Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of William Werts; Joshua Wheeler; and The Lutz Family. A Putt's Overland Envelope is attached at the bottom.
Scanned page 33 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of The Susie Brown (The C. and O. Ferry, Portsmouth, O.); Central House, Post Office Corner; and a written acknowledgement of taxes received from John Vastine, signed by David Gharky.
Scanned page 32 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of the River City Band, Portsmouth, O.; The Masonic Temple built on Chillicothe and Fourth (4th) Streets in 1906; Salt Wollen Mill; and Father Nonnan.
An image captioned Market Street 1847 is missing from the page.
Scanned page 30 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white typed text of a letter from the Evansville, Indiana Library to H. A. Lorberg thanking him for a donation to their library.
Scanned page 29 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of the Old Time Firemen: E.K. McAleer, George Gims, John Behrens, Lou Ellis, George Brown, Charles White; The Old Ball House on Second (2nd) and Washington Streets; John Powers, Sr.; Louis Adair; Billy Grooms; Edwin White; J.B. Carter
Scanned unnumbered page from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white photographs of Honorable O. W. Newman and tree-lined Lover's Lane on Rose Ridge in Portsmouth. A fence runs along the left side and a man is on the side walk.
Scanned page 28 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white photographs of Dr. Corson; William Elden; Julia Waller; J.W. Fulton; Squire Milton Kennedy; J.J. Rardin; German M.E. Church; Balser Andres (a B. & O. engineer that died after a train wreck in 1905 in Jackson, Ohio.); and an ad for Professor J.P. Czerwinsky, Vocal and Instrumental Music.
Scanned page 21 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white photographs of The Riversides (a Portsmouth baseball team); Colonel Oliver Wood (served in the 22nd O.V.I. Civil War.); George Helfenstein; Captain Williamson (steamboat captain); an unknown male; a paper with the text "Carriers' Blade Address"; and The Elk Building (originally the Sixth (6th) Street Methodist Episcopal Church Building, the Elk lodge #154 moved here from Second (2nd) Street in about 1916 and the building was razed in 1928 for the Masonic Temple Building).