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- Lantern Slide, "Doubt and Despair" Cartoon from the Ram's Horn Magazine, 1890-1910 - Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as <em>Harper's Weekly</em>--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from <em>The Ram's Horn</em>, a non-denominational Christian periodical.

- 1890-1910
- Collections - Artifact
Lantern Slide, "Doubt and Despair" Cartoon from the Ram's Horn Magazine, 1890-1910
Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as Harper's Weekly--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from The Ram's Horn, a non-denominational Christian periodical.
- "The Veil is Rent" Cartoon, 1890-1910 - Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as <em>Harper's Weekly</em>--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from <em>The Ram's Horn</em>, a non-denominational Christian periodical.

- 1890-1910
- Collections - Artifact
"The Veil is Rent" Cartoon, 1890-1910
Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as Harper's Weekly--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from The Ram's Horn, a non-denominational Christian periodical.
- Lantern Slide, "The Devil's Advice" Cartoon, 1890-1910 - Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as <em>Harper's Weekly</em>--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from <em>The Ram's Horn</em>, a non-denominational Christian periodical.

- 1890-1910
- Collections - Artifact
Lantern Slide, "The Devil's Advice" Cartoon, 1890-1910
Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as Harper's Weekly--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from The Ram's Horn, a non-denominational Christian periodical.
- The Eclectic Second Reader, 1843 -

- 1843
- Collections - Artifact
The Eclectic Second Reader, 1843
- Album of Heinz Company Sales Personnel Manuals, Convention Ribbons, and Product Booklets, 1873-1912 - This album, compiled by the H. J. Heinz Company, includes ribbons and programs from salesman conventions, ribbons from company outings, salesman demonstration manuals, export and import price lists, business ethics booklets, and photographs of products displays.

- 1873-1912
- Collections - Artifact
Album of Heinz Company Sales Personnel Manuals, Convention Ribbons, and Product Booklets, 1873-1912
This album, compiled by the H. J. Heinz Company, includes ribbons and programs from salesman conventions, ribbons from company outings, salesman demonstration manuals, export and import price lists, business ethics booklets, and photographs of products displays.
- "Selma," 1965 -

- 1965
- Collections - Artifact
"Selma," 1965
- Lantern Slide, "The Richest Man in the World" Cartoon, 1895 - Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as <em>Harper's Weekly</em>--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from <em>The Ram's Horn</em>, a non-denominational Christian periodical.

- 1895
- Collections - Artifact
Lantern Slide, "The Richest Man in the World" Cartoon, 1895
Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as Harper's Weekly--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from The Ram's Horn, a non-denominational Christian periodical.
- Lantern Slide, "Wanted: Sixty Thousand Boys" Cartoon, 1890-1910 - Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as <em>Harper's Weekly</em>--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. Beard provided illustrations for this poem that attacked alcohol consumption and voters' complacency to remedy the situation.

- 1890-1910
- Collections - Artifact
Lantern Slide, "Wanted: Sixty Thousand Boys" Cartoon, 1890-1910
Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as Harper's Weekly--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. Beard provided illustrations for this poem that attacked alcohol consumption and voters' complacency to remedy the situation.
- Lantern Slide, "The Helping Hand" Cartoon, 1890-1910 - Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as <em>Harper's Weekly</em>--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from <em>The Ram's Horn</em>, a non-denominational Christian periodical.

- 1890-1910
- Collections - Artifact
Lantern Slide, "The Helping Hand" Cartoon, 1890-1910
Frank Beard (1842-1905), an illustrator, caricaturist, and cartoonist, began his career by sketching scenes of military life for popular publications--such as Harper's Weekly--during the Civil War. His later works promoted Christianity, warned against secularism, and targeted the social ills of the Gilded Age. This slide shows one of his illustrations from The Ram's Horn, a non-denominational Christian periodical.
- NEA Journal, January 1965 -

- January 01, 1965
- Collections - Artifact
NEA Journal, January 1965