The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service
  Label Dataset Type Subdivision Identifier
1. Hours of opening. Sunday opening

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
Z708
Bibliography. Library Science. Information Resources--Libraries--Library science. Information science--Hours of opening. Sunday opening ; Hours of opening--Libraries ; Sunday opening--Libraries
2. Relations to the public (Hours, etc.)

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
N490
Fine Arts--Visual arts--Art museums, galleries, etc.--Relations to the public (Hours, etc.) ; Relations, Public--Art museums, galleries, etc. ; Hours of opening--Art museums, galleries, etc.
3. Smith, Roger New York, New York. Mayor La Guardia, speaking at the opening of the exhibition of cartoons concerning lost hours in war production sponsored by the OWI (Office of War Information) 1943 June

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20053350
4. Waiting in line for tickets for the opening game of the World Series. Picture snapped at 10 P.M. tonight October 3rd, twenty four hours before the tickets will be placed on sale 1924 Oct. 3.

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 11580420
5. Palmer, Alfred T. A poster comes to life. "Meet the guys who shoot 'em." George Woolslayer introduces a group of open-hearth furnace men to his poster pals, Evans and Vineyard, who are getting a first-hand view of production for war. Although they knew how to shoot guns and drive jeeps before they came to Allegheny-Ludlum, they're seeing for the first time the kind of Americans who make these things: skilled and semi-skilled workers, tireless men who can work for hours in terrific heat. Allegheny-Ludlum Steel, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19638533
6. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19502384
7. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness. An interested group watching Miss Ober wash out a boy's eye

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19502386
8. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness. Treating a skin disease

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19502381
9. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness. Dressing a little girl's head

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19502383
10. Parks, Gordon, 1912-2006 New Britain, Connecticut. A child care center, opened September 15, 1942, for thirty children, age two to five, of mothers engaged in war industry. The hours are 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. six days per week. The director, Miss Jane Machmer, cleaning a child's dirty face before lunch time

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
20054124
11. Washington (State) Secretary of State Precinct election officer's guide book, containing State laws relating to the polling place regulations before polls open, during voting hours after the polls have closed

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
9406915
12. Vienna's Greatest War Loss. Vienna suffered many losses in the war. But the greatest loss was the widespread degeneration of the health of the child population. By the thousands, Vienna's children are scummbing to tubercular complaints. Here are a a group of children of the "tenth district", Vienna's slum quarter. They are taking a sun bath. They will sit for hours in the open air. Sunlight, and American food sent by the Red Cross are the only curatives available for these children. Most of the children's hospitals are supplied with Red Cross condensed milk

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19510627
13. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness. Treating a skin disease 11 September 1919 [date received]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19502381
14. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness. Dressing a little girl's head 11 September 1919 [date received]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19502383
15. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness. This picture shows Miss Ober giving a can of milk to a Roumanian mother with her baby. The baby is tied up in swaddling clothes so that it can be carried easily 11 September 1919 [date received]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19502385
16. Parks, Gordon, 1912-2006 New Britain, Connecticut. A child care center, opened September 15, 1942, for thirty children, age two to five, of mothers engaged in war industry. The hours are 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. six days per week. The director, Miss Jane Machmer, cleaning a child's dirty face before lunch time 1943 June

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20054124
17. Vienna's Greatest War Loss. Vienna suffered many losses in the war. But the greatest loss was the widespread degeneration of the health of the child population. By the thousands, Vienna's children are scummbing to tubercular complaints. Here are a a group of children of the "tenth district", Vienna's slum quarter. They are taking a sun bath. They will sit for hours in the open air. Sunlight, and American food sent by the Red Cross are the only curatives available for these children. Most of the children's hospitals are supplied with Red Cross condensed milk March 1920 [date received]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19510627
18. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness. This picture shows how the Roumanian mothers tie up their babies in swaddling clothes so that the little one can be carried easily 11 September 1919 [date received]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19502382
19. Palmer, Alfred T. A poster comes to life. "Meet the guys who shoot 'em." George Woolslayer introduces a group of open-hearth furnace men to his poster pals, Evans and Vineyard, who are getting a first-hand view of production for war. Although they knew how to shoot guns and drive jeeps before they came to Allegheny-Ludlum, they're seeing for the first time the kind of Americans who make these things: skilled and semi-skilled workers, tireless men who can work for hours in terrific heat. Allegheny-Ludlum Steel, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1942 Aug

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19638533
20. A.R.C. Child Dispensary in Bucharest, in charge of Miss Ober of Chicago, a Red Cross nurse and child welfare expert. The line forms at 10 am, outside the window of Miss Ober's offices. Presently the window opens and Miss Ober, in long white hospital apron and rubber gloves, begins her three hours' work with the children. The rubber gloves are a very necessary precaution, for there is typhus and many other contagious and infectious diseases about. The ailments are of great variety, but much of the trouble is skin diseases and diseases due to malnutrition and uncleanliness 11 September 1919 [date received]

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19502384


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