Why don't you work smarter and not so necessarily harder?
Verse. Title from first two lines of poem. Printed and illustrated on light brown paper.
Verse. Title from first two lines of poem. Printed and illustrated on light brown paper.
At head of text: Copyright by Morris Weinthal, Oct. 1914.
At head of text: Copyright by Morris Weinthal, Oct. 1914.
At head of text: Copyright by Morris Weinthal, Oct. 1914.
Title and first line the same.
Within double line border. At end of text:-Exc.
Title within single line border.
Title within single line border.
1 broadsheet. At head of text: Acts XXVII:23. At end of text: Published by J.A. Whipple, No. 3 Hamilton Place, Boston, U.S.A.
1 broadsheet. At head of text: Acts XXVII:23. At end of text: Published by J.A. Whipple, No. 3 Hamilton Place, Boston, U.S.A.
Poetry and prose, printed in one and two columns within single line border with corner ornaments. At head of poem: Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year One Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty-three, by Wm. H. Hayward, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of Maryland. At end of poem within border: *Since ascertained to have been Sergt. A. Humerton, Co. C, 154th N.Y. Vols.; whose family now resides in Cattaragus County, New York. Imprint in lower margin below border: Slater, Print. Baltimore.
Double line border on cover.
Title from first lines of poem. "'Additions', March 1968 - 2" appears at the bottom of the sheet.
1 broadsheet. Printed in three columns.
Within double line border, printed in two columns. On verso: Stereoscopic view of man digging a grave.
Within double line border, printed in two columns. On verso: Stereoscopic view of man digging a grave.
Within double line border, printed in two columns. On verso: Stereoscopic view of man digging a grave.
Attack on Woodrow Wilson. Attack on Woodrow Wilson. Poem in 19 four-line stanzas. Publication date suggested because of mention of the "conclave at Versailles." Poem has been attributed to William E. Foster because a typescript now at Brown University was found in a book from Foster's estate at the American Antiquarian Society.
Poem in seven four-line stanzas. At end of text: Member Temperance Praying Band. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence.
First line: Why am I so weak, and lonely.
Broadsheet. Within single-line border on each side. Text of hymn in four eight-line stanzas. Author's name not on item. At end of text: Church herald. In lower margin on recto: Church of the Transfiguration New York. At lower left within border on recto: 49. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence.
Translated by George P. Philes. Cut of Lorenzo de Medici statue at head of title.
At head of text: Who seek salvation must first learn the lesson of kindness.
At head of text: Who seek salvation must first learn the lesson of kindness.
At head of text: Who seek salvation must first learn the lesson of kindness.
At upper right: Words and music by J.E. Kelly, 4819 Chicago St., Seattle, Wash. Text of song in two eight-line stanzas with eight-line chorus beginning: O, who put the big double "L" in O'Kelly.
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