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- New Brunswick License Plate, 1929 - Early license plates issued by Canadian provincial governments consisted of porcelain coated steel, embossed or painted tin, or fiberboard. By the 1920s most provinces produced plates made of embossed steel. Automobiles registered in New Brunswick in 1929 sported a plate like this one.

- 1929
- Collections - Artifact
New Brunswick License Plate, 1929
Early license plates issued by Canadian provincial governments consisted of porcelain coated steel, embossed or painted tin, or fiberboard. By the 1920s most provinces produced plates made of embossed steel. Automobiles registered in New Brunswick in 1929 sported a plate like this one.
- Sales Catalog of the H. J. Heinz Company and Products, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, circa 1910 - With humble beginnings exclusively selling horseradish in 1869, H.J. Heinz continued to expand his product line to build the "House of Heinz" and become a leader in the manufactured food industry. This sales catalog highlights the manufacturing process and provides photographs of the factories, branch houses, and employees. It also contains information and photographs of each of the "57 Varieties" of Heinz products.

- 1910
- Collections - Artifact
Sales Catalog of the H. J. Heinz Company and Products, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, circa 1910
With humble beginnings exclusively selling horseradish in 1869, H.J. Heinz continued to expand his product line to build the "House of Heinz" and become a leader in the manufactured food industry. This sales catalog highlights the manufacturing process and provides photographs of the factories, branch houses, and employees. It also contains information and photographs of each of the "57 Varieties" of Heinz products.
- Work Table, 1805-1820 -

- 1805-1820
- Collections - Artifact
Work Table, 1805-1820
- Collision on the Western Extension R.R., N.B., 1872 - Accidents were frightfully common on 19th-century railroads. Crude equipment, poor signaling, and uncoordinated timekeeping all contributed to the problem. This illustration shows the aftermath of a head-on collision between two trains in the Canadian province of New Brunswick in 1872.

- 1872
- Collections - Artifact
Collision on the Western Extension R.R., N.B., 1872
Accidents were frightfully common on 19th-century railroads. Crude equipment, poor signaling, and uncoordinated timekeeping all contributed to the problem. This illustration shows the aftermath of a head-on collision between two trains in the Canadian province of New Brunswick in 1872.