Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: devils
Heaney the Magician Tickets
23 Nov 2017 |
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"Heaney the Magician. Good luck to you. Good luck. Heaney, World's Foremost Magician, and Company. Adults. Admit one. Heaney the Magician."
Gerald Heaney (1899-1974) was a stage magician who performed as "Heaney the Great." See also an enlargement of the top portion of this 10-ticket sheet.
Heaney the Magician
23 Nov 2017 |
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"Heaney the Magician. Good luck to you. Good luck. Heaney, World's Foremost Magician, and Company. Adults. Admit one. Heaney the Magician."
This is the top portion of a 10-ticket sheet for stage magician Gerald Heaney (1899-1974), also known as "Heaney the Great."
Those devilish creatures crouched on Hearney's shoulders are "whispering imps." Other magicians also used whispering imps in their advertising. See Howard and Jane Thurston Good Luck Throw-Out Card and The Great Raymond Is Here for examples.
Krampus on Sputnik
10 Dec 2016 |
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Den Krampus soll der Sputnik holen,
Weil er die Kinder hat bestohlen!
I'm not sure of the exact translation of the rhyming lines on this Austrian postcard (dated 1961 on the back), but I believe the general idea is that Krampus is making his getaway on Sputnik (which evidently can refer to a rocket as well as a satellite ) because he has just taken the children's pretzels and other treats, ones that St. Nicholas gave to them.
Happy Surreal Halloween
29 Oct 2016 |
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Addressed on the back to Miss Anna Witmer, York , Pa., R.F.D. #12, but there's no stamp or postmark. Message: "From your Aunt Annie."
In this surreal scene from a Halloween postcard by publisher Raphael Tuck, a witch, black cat, and some devils fly out of the top of a creepy jack-o'-lantern centerpiece as children cower in the background.
See below for some other Tuck Halloween postcards.
Our Gilt-Edge Goods, Reilly Bros. and Raub, Lancas…
03 Nov 2015 |
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"Our Gilt-Edge Goods. Nothing is too much trouble or too expensive to make these goods all that the name implies. The newest requirements of the people are satisfied with a pleasing completeness. The newest ideas are tested for practical worth and freely used, being carefully embodied when they contribute increased advantage. Selected workmen of special training and superior skill aid in securing perfection. The use of the purest pigirons only and the best materials for all fittings establish their superior quality, utility, durability, convenience, & beauty. Nothing better made. Reilly Bros. & Raub, Lancaster, Pa."
Front cover of an advertising leaflet for Reilly Bros. & Raub, a hardware store that was located in Lancaster, Pa. (the building that housed the store is still standing). Note the distinctive typefaces and the devilish figure with pitchfork at top.
An inside page from the leaflet (see below) contains an advertisement for the Valley Novelty Range. Compare this with a similar ad for the same stove on a separate advertising trade card from Lebanon, Pa. (below).
Comic Imp Card: I Am ________, Who the Devil Are Y…
06 Apr 2016 |
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"I am (Comic Imp Card). Who the devil are you?"
A card pasted in a Victorian-era "Agent's Sample Book" that was issued by an unidentified calling card company.
I also have a blank copy of this card without the "Comic Imp Card" description or a name. See I Am ________, Who the Devil Are You? (below).
For an example of another card that was in the "Agent's Sample Book," see the Fireman's Card (below).
Have a Devilishly Happy Halloween
11 Oct 2015 |
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Artist's initials: "HBG" (H. B. Griggs). Postmarked Oct. 31, 1912, on back.
I Am Uriah E. Heckert
27 Apr 2015 |
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Rebus: "Eye AM Uriah E. Heckert. W-Hoe T-He Devil R Yew?"
Translation: "I am Uriah E. Heckert. Who the devil are you?"
Acquaintance cards--like this rebus version--continue to attract some media attention. The latest is a Daily Mail posting by Annabel Fenwick Elliott on April 24. See her discussion of these "cheeky cards": " May I Have the Pleasure of Seeing You Home?' The 'Flirtation Cards' 19th-Century Men Used to Woo Ladies (But They Had to Be Returned If She Wasn't Interested) ."
Howdy Doody and a Devilish Imp, Halloween, 1955
27 Oct 2014 |
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A trick or treat photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.
Handwritten note on the back of the photo: "Halloween, 1955."
A little cowboy--wearing a Howdy Doody kerchief around his neck and Howdy Doody boots--poses in front of the fireplace alongside his brother, whose costume features a devilish image on the front.
Driving the Red Devil Away
14 Jul 2014 |
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Or at least it looks like they're trying to drive away in "The Red Devil." Unfortunately, there aren't any clues regarding the origin of the devilish vehicle on this real photo postcard.
I Am Sam Kahn, Who the Devil Are You?
06 Apr 2016 |
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"I am Sam Kahn. Who the devil are you?"
I have found cards like these two--the one for Sam Kahn above and the other for Anna "Butch" Engle below--among collections of graduation name cards that date as late as the1940s. I don't have any definitive proof, but I suspect that high school or college students were able to order amusing cards like these from Jostens or some similar company at the same time they ordered their formal graduation announcements and name cards.
These "who the devil are you" cards are, of course, just updated versions of earlier nineteenth-century Devil Cards and Comic Imp Cards (see examples below).
I Am Anna "Butch" Engle, Who the Devil Are You?
06 Apr 2016 |
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"I am Anna 'Butch' Engle. Who the devil are you?"
For a similar card, see I Am Sam Kahn, Who the Devil Are You? (below).
I Am ________, Who the Devil Are You?
06 Apr 2016 |
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"I am ________. Who the devil are you?"
For another copy of this card, see Comic Imp Card: I Am ________, Who the Devil Are You? (below).
I Am C. Y. Young, Who the Devil Are You?
06 Apr 2016 |
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"I am C. Y. Young, who the devil are you?"
These two "devil cards" date to 1877.
Who the Devil Are You?
06 Apr 2016 |
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"I am (Devil Cards), who the devil are you?"
A selection of devilish acquaintance and calling cards from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries (see above and below).
Louis Klug
06 Apr 2016 |
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A pipe-smoking devil carries a "Louis Klug" sign across this nineteenth-century German calling card.
The Procrastinator's Hereafter
26 Feb 2014 |
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"The Procrastinator's Hereafter. Take a friend's advice: Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today--Answer that letter." Sign: "Bottomless Pit Drop In."
Pity the poor procrastinator who doesn't answer his letters! This pathetic fellow obviously failed to keep up with his correspondence while he was alive, and now in the "hereafter" the devil is looking over his shoulder to make sure he responds on time--and for all time!
In order to avoid falling into the fiery "Bottomless Pit" below, the procrastinator is precariously perched on an endless roll of paper as he scribbles out his message. The last few lines he's written on the paper suggest that he's trying to explain away his current predicament: "...in my new home. Although everything is up to sample, I'm not stuck on the place but circumstances over which I have no control impel me to stick...."
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Reverse of postcard:
Postmarked: "Hartford, Conn., Aug. 25, 1912."
Addressed to: "Mr. W. J. Ross, 131 River St., N. Adams, Mass."
Handwritten message: "Dear Will: What do you think of this for a card? I don't hear from Flora very often. I'm working and not having much fun either--just existing. Not as tired as when I came here. Hastily, Cora."
You Can Go to This Fellow
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