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 these supplemented by a blue card (U), notice of use on mechanical instruments; (F) published map; (G) work of art (painting, drawing, or sculpture), or model or design for a work of art; (H) reproduction of a work of art; (I) drawing or plastic work of a scientific or technical character; (JO photograph published for sale; (J) photograph not reproduced for sale; (K) print or pictorial illustration; (R) renewal of copyright subsisting in any work; (R extension of a renewal copyright subsisting in any work. Thus an applicant for copyright on an American book should send for card (A), on which he may enter his application and also include afBdavit as to American typesetting, printing, and binding; if he wishes the affidavit to be separately made he should obtain also the special blue card (A), or if lithographic or photoengraving is used he should obtain also the special blue card (A). A dramatic applicant should send for card (D or card (D), respectively, for the entry of a dramatic or dramatico-musical composition ; or for (D) if he desires to copyright without reproducing for sale. The applicant for a musical composition, as distinguished from a dramatico-musical work, should send for card (E) or (E) respectively. The art applicant should send for card (G) for an original work of art, or card (H) for a reproduction, or for a photograph card (J) or card (J) respectively.

Similar certificate cards, also of library size, uniformly white, are provided for the several classes of registration, correspondingly lettered and numbered, except in a few cases where one certificate form serves for more than one class or subdivision, with the addition of a general form (Z) to cover anything unprovided for in the other certificate forms. The certificate bears on one side the uniform statement of the deposit of two copies or one copy of the article