It used 122 roll film. Good luck trying to find any today. As it was an Autographic model, you could open a slide on the rear of the camera to write information on the backing paper of the negative.
It was a government mandate to change the gearshift order.
The holes are called “Cruiser-Line Ventiports."
It's not automated, but take a look at Topaz JPEG to RAW AI. It is amazing.
I suspect that since the new iPad Pros will be using the M1 chip that there will be a good likelihood that all Mac OS software will be able to run on them very soon. My iPad is a couple years old and works very well, but I would seriously consider a new one if and when it will do everything a laptop would.
It is built-in to Mac Os.
Movavi Screen Recorder 21 works very well and is not too costly.
The taillight with the bowtie symbol looks spurious. Mine never had that.
If your iMac is new, it probably only runs 64 bit programs. I don't think any old Photoshop software available on CDs is 64 bit. You may be able to install Parallels and an older version of the OS to run the Adobe programs, but it could be a bit time-consuming to do so.
You can do it in Shutterfly under advanced editing. Delete the photo boxes and add a text box to any page or all pages.
Headlights look to be about 1937 to me.
You definitely do not want to keep photo equipment in one, as the humidity level is very high to ensure safety of things like paper in a fire.
I have the same problem with a few photos on my iPhone. I have transferred many photos from phone to Mac with Image Capture, and sometimes one or two stay on the phone while all the others are deleted after the transfer. I have never figured out the reason some are persistent. Hopefully someone knows how to do it!
Try raising the slide you are scanning to about 2 inches from the surface of the iPad. The lines should be out of focus and less discernible. A piece of milk glass or white plexiglass under the slide would help, too.
My two cents - looks like a Crown Graphic with a Kalart rangefinder. It uses 4x5 inch film.