METHUSELAH ARCHIVE SOURCES / COMMONS-KUHNE-FACIAL-DIAGNOSIS-TITLEPAGE

Title page of Louis Kuhne's Facial Diagnosis (1897)

period print · 1897
type:period print
year:1897
citation:Title page of Louis Kuhne's Facial Diagnosis, trans. August F. Reinhold, New York: A. F. Reinhold, 1897. Internet Archive scan louiskuhnesfaci00kuhn, on Wikimedia Commons as File:Louis Kuhne's Facial diagnosis .. (IA louiskuhnesfaci00kuhn).pdf (public domain); also held by the Library of Congress (item 06038744, public domain).
LINK
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Louis_Kuhne%27s_Facial_diagnosis_.._(IA_louiskuhnesfaci00kuhn).pdf
SUMMARY
Wikimedia Commons file record for the public-domain scan of Louis Kuhne's Facial Diagnosis (1897), from which the title-page image was extracted. The Commons record states the rights as 'Public domain.' The title page (viewed directly, 2026-06-12) reads: 'LOUIS KUHNE'S FACIAL DIAGNOSIS. "Facial Diagnosis" is essentially an ante-diagnosis, enabling us both to foresee and forestall any ailment. ILLUSTRATED. A free and abridged translation with notes. BY AUGUST F. REINHOLD, M.A., Manager of the Reinhold Institute of Water Cure of New York City. PUBLISHED BY A.F. REINHOLD, 60 Lexington Avenue, New York City. 1897,' with a Library of Congress copyright stamp dated MAY 29 1897. The same scan is held by the Library of Congress (item 06038744). Source for the artifact-role media entity kuhne-facial-diagnosis-titlepage; the caption quotes and paraphrases the title page itself, asserting no identification the page does not state.
NOTES

This is the Wikimedia Commons file record for the public-domain scan of Louis Kuhne’s Facial Diagnosis (1897). The title-page image used as the artifact asset was extracted from this scan (which originates from the Internet Archive item louiskuhnesfaci00kuhn and is also held by the Library of Congress, item 06038744). The Commons record states the work is in the public domain. The title page itself names the work, the translator-publisher August F. Reinhold, his “Reinhold Institute of Water Cure of New York City,” and the 1897 date, and carries a Library of Congress copyright stamp; the caption draws only on what the page states.