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40 results filtered with: Body
  • Brown jumping spider (unknown species)
  • Body shapes, female
  • The human thorax
  • Pseudo-Galen, Anathomia; WMS 290
  • Types os superb physical manhood who have been developed to this high degree of physical fitness and resistant power to disease by the very methods I am advocating in this book, and have been advocating consistently all over the world for the past quarter of a century. This is the type of youthfull manhood that we could and should have had if my advice had been taken and followed, as recruits, instead of such weedy specimens of humanity as shown in the previous picture.
  • Pseudo-Galen, Anathomia; WMS 290
  • Louse (Pediculus humanus humanus)
  • A women during pregnancy
  • Tick
  • Pseudo-Galen, Anathomia; WMS 290
  • Tick
  • La Culture Physique, 1904, Max Unger.
  • Body shapes, female
  • A women during pregnancy
  • Body shapes, female, hands and feet
  • Skin
  • The first photo shows the physical condition of the youth of the nation as revealed by the war. The second shows what can be achieved by scientific methods of physical education and culture, and how imperative such methods are to safeguard us against physical deterioration and disease in future years.
  • A women during pregnancy
  • Body shapes, female
  • Male jumping spider (possibly Platycryptus undatus)
  • Pseudo-Galen, Anathomia; WMS 290
  • Blue Bee (unknown species)
  • Wound man, Pseudo-Galen, Anathomia; WMS 290
  • A women during pregnancy
  • Structure of human head and brain
  • Structure of human head and brain
  • Mecahnical man
  • Brown jumping spider (unknown species)
  • Splendid physical types shown here are illustrative of some of the results that followed Eugene Sandow's lecture tour
  • Orange and white jumping spider (unknown species)