Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting a festival meal. The posctard includes a Yiddish poem : "At the nighttime festival meal / Sits the happy family / Eat and drink and let it be well with you / Here comes a year of prosperity."
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting a festival meal. The posctard includes a Yiddish poem : "Eat in good health and drink, "L'chaim!" / May the meal be well received / High up in heaven / And a good year be inscribed."
Rosh Hashanah postcard with a Yiddish poem : "The radio sounds, the radio resounds / 'Father, mother, a good year to you!' / 'May much naches be yours this year!' / Everything blessed, rich!'"
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting the sending of a New Year's greeting : "Take, carry my wishes to one after another today / Wherever a house, wherever a friend / But arrive to my beloved first / I send her my best greeting."
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting Jews immigrating to Eretz Israel (Land of Israel). The postcard includes a Yiddish poem : "With a newly enthusiastic heart / With a free and proud gaze / Jews hurry to the train / To their own land, to their own happiness."
Rosh Hashanah postcard with a Yiddish poem : "A good year to you, dear girls! / Let us now speak only of happiness! / May the New Year bring us / More naches, light and peace!"
Rosh Hashanah postcard with a Yiddish poem : "A good year to you, dear girls! / Let us now speak only of happiness! / May the New Year bring us / More naches, light and peace!"
Rosh Hashanah postcard with a Yiddish poem : "His voice sounds sweetly from afar / Filled with the fire of love / And how heartfelt it sounds, his wish / In honor of her…New Year."
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting Jews immigrating to Eretz Israel (Land of Israel). The postcard includes a Yiddish poem : "Soon the ship will sail to the Holy Land / To life and freedom, to bright days / The hearts beat, blood flows hotter / How sweet and pleasurably good."
Rosh Hashanah postcard by Hayyim Goldberg with a Yiddish poem : "A New Year dispatch reverberates around the world / Wake up, dear brother, be brave, free! / God gives you His grace and His blessing for the New Year / Happiness and honor, and money come to you!"
Rosh Hashanah postcard by Hayyim Goldberg entitled "New Year's tickets." The postcard includes a Yiddish poem : "Here is your mazel's happiness-ticket / It brings you joy without limit / And will accompany you in the path of life / And make your days bright!"
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting the delivery of a New Year's greeting. The postcard includes a Yiddish poem : "A little letter for the New Year / I carry here to you / Filled with love and loyalty / Filled with happiness and comfort and blessing."
Rosh Hashanah postcard by Hayyim Goldberg with a Yiddish poem : "In merit of the candle that I light here now / In merit of the holy fire / Be gracious to me, God, with my husband, with the children / Illuminate and shine upon us this New Year!"
Rosh Hashanah postcard with a menorah in the center. The postcard includes a Yiddish poem : "Happiness, health, and life / May God give you / And what pleases you / From the beautiful world."
Black-and-white Rosh Hashanah postcard with a pair of birds carrying a New Year's greeting, in front of a wreath of flowers. The postcard includes a Yiddish poem : "Dear doves, bright, white / Are bringing us sweet, important news / Are bringing us good fortune and dear hopes / Are opening for us safe, joyful paths."
Postcard with a black-and-white illustrated portrait of author, poet, essayist, and dramatist Yitskhok Leybush Peretz (I. L. Peretz). Illustration by Perec Willenberg.
Postcard with a black-and-white photographic portrait of author, poet, essayist, and dramatist Yitskhok Leybush Peretz (I. L. Peretz), including a biographical note.
Postcard with a black-and-white photographic portrait of poet and essayist Yehudah Leib Levin (also known by the literary acronym Yehalel), including a biographical note.
Postcard by Hayyim Goldberg with the first two stanzas of Morris Rosenfeld's poem Mayn Yingele (My Little Son) : "I have a son, a little son / A youngster mighty fine! / And when I look at him I feel / That all the world is mine. / But seldom do I see him when / He's wide awake and bright. / I always find him sound asleep / I see him late at night."