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Unpaginated genealogical and historical text 10 p.+ 13 (of 15?) loose plates + some related manuscripts and notes. Early manuscript corrections in the text. Folio. 320 mm. The plates and portraits are original mounted photos by T.F. Scudder, Huntington, Long Island, New York. Scarce private edition portfolio. Very good. Sarah Franklin "Sally" Bache (1744-1808) was the daughter of Benjamin Franklin and Deborah Read. She was a leader in relief work during the American Revolutionary War and frequently served as her father's political and social hostess, as her mother had died in 1774. Sarah Bache was Benjamin Franklin's daughter. Benjamin Franklin Bache (1769-1798) was an American journalist, printer and publisher. He founded the Philadelphia Aurora, a newspaper that supported Jeffersonian philosophy. He frequently attacked the Federalist political leaders, including Presidents George Washington and John Adams, and historian Gordon S. Wood wrote that "no editor did more to politicize the press in the 1790s." His paper's heated attacks are thought to have contributed to Congress's passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts. The favorite grandson of Benjamin Franklin, Bache was often referred to as "Lightning Rod Junior" after his famous grandfather's experiment. He died at 29 in the yellow-fever epidemic of 1798. We may have a few fine reproductions from portraits by St. Memin that would enhance and/or complete this collection - gratis. RARE. PA58
78 pages. Features: Randy Norwood's '80 Dodge Van "Blue Moon"; Van Metal Magic; Doug Massey's "Mad Dog" 1978 Ford E-150 Van; So. Cal. Council Mix-Off; Make Your F-100's Bed; Sal Marchese's '78 Toyotal Pickup; Centerfold photo of Tom J. Yancoskie's '77 Dodge Van "Alien"; Carl Caspers' Kentucky Auto Show; Clone Vanduras in Hollywood; Australian supertruck; Put the Aspen/Volare transverse torsion bar suspension under your F-100 for an unbelievable ride; Install Jiffy Top; Mallory RPM Limiting Tach; Bob Schuller's 1970 El Camino "Sundowner"; Ruby Red - Donnie Senner's 1974 Dodge Van. Average wear. Small piece missing from fore-edge of back cover. A sound copy. Magazine
pp. 332, (4) [Publisher's catalogue] + Portrait Frontis and full page photographs. Inked ownership. 8vo. Original full red cloth binding lettered in gold, edges slightly worn. Hardbound. Very good. Dr. Steiner, a Hungarian Jew, became a Christian Minister in United states and an advocate for immigration reform. BIOGRAPHY BOX 1
in-8, 333 pp, illustrations, broché. Bel exemplaire. [SO-2]
grand in-8°, 285 pages, ill. et fig. in-t., rel. pl. cuir decore ed. Bel exemplaire. [WE-CA]
32 pages. Features: Fascinating news bits inside front cover; Merry Richmond, Virginia - Rich in Romance/The Rare Old Traditions are still Undimmed; Letting in the Alien (Immigration) Flood - Why? - Relatives have relatives and the Perlman Bill would admit them all; Two Dozen Ways to Keep Sane - ways of thinking and living cause mental breakdowns; Woodrow Wilson - Taker of Chances (part 4); The Drama of Our Youth - village theatricals when father and mother were characters in the play; Mr. (Henry) Ford's Page - he talks about the mirage of the 'saturation point' of a service; Editorials - foreigners involved in crime, prohibition, controversial reporting about Russia, the Mexican/US border, Mr. Trotsky (Braunstein) takes another fling at the U.S., Winston Churchill and the cancellation of war debt; Literary Fakers and Their Fakes - Wherein the delightful 'Spectra' Hoax is told and the Eulogists of Modern and Ultra-Modern Verse are engulfed in sorrow; A Dinosaur Breaks into History - if man drew a pictograph from life, it upsets many theories; What to do to make life worthwhile - many people consider that a college education and 'success' are synonymous, but here are some people who are of the opposite opinion; Paul Revere tells his own story - family archives furnish new light on Patriot's Famous Ride into Lexington; Chats with Office Callers;There is nothing new under the sea - how Robert Fulton Demonstrated Submarines Over a Hundred Years Ago; When Cliff House Went Really Dry - the once famous San Francisco Resort Sees Changed Days; How to Steal Apples - loopholes of law which enable fruit marauders to defy mantraps, spring guns and the farmer's bulldog; Co-operation Saves Workers From Death - employees of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company at Los Angeles fight Tuberculosis, the Great White Plague, at the Lone Wolf Colony; How the Indians Made Sugar; Beating the Grain of Mustard Seed - nurseryman George Klehm can grow a 35' elm tree in six years; A Dance a Week - The Lancers ("Oriental) with first violin sheet music (continued); Back cover quote from Benjamin Harrison about national expansion. Average wear. Unmarked. Middle page loose but present. A worthy vintage copy. Magazine
in-8°, 318 pages, illustrations hors texte N&B, broche, couverture illustree plastifiee. Bel exemplaire [CA32-4]