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23674Bill dated 14 September 1831; covering letter "Wareham Nov. 1831". Two pages folio fold marks a little grubby some damage by stamp vandal marginally affecting text ow fair. A. The covering letter by Tho. Phippard sending the "Bill in the Election" asking the recipient E.Nicoletts Bridport to fill in "the blanks with the average sums charged per diem by the other agents. I have not included many days absent in the business. My bill will be higher than some agents as I was directed to proceed in canvassing my Division earlier in consequence of the proceedings of Ashleys ie Later Lord Shaftesbury. PS If the others charge for days absent viz:- Sundays when we all worked and the day after the Election be pleased to add the number of days named in my account." B. The Bill to 'The Committee for the Election of the Honble W.F.S. Ponsonby' 14ll. with most figures filled in in pencil including the new total of £139.5.21/2. Expenses include: "Retainer" "Proceeding to canvas same self and two clerks" "Attending the Election as Agent and Inspector 15 days" "Other Clerks attending solely on the business of the Election the same time viz 15 days" coach and gig hire payment for a committee room. See image. Note: Ponsonby spent some time annoying William Lamb presumably on behalf of his sister Lady Caroline Lamb. He did not get elected on this occasion beaten by Lord Ashley later Earl of Shaftesbury became an MP in 1832. Bill dated 14 September 1831; covering letter "Wareham, Nov. 1831". unknown
53754ème édition.In 12 broché,titre,182 pages,1page de catalogue,1 page de table.Germer & Baillière & Cie Bibliothèque utile.Rousseurs très éparses
1985111516Nanterre, Archives départementales des Hauts de Seine 1985 In-8 broché 24 cm sur 17,8. 445 pages. Couverture écornée Bon état d’occasion.
1892431661892. Affiche au format 42x52 cm, sur papier rose.Bon etat.
1965137832- 6 documents 21 x 27 cm de 1 à 4 pages.
19604337Various locations in and around Chicago Il: likely early November 1960. Very good plus. Title leaf plus 25 leaves illustrated with forty-seven silver gelatin photographs pasted one per leaf or page all about 5.5 x 7.5 inches plus five loose images two duplicates and three other images not pasted in. Square quarto. Contemporary tan cloth custom photograph album metal-hinged spine front cover printed with title reading "ELECTION 1960." Minor wear and soiling to album. Light occasional thumb-soiling to album leaves ownership signature reading "G. Robert Hillman" on title leaf. Photographs in excellent condition. An utterly charming vernacular photograph album assembled during the seminal Presidential Election of 1960 one of the closest presidential elections in United States history which pitted Vice President Richard Nixon against the junior Senator from Massachusetts John F. Kennedy. The album features about fifty original photographs on the campaign trail in Illinois beginning with about a dozen-and-a-half images of Richard Nixon and his local supporters. The photographs capture various angles of Nixon during his stump speech a young boy waving an "I'm for Nixon" handmade sign another young boy with a Nixon button on his coat crowd scenes a large campaign sign for Nixon-Lodge outside a local store and more. One image featuring a mixed crowd of Nixon and Kennedy supporters transitions into the next section of photographs which concentrates on JFK's campaign. The first image in this section is a closeup of a "Kennedy for President" hat followed by four images of JFK's campaign manager Robert Kennedy making a speech three images of Eleanor Roosevelt stumping for Kennedy five images of Lyndon Johnson and his airplane numerous shots of Kennedy supporters and crowd shots outside Chicago Blackhawks stadium. The photographs then feature the inside of Chicago Auditorium where the first three images depict John F. Kennedy - the first shaking hands with Chicago's longtime Mayor Richard Daley and two during his speech likely his speech of November 4 1960 - just four days before Election Day. The final three images show supporters of both candidates.<br /> <br /> The 1960 United States Presidential Election was a watershed moment for the campaign politics of the country. Senator Kennedy won the election with a clear Electoral College margin of 303 to 219. However Vice President Nixon won three more states than Kennedy and lost the popular vote only by about 110000 votes out of more than 68 million votes cast. The election set the course for most of the remainder of the 1960s but left Nixon soured and suspicious that the election had been stolen from him - a feeling he never let go and one with ominous echoes today. As indicated in the present album the 1960 presidential election was passionate on both sides with each candidate drawing large enthusiastic crowds for their appearances.<br /> <br /> The signature on the title leaf of the present album likely identifies the compiler. G. Robert Hillman is a Senior Editor for Politico. Hillman was born in Peoria and grew up on a farm near Flanagan Illinois about a hundred miles from Chicago. He went to college at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and began his career at Chicago Today and the Chicago Sun-Times. Hillman would have been in middle school during the 1960 election campaign not too precocious for a young man obsessed with politics especially during one of the most heated and media-intensive campaigns of the 20th century. likely early November unknown
a13150Municipal election broadside for Frederick W. Lincoln Jr. for Mayor of Boston and related candidates for municipal office Ward 6 1865. VG. . unknown
0656435836.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1333165617.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
PARIS, Helpé - 1936 - Tract pour les élections - In-4 - Broché - Couverture illustrée - fac-similé - 12 pages - Propre
1983146381Toronto ca. 1983. Softcover. ex library-good. 36 668 p. 24 cm. Orange card covers. Ex library with labels outside ink stamps outside and on first leaf. <br/><br/> paperback
55754Paris, François-Xavier de Guibert, 2007. 17 x 24, 208 pp., quelques illustrations, broché, très bon état.
2017500155961Plon 2017 203 pages 13 4x20 1x2 1cm. 2017. Broché. 203 pages.
244 pages. Features: Nice color photo Miller beer ad inside front cover; Dewar's Whisky ad features Barbary Waterston; James Deakin looks forward to the 1972 election with emphasis on Harold Hughes; Times Change, by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. - reflections from the class of '40; Too Bad - reflections on high-school students from the Class of now; Six Jobs looking for women applicants - hockey goalie, forest ranger, university president, construction worker, ladies' shoe salesman, locker room attendant; Son and Hair, by Thomas Berger; If Hitler asked you to execute a stranger, would you?; Helen Burley Brown only wants to help; Personal Helicopters; The War Machine vs. the Peace Machinist; Otto and Bruno, by Jonathan Strong; Phone Lovers take heart - new telephone products; Kirk Douglas at Large... and getting larger, by Roger Ebert; Three Harvard travelers tell you how to travel the world on the cheap - Franklin Chu, Larry Gage, and Dan Ardrey; Photo Series - how to take your pants off while wearing chains; The Murder of Jeremy Harlowe; Doing it the Hard Way - New York sculptor Harvey Citron; European fashion report with photos. Many great vintage photo ads. Average wear. A sound copy. Magazine
24163PARIS, E. Dentu, 1875 - E.O. - In-12 - Broché - 180 pages - exemplaire non coupé, très propre
PARIS, E. Dentu, 1875 - E.O. - In-12 - Broché - 180 pages - exemplaire non coupé, très propre
10384Bulletin Officiel Municipal - In-4 - Broché - couverture illustrée en NB ou couleurs -illustrations en texte Nb ou couleurs - 15 à 40 pages par Numéro - Très propreN° 1 à 4, 1966 à 1970 - ancienne municipalité N° 1 à 73, de avril 1983 au 29 juin 1995 (Sauf 6, 11, 12, 54 & 55) - Soit 72 numéros
Bulletin Officiel Municipal - In-4 - Broché - couverture illustrée en NB ou couleurs -illustrations en texte Nb ou couleurs - 15 à 40 pages par Numéro - Très propre N° 1 à 4, 1966 à 1970 - ancienne municipalité N° 1 à 73, de avril 1983 au 29 juin 1995 (Sauf 6, 11, 12, 54 & 55) - Soit 72 numéros
185229127New York 1852. 16pp disbound with archivally reinforced inner margin. Good. <br /> <br /> This pamphlet records a Democratic Party rally during the 1852 presidential contest endorsing "with joyous hearts the names of Franklin Pierce and William R. King as the favored standard bearers of our political faith in the present campaign. In looking over the troubles and darkness which hung around our National Convention the name of Pierce was discovered like an oasis in our desert to cheer and gladden us all." <br /> A variant issue did not print the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions and omitted that reference from the title. The Resolutions are printed here beginning at the bottom of page 12 and ending in the middle of page 15. Pages 15-16 print the list of Evening Post Documents for the 1852 campaign. <br /> Sabin 89203. OCLC 21984603 5as of July 2012. unknown
185225283New York 1852. 16pp untrimmed uncut and folded. Dusted lightly worn some spine splitting. Good.<br /> <br /> A Democratic Party rally during the 1852 presidential campaign endorsing "with joyous hearts the names of Franklin Pierce and William R. King as the favored standard bearers of our political faith in the present campaign. In looking over the troubles and darkness which hung around our National Convention the name of Pierce was discovered like an oasis in our desert to cheer and gladden us all." <br /> This is a variant printing. Our copy's title ends as noted above; the title of the other issue ends with 'Also Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798 and 1799.' Our issue does not print those Resolutions. Pages 15-16 print the list of Evening Post Documents for the 1852 campaign. <br /> OCLC 319715221 2as of 7/12. See Sabin 89203 and OCLC 21984603 5 for the other issue. unknown
185225283New York 1852. 16pp untrimmed uncut and folded. Dusted lightly worn some spine splitting. Good.<br/><br/> A Democratic Party rally during the 1852 presidential campaign endorsing "with joyous hearts the names of Franklin Pierce and William R. King as the favored standard bearers of our political faith in the present campaign. In looking over the troubles and darkness which hung around our National Convention the name of Pierce was discovered like an oasis in our desert to cheer and gladden us all." <br/> This is a variant printing. Our copy's title ends as noted above; the title of the other issue ends with 'Also Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798 and 1799.' Our issue does not print those Resolutions. Pages 15-16 print the list of Evening Post Documents for the 1852 campaign. <br/>OCLC 319715221 2as of 7/12. See Sabin 89203 and OCLC 21984603 5 for the other issue. unknown books
1920List2706Chicago or New York 1920. 6 x 9 inches single sided. Toning several small stains small fold at top left corner; near fine. An anonymous handbill decrying lynching in the United States and advertising the differences in anti-lynching policy between the Republican and Democratic parties. The header states that “Everyone agrees that lynching is the chief crime against the colored man in the United States†and the remainder illustrates the great disagreement over just what to do about it. The left column quotes the Republican platform and its then-nominees Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge who would shortly be elected to office on their support for federal anti-lynching legislation. The right column points out that the Democratic platform and its nominees James M. Cox and Franklin D. Roosevelt all “said: NOTHING!†on this issue. Lynching would not be made a federal hate crime until 2022 nearly 100 years later. As of writing we find no other copies of this handbill in OCLC. unknown
1861ZB579780Washington: 1861. 161 pp issued as 37th Congress 1st Session HMD 4; extraction roughness at spine else very good in self wrappers. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. Washington: unknown
20041139062004 Editions CRISP (Centre de Recherche et d'Information Socio-Politique) - 2004 - Fort in-8, broché, couverture illustrée - 582 p.
184034201Washington: Blair & Rives 1840. Folio 8 3/4" x 12". 416pp. Nos. 1-27 of Volume VI; May 16 1840 - October 26 1840 plus No. 27 the final issue recording detailed election results from January 1841. Boards detached endpapers filled with local political tickets. Scattered foxing light wear Good.<br /> <br /> A detailed contemporary report of the 1840 presidential campaign from the perspective of this Democratic publication. It begins with the Democrats' National Convention in Baltimore with the speeches proceedings and Address to the People. <br /> A campaign biography of Van Buren the Democrats' candidate and Blair & Rives's as well is included plus discussion of all the issues: slavery abolition internal improvements tariff banks. The Whigs are repeatedly referred to as the 'Federal' Party in order to drive home that the Whigs were descended from the discredited Hartford Convention Federalists. <br /> The Whig candidate William Henry Harrison is "still shrouded in mystery. Blair & Rives unknown