Title
Woman's head and 10,000 boxes
Subject
Poniatowski, Józef Antoni, książę, 1763-1813
Description
Król Poniatowski miał najmniejszą głowę z wszystkich królów polskich
Najwybitniejszym strzelcem w armji amerykańskiej był Polak!
Zmartwienie nauczycielek w (amerykańskiej) Warszawie
10,000 pudełek importowanych z Polski, są jednej wielkości lecz niema dwu identycznych wzorów.
King Poniatowski had the smallest head of all the Polish kings
The best sharp-shooter in the American army was a Pole!
The worry of female teachers in (American) Warsaw
10,000 boxes imported from Poland are all the same size but not two of them have the same pattern.
The image shows a newspaper page titled "Czy Wiecie Ze" with illustrations and captions. In the top left, an illustration depicts a monarch seated on a throne. To the right, two soldiers stand in a field, with a group of soldiers and wagons in the background. Below on the left, there is a portrait of a person with a headscarf and raised hand near a “STOP sign. On the lower right, an illustration shows a large group of people gathered together. Text in Polish accompanies each illustration
Creator
Archacki, Henry, 1907-1998
Source
Dziennik dia Wszystkich = Everybody's Daily
State University of New York at Buffalo. University Libraries. Polish Room.
Publisher
State University of New York at Buffalo. University Libraries
Date
1932
Rights
IN COPYRIGHT. This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).
Format
image/jpeg
Language
pol
Type
Image
Identifier
bk01_pg063_black
Is Part Of
Archacki Cartoons. LIB-ASL003
Archacki cartoon collection scrapbooks. MS-0180
Collection
Citation
Archacki, Henry, 1907-1998, “Woman's head and 10,000 boxes,” Digital Collections - University at Buffalo Libraries, accessed November 13, 2025, https://digital.lib.buffalo.edu/index.php/items/show/4044.
