explore number one though, it might deserve it.

An' It makes me wonder. Don't you feel a link to a song coming along?

 

www.butterfly-conservation.org/Butterfly/17/Butterfly.htm...

 

c. 1943, honoring 100 years of Brazilian stamps

Development of the 101” Forward Control started in 1969 and the initial designs were square-nosed, not particularly attractive and arguably rather underpowered given the six cylinder petrol engine available at that time. As trials continued the body styling improved and the 3.5 V8 engine was fitted.

 

The vehicle was intended to be an air-portable tug for the new 105mm field gun and was originally intended to have a powered trailer that would sit between the vehicle and the field gun, but this never progressed beyond user trials.

 

Our vehicle is LHD chassis number one of the pre-production batch. The vehicle has many detail differences from the final design that went into production in 1975, including no front wheel spats, tread steps, stacked rear lamps, round reflectors, locker lid catches, fuel tank pressings, front lashing hooks in outriggers, heater tap, road wheels and vacuum gauge for trailer brakes. The vehicle appears in many photographs taken during the initial trials, most of which show the truck with the powered trailer.

 

The vehicle is in wonderfully original condition, having spent most of its recent life in a greenhouse!

 

The Dunsfold Collection

Alfold - Surrey

England - United Kingdom

June 2015

Avanti West Coast Voyagers 1A50 await departure at 1358hrs.

June 12th.

A very late running Via Canadian train number 1 rolls through Rosedale BC on Sat June 6, 2015. Off the advertised by almost 12 hours makes this shot possible with Mount Cheam in the eastern Fraser River Valley in British Columbia.

Macro Mondays 'bokeh' theme, one of the member's choices. This is one of my favourite themes but I found it hard to get a shot I was happy with, probably because I was both tired and busy with Christmas preparations.

 

The 'snow' on the ground is baking powder and the snowflakes are an overlay. The flash was directed from the side towards the background (a gold sequined make-up bag) at 1/64 power, to get the bokeh.

 

Santa is a cake decoration and the reindeer a decoration for gifts. They measure 5.5 cm and 3.5 cm high respectively.

 

Explore Number 1 (how bizarre is that, when I looked at Explore earlier this morning it wasn't even in)

I finaly have some Shell bricks to make some petrol stations :) You must be old to remember those kind of sets hahah

Street Prostitution Photo Essay

Toyota, Yaris, AP4

Winner 2020 Netier National Capital Rally

youtu.be/RsjtZaOCfWE

The new barber shop on Biltstraat, Utrecht (and the lowest prices in town)

My photo of 'The Bean' sculpture reached the #1 position on Explore on April 28, 2014. WOO HOOO ! ! !

Toyota, Yaris, AP4

Winner 2020 Netier National Capital Rally

vimeo.com/485410527

The Blue Angels have developed powered flight into an art.

 

This was taken during a mid-week show that The U.S. Navy Flight Demonstration Squadron performs at their base during the show season - Pensacola NAS.

 

The squadron CO - Number 1, traditionally called "Boss" flies more than just his F/A-18 Hornet, he flies the entire formation. Look at Number 3; his head is swiveled, fixed on his aiming point on Bosses left wing. Number 3 (who is a Marine Aviator) flies almost all of the show with his head in this position; glued on Boss, maintaining position and demonstrating the precision flight that the Squadron has become world-famous for.

 

MG_2077

Ready for Monday! In case you can't see - black patent upper, dark green lower - perfect for my green chiffon dress!

Summerhill, Dublin

Luss Highland Gathering 2016

Number 1: David Ayre (GB) and Anthony Thompson (GB) in a (110 years old!) 1907 Itala 40 participating in the 2017 Flying Scotsman Rally.

 

Any additional information clarifying the vehicle's make, model, modifications made and its specific history will be welcomed.

 

www.endurorally.com

 

Press "L" to view large.

My son Josh had a really great student teacher visiting his kindy class over the last few months and tomorrow is her last day so I made some cupcakes for her and the class to share.

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