Postcard : This card is good for 1000 votes when presented by the person to whom it is addressed. [Circa 1910-1915]
Ballot box
Voting
Postcard with an illustration of a woman waving her arm, knocking over a glass. She is standing behind a ballot box, labeled "Vote for No. 120
[Circa 1910-1915]
English
POST.1000.39
Postcard : The candidate who always receives the ladies vote Fleishchmann's Yeast. [Circa 1880-1890]
Advertising cards
Ballot boxes
Consumer goods
Cooking (Bread)
Household supplies
Yeast
Trade card advertisement for Fleischmann's Yeast. This card shows three women casting their ballots into a ballot box. The verso contains directions for use and several recipes.
Fleischmann's Yeast
Cincinnati, OH : Frey Printing Company
[Circa 1880-1890]
Postcard : This card is good for 1000 votes when presented by the person to whom it is addressed. [Circa 1910-1915]
Ballot box
Voting
Postcard with an illustration of a woman waving her arm, knocking over a glass. She is standing behind a ballot box, labeled "Vote for No. ___"
[Circa 1910-1915]
Postcard : Nobody loves me, How can I win any votes. 1912
Ballot boxes
Children
Children and politics
Political candidates
Voting
United States--District of Columbia--Washington (D.C.)
This card, is part of a twelve-card series, featuring children, illustrated by Indiana artist Cobb Shinn. The illustration features a young girl crying, standing next to a "Votes for Wimmen" ballot box.
On the verso, the card is addressed to Mr. A. Mathias 606 Alafansa Ave. Congressional Heights Washington, D.C., and postmarked December 4, 1914. The message reads:
"Dear Ash: / I have been over to Marie's [illegible]
I don't know wether I am going with Kit or not this eve; It is raining here. I ordered the paper sent to you. Hope everything is O.K. and you are well."
Shinn, Cobb K.
New York : T.P. Co.
1912
Flier : To a Modern Woman. 1920
Ballots
Constitutional amendments--Ratification
Elections
Gender roles
Mother and child
Voting
Caricature of a woman wearing a "Women's Rights" sash, holding a ballot. On one side are her children and on the other, the ballot box. Along the top are a series of voting booths, showing only the lower portion with people's legs and feet.
The poem was written after the 19th amendment passed, granting women the right to vote.
[n.p.]
[Circa 1920]
1 p.
English
Printed in the U.S.A.
Le Petit journal: supplement illustre. No. 913. May 17, 1908
Ballot box
Clermont-Ferrand (France) -- Newspapers
France -- Clermont-Ferrand
Magazine illustration
Paris (France) -- Newspapers
Women--Suffrage--France
Le Petit Journal, or “The Little Newspaper”, was a daily newspaper published from 1863 to 1944. In 1884, the paper began to include a weekly illustrated supplement.
The full-page color illustration on the cover of this issue is entitled: "The Feminist Action: Suffragettes invade a polling station and seize the ballot box."
In French: "L'Action Feministe / Les suffragettes envahissent une section de vote et s'emparent de l'urne électorale"
Paris : Le Petit journal
1908-05-17
French
Text
PERI.1908.01
France
Published from 1890 to 1920