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- Streetcar Advertising Poster for Heinz Breakfast Wheat, "A New Treat in Wheat," 1933-1935 - Henry J. Heinz rarely missed an opportunity to market his "57 Varieties" -- a catchy slogan he created despite offering a line of more than 60 packaged food products. A prolific promoter, Heinz aimed to reach consumers in stores, at home, and everywhere in-between. This colorful poster advertised Heinz Breakfast Wheat, a hot cereal, to passengers riding a streetcar.

- 1933-1935
- Collections - Artifact
Streetcar Advertising Poster for Heinz Breakfast Wheat, "A New Treat in Wheat," 1933-1935
Henry J. Heinz rarely missed an opportunity to market his "57 Varieties" -- a catchy slogan he created despite offering a line of more than 60 packaged food products. A prolific promoter, Heinz aimed to reach consumers in stores, at home, and everywhere in-between. This colorful poster advertised Heinz Breakfast Wheat, a hot cereal, to passengers riding a streetcar.
- Advertisement for Whitman's Chocolates, March 1934, "The Thing to Do...Take...Give...Send Whitman's Chocolates for Easter" -

- March 31, 1934
- Collections - Artifact
Advertisement for Whitman's Chocolates, March 1934, "The Thing to Do...Take...Give...Send Whitman's Chocolates for Easter"
- Poster, "Rural Slums on Worn Out Land," Resettlement Administration, 1935-1936 - The Resettlement Administration (1935-6), a New Deal program, sought to relieve both urban and rural poverty by relocating struggling families to new, planned communities. Poor farming practices had depleted large areas of the United States, contributing to widespread loses in soil fertility. This poster encourages poor farm families to move from these regions of "worn out" soil to new communities.

- April 1935-December 1936
- Collections - Artifact
Poster, "Rural Slums on Worn Out Land," Resettlement Administration, 1935-1936
The Resettlement Administration (1935-6), a New Deal program, sought to relieve both urban and rural poverty by relocating struggling families to new, planned communities. Poor farming practices had depleted large areas of the United States, contributing to widespread loses in soil fertility. This poster encourages poor farm families to move from these regions of "worn out" soil to new communities.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt Campaign Booklet, "This Generation Has a Rendezvous with Destiny," 1936 - President Franklin Roosevelt declared, during his renomination acceptance speech at the 1936 Democratic National Convention, that the generation of Depression-era Americans had "a rendezvous with destiny." This pronouncement became the title of this campaign brochure. The booklet touted the economic and social progress of the American people during Roosevelt's first term, highlighting the achievements of the alphabet agencies his administration created.

- 1933-1935
- Collections - Artifact
Franklin D. Roosevelt Campaign Booklet, "This Generation Has a Rendezvous with Destiny," 1936
President Franklin Roosevelt declared, during his renomination acceptance speech at the 1936 Democratic National Convention, that the generation of Depression-era Americans had "a rendezvous with destiny." This pronouncement became the title of this campaign brochure. The booklet touted the economic and social progress of the American people during Roosevelt's first term, highlighting the achievements of the alphabet agencies his administration created.
- "Food for Thought" Tablecloth, 1936-1940 -

- 1936-1940
- Collections - Artifact
"Food for Thought" Tablecloth, 1936-1940