The cam looks strange to me... but I may not remember correctly, if it is wrong, others will say. Maybe it is just the angle of the picture - two peaks look somehow different than the rest seen...
So there is no spark on no plug, correct? And plugs look nice and clean?
Do the points open and close as you turn the engine?
To be honest - the best way forward is, I think, the algorithm Frank posted (thank you Frank!). It is a quickiest and cheapest way - to go systematically along the potential causes if obvious cause is not seen (lose wire, lose screw etc.). Important moment there is "Spark from Coil" - did you check that? If you have spark after coil, you have:
condenser,
points
rotor
cap
To be honest again: I have all four in my bag in the car always with me (Well, recently I switched to 123, but that is another story). They are not thousands of dollars.
Rotor and cap - can be visually inspected. check if the coal connector is there in the cap. Check for cracks (thinner than hair). See if the connectors on rotor are clean. Sometimes it is just about replacing and trying. Buy rotor and cap from a good source, do not save money ( I had a very bad experience with Beru in M103, I buy from Mercedes now - easier to give back if there are issues).
Points - gap should be checked and dwell. See if the screw holding the points is tight (the slotted one under the black wire on your pic). Cleaning the points with very fine sand paper may help as well. Bosch had a produciton lot of these points with fault - there were many cases here that new points stopped working. I am not suggesting this is your case, but it was a lot of headache for a couple of us here until they admitted that.
Condenser - may check the resistance. Otherwise I would replace it and try. You have an old condesner as much as I cen see.
Unless more educated fellow Members see anything on the pictures - do not shoot from the hip, go systematically through what Frank sent.