Collecting Watch Tower literature for many includes collecting variants of publications. Sometimes changes were made due to refinements of belief, other times proof reading glitches or copyright issues played a part. Sometimes what was produced caused questions to be raised. One example of the latter is the picture found in the book Riches (1936).
The original line drawing showed a witness preaching
to an elderly gentleman. In the background is a nun who appears to be using a
tuning fork on the householder (?) while discouraging the witness from his
work. The only problem was that, if you looked at the picture quickly, it might
appear to some that the nun was “blessing” the witness’ efforts. A quick check
of the text in the book would immediately disabuse anyone of that idea, but
feedback showed the advisability of changing the picture. As a result, a new
picture was drawn, which replaced the nun with a phonograph.
This meant that there were soon two editions of Riches in circulation. As a result, some
wrote in. More than one copy of the standard reply has survived, but the one
pictured below was sent to a John Shearrow from Alliance, Ohio. The identical
address on a 1940s registration card identifies him as John Cunningham Shearrow
(1890-1962) who married and had one daughter, but no further information has
been gleaned.
The letter advised any with the “nun” copy to
carefully remove the page, and these could still be placed without any picture
at this point. As there was no text on the reverse of the picture, this was
quite easy to do.
So collectors can find at least three versions of Riches, one with the nun, one with a page neatly cut out, and then a later printing with a replacement picture.
4 comments:
My copy says:
"First printing
1,000,000 copies"
But the picture is the replacement picture.
Thanks for sharing this!
Andrew Martin
This is probably the most fascinating post yet, thank you so much.
interesting, thank you!
Love this, thank you for detailing a possible reason for the sudden change and thought by HQ to remove the pic. That’s the most plausible explanation I’ve ever heard. Thank you Jerome!
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