Rare Books
An historical perpetual calendar, in which you may find the rising and the setting of the sun in every month, with the fairs in divers counties, towns and liberties
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Are you 100% American? Prove it! Buy U.S. Government bonds : third liberty loan : U.S. Treasury will pay interest every six months
Visual Materials
Language: English Place of publication: New York (N.Y.) Artist(s): Stern, Joseph, 1890-1971 Printer(s)/Publisher(s): Sackett & Wilhelms Litho. & Prt. Co. Notes: "10-A"
priWWI_S_39
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The farmer's calendar : containing the business necessary to be performed on various kinds of farms during every month in the year
Rare Books
70444
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Our boys in the trenches - is there anything they need that you would not give them? Every liberty bond you buy helps them win the war. Buy more liberty bonds!
Visual Materials
Language: English Notes: "3"
priWWI_B_34
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Lend your money to your government : buy a United States Government bond : second liberty loan of 1917 : U.S. Treasury will pay you interest every six months
Visual Materials
Language: English Place of publication: New York (N.Y.) Printer(s)/Publisher(s): American Lithographic Co. Notes: "No. 7"
priWWI_A_100
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You will find in every package of Arbuckle's ariosa coffee one of a series of 50 instructive, interesting and artistic cards
Visual Materials
The Jay T. Last collection of beverage prints and ephemera contains approximately 2,650 printed items advertising beverage products and related businesses in the United States from the 1840s to the 1940s, with the bulk of the items spanning from 1850 to 1915. The collection consists largely of lithographed ephemeral items produced for American businesses affiliated with the manufacture, distribution, and sale of beverages such as coffee, tea, juice, milk, carbonated beverages, and alcoholic drinks including beer, wine, whiskey, and other liquors. The collection includes approximately 40 large-size items comprised mainly of lithographed advertising prints and product labels for tea, coffee, and spirits. Small-size items number approximately 2,600 and contain a variety of promotional materials including trade cards, calendars, die-cut scraps, booklets, and printed billheads and letterheads with manuscript text. The collection deals with beverage production, merchandising, advertising, and consumption -- including depictions of families and other groups drinking together -- and the images provide a resource for studying the history of American beer, liquor, coffee, tea, and carbonated beverage industries along with the evolution of their advertising in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Materials in the collection produced for manufacturers and distributors of alcoholic beverages also provide a perspective on their advertising strategies in the face of a growing temperance movement in the United States leading up to Prohibition. As graphic materials, the prints offer evidence of developing techniques and trends in printmaking, and of the artists, engravers, lithographers, printers, and publishers involved in the creative process.
priJLC_BEV_005200