Black-and-white Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting a woman holding a cornucopia in one hand and raising a menorah over a Star of David with an inset landscape in the other.
Rosh Hashanah postcard showing the scales of justice weighted down with fish; a moon and stars are above the scale. Text at the bottom of the postcard reads : "May our merits multiple like fish and the stars at night."
Rosh Hashanah postcard with Jerusalem in the background and a crowd playing harps, drums, trumpets, and cymbals in the foreground. At the top of the card are two flags with Stars of David and text : "Bring us to Zion your city in glad song."
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting the candles and kiddush cup used in the ceremony of Havdalah. Text at the top of the postcard reads : "Behold, God is my salvation; I will trust, and will not be afraid."
Rosh Hashanah postcard with an eternal light (ner tamid) in the center. Text beneath reads : "For the commandment is a lamp, and the teaching is light."
Rosh Hashanah postcard with an eternal light (ner tamid) in the center. Text beneath reads : "For the commandment is a lamp, and the teaching is light."
Rosh Hashanah postcard with a Torah scroll in the center. Text on the scroll reads : "And in the seventh month, on the first day of the month, you shall have a holy convocation: you shall do no manner of servile work; it is a day of blowing the horn unto you."
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting the candles, kiddush cup, and spice box used in the ceremony of Havdalah. Text at the bottom of the postcard reads : "I will raise the cup of deliverance and call upon the name of the Lord."
Black-and-white Rosh Hashanah postcard of the exterior of the Schmalzhoftempel, also known as the Synagoge Schmalzhofgasse (Schmalzhofgasse Synagogue), in Vienna.
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting a globe labeled "Eretz Israel" (Land of Israel) amid the sea, with sailboats behind and the sun in the background. The flags contain text excerpted from Isaiah : "And He will set up an ensign for the nations, and will assemble the dispersed of Israel, and gather together the scattered of Judah from the four corners of the earth." The bottom of the postcard reads : "L'shanah haba'ah b'Yerushalayim!" ("Next year in Jerusalem!").
Rosh Hashanah postcard with a reproduction of the lithograph Les Vermicelles by Alphonse Lévy, showing a housewife preparing frimsel (egg noodles) for the Sabbath.
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting a windmill issuing gold coins. The blades of the windmill display banknotes of the United States and United Kingdom. The postcard includes a Yiddish poem (some text missing).
Postcard with two Zionist flags flanking a Star of David, above lyircs to the song "Seu Ziona Ness Vadegel" by Noah Rosenblum : "Return, return from distant climes to the land our fathers trod, / Escape, escape the gloomy depths, assisted by Almighty God! / If we can once again set up, the cornerstone and till the ground, / Laughter will fill up our mouths, and songs of joy resound."
Rosh Hashanah postcard with text excerpted from Genesis 2:24 : "Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife, and they shall be one flesh."
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting the Purim custom of mishloach manot (sending of portions). Text excerpted from Esther 9:19 : "Therefore do the Jews of the villages, that dwell in the unwalled towns, make the fourteenth day of the month Adar a day of gladness and feasting, and a good day, and of sending portions one to another."
Rosh Hashanah postcard depicting the ceremony of Kiddush. The text reads : "And Moses declared unto the children of Israel the appointed seasons of the Lord" (Leviticus 23:44).