452 résultats
1775WRCAM46863Philadelphia: Robert Aitken 1775. Twelve issues and one supplement a complete run of the first year. 6255pp. including title signature and the supplement plus fifteen plates plate of Charlestown lacking half. Without a leaf numbered 285-286 but the text uninterrupted and evidently complete apparently a mis-pagination at the time of printing. Contemporary calf; rebacked preserving part of the original spine. Boards rubbed neatly repaired at corners "F. Bailey's" stamped in blind on each board. With the inscription in a neat contemporary hand "Ready money for clean Linen Rags By the Printer hereof" on the front flyleaf. Bookplate of the Library Company of Philadelphia with early discard stamp on front pastedown. Light foxing soiling and tanning to text. Half of the plan of Charlestown lacking. Overall almost very good. A run of the first twelve issues and the 1775 supplement of THE PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE. the only magazine issued in the American colonies for most of the crucial year of 1775. This copy belonged to Revolutionary- era printer Francis Bailey of Philadelphia and Lancaster Pennsylvania. In the latter location Bailey was the printer of the first edition of the Articles of Confederation. THE PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE is among the most important American Revolutionary-era publications for two primary reasons. First it was edited from February to July 1775 by the famous radical Thomas Paine and his regular occupation as he was developing COMMON SENSE was as its editor. Secondly it contains some of the most significant maps produced in America during the Revolution including battle plans that became prototypes for oft-reproduced illustrations. Only a small handful of similar maps were produced in America during the Revolution. Ristow describes three of the maps and plans numbers 8 9 and 10 below as "the earliest revolutionary war maps printed in America." The present collection contains the first twelve of the total nineteen issues of THE PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE a complete run for the year 1775. <br> <br> THE PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE was conceived and founded by the Revolutionary printer Robert Aitken best known for his work as a printer for the Continental Congress. Aitken launched the periodical himself but soon found it too much work and hired Paine as editor at £50 a year. Paine had only arrived in America a few months before in December 1774. He quickly became the major contributor as well as editor sometimes writing under the initials "A.B." and sometimes with no by-line. "These initials he affixed to descriptions of mechanical devices anecdotes Addisonian essays argumentative papers and poems in some variety.the most imaginative and literary of the pieces have never been reprinted. <br> <br> "Published on the eve of the American Revolution and edited by one of the leading Revolutionary publicists THE PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE is of course of paramount political interest.in December the magazine published 'Reflections on the Duty of Princes' in which sovereigns are sharply warned against the exercise of arbitrary power. This is signed 'A.' and is followed by an oratorical passage 'On Liberty' signed 'Philo-Libertas.' Both are in the accents of Paine." - Mott. Mott also particularly mentions Paine's famous "Liberty Tree" article in July 1775 Phillis Wheatley's verses to Washington of April 1776 and Paine's article on the abuse of texts in the supplementary number for 1775. Paine also contributed much that was not political and there are many articles on current events in that fast-moving period which may or may not come from his pen; however writing for this magazine often it was said under the influence of drink was Paine's primary work during this period and all told a substantial part of each issue sprang from his genius until his break with Aitken in July 1775. The magazine chronicles month by month Paine's sentiments before writing COMMON SENSE which was published in mid- January 1776. <br> <br> Many of the important maps and illustrations in THE PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE were engraved by the publisher Robert Aitken. The plates in the present volume are as follows: <br> <br> 1 "A New Electrical Machine" in the January 1775 issue. A detailed illustration of a European-invented device for studying electricity. <br> <br> 2 "Doctor Goldsmith" in the January 1775 issue. A portrait of Oliver Goldsmith. <br> <br> 3 "A New Threshing Instrument" in the February 1775 issue. <br> <br> 4 "General Wolfe. A new Song Engraved for the Pennsylvania Magazine" in the March 1775 issue. A folding plate of sheet music with lyrics on the death of Gen. Wolfe in the French and Indian War. <br> <br> 5 "A New Invented Machine for Spinning of Wool or Cotton" in the April 1775 issue. A quite detailed illustration drawn and engraved by C. Tully the inventor of the machine. The plate is torn in the lower margin with a small bit of loss. <br> <br> 6 "Front View of a Frame House resembling Brick" in the April 1775 issue. A fine early American architectural illustration. <br> <br> 7 "Description of a new invented Machine for deepning sic and cleansing Docks &c." in the May 1775 issue. This folding plate itself has no caption but is thus described in the text. An early Philadelphia invention of a dredger. The plate is torn in the upper right corner with loss of about one-sixth of the image supplied in expert facsimile. <br> <br> 8 "A New Plan of Boston Harbour from an Actual Survey" in the June 1775 issue. A fine detailed folding map of Boston harbor showing Boston Dorchester Charlestown Roxbury and other towns fortifications and the several islands that dotted the harbor. WHEAT & BRUN 239. PHILLIPS MAPS p.166. JOLLY MAPS OF AMERICA IN PERIODICALS BEFORE 1800 266. <br> <br> 9 "A New and Correct Plan of the Town of Boston and Provincial Camp" in the July 1775 issue. A fine and important folding plan showing the British battery on Boston Common and the fortification of Boston neck. Many streets are named and wharves identified. NEBENZAHL 2. WHEAT & BRUN 238. PHILLIPS MAPS p.149. JOLLY MAPS OF AMERICA IN PERIODICALS BEFORE 1800 267. RISTOW p.41. <br> <br> 10 "Exact Plan of General Gage's Lines on Boston Neck in America" in the August 1775 issue. This folding map is another important American-engraved battle plan. The accompanying text states that by using the map "it will be easy to form a perfect idea of the manner in which the General hath blockaded the entrances into Boston." Guardhouses fortifications batteries and more are shown. NEBENZAHL 5. WHEAT & BRUN 237. RISTOW p.41. PHILLIPS MAPS p.149. JOLLY MAPS OF AMERICA IN PERIODICALS BEFORE 1800 268. <br> <br> 11 "A Correct View of the Late Battle at Charlestown June 17th 1775" in the September 1775 issue. A view of the Battle of Bunker's Hill showing action on land and at sea and part of Boston in flames. Only the right half of the plate is present in this copy. RISTOW p.41. DEÃÂK PICTURING AMERICA 143. <br> <br> 12 "A Map of the Present Seat of War on the Borders of Canada" in the October 1775 issue. Folding map showing the area from the St. Lawrence River and Montreal in the north down the length of Lake Champlain to Crown Point in the south. WHEAT & BRUN 89. PHILLIPS MAPS p.193. JOLLY MAPS OF AMERICA IN PERIODICALS BEFORE 1800 269. <br> <br> 13 "Plan of the Town & Fortifications of Montreal or Ville Marie in Canada" in the November 1775 issue. A very detailed map of Montreal showing buildings streets squares gardens etc. This folding plan has a fine inset: "View of the Town &c. of Montreal." WHEAT & BRUN 91. PHILLIPS MAPS p.451.JOLLY MAPS OF AMERICA IN PERIODICALS BEFORE 1800 270. <br> <br> 14 "Description of a New Machine for enabling Persons to escape from the Windows of Houses on Fire" in the December 1775 issue. The plate has no caption and the description is taken from the text. An ingenious device involving a large basket and pulley system designed to help people escape from tall burning buildings. <br> <br> 15 "A Plan of Quebec Metropolis of Canada in North America" in the December 1775 issue. This detailed map is keyed to a table identifying seventeen important buildings citadels and batteries in the town. WHEAT & BRUN 90. PHILLIPS MAPS p.735. JOLLY MAPS OF AMERICA IN PERIODICALS BEFORE 1800 271. <br> <br> The provenance of this copy is of particular interest. The volume is blindstamped on the front and rear boards: "F. Bailey's." This is Francis Bailey who operated as a printer in Philadelphia until 1777 and then moved to Lancaster Pennsylvania. In the chaos that ensued after the English seized Philadelphia in the fall of 1777 and the Continental Congress retreated to York Pennsylvania Bailey became for a time the official printer to both the Congress and the government of Pennsylvania. As such he printed the first edition of the Articles of Confederation in Lancaster in November 1777 and a number of important Revolutionary decrees. <br> <br> Lengthy runs of THE PENNSYLVANIA MAGAZINE especially with the scarce illustrations and plans are virtually unknown in the marketplace. A major Thomas Paine piece and of great importance for his work and the American situation on the eve of the Revolution as well as for the graphics and maps bound in. MOTT AMERICAN MAGAZINES I pp.87-91. EVANS 14380. DEÃÂK PICTURING AMERICA 143. FOWBLE PRINTS AT WINTERTHUR 108. Robert Aitken hardcover books
1939879721939. MAGAZINE KATÔ SHINKICHI editor. HOKUSHI THE NORTH CHINA Genchi Henshû Peiping Tokyo Osaka. Showa 14 - 18. 1939-1943. All 51 issues of this important record of the Japanese occupation of North China during the Pacific war in wrappers as they originaly appeared. As the subtitle indicates it was edited "onsite" in Peiping and then printed in Japan. At first intended for an international audience to illustrate the normality of life in North China under the Japanese by the early months of 1942 after war with the West was truly joined the English subtitle and occasional English captions were dropped. From beginning to end a remarkably well-crafted magazine from a graphic point of view with many wonderful photos printed on relatively good quality paper. By the final issues which appeared in 1943 the subjects became more and more military but until then one could scarcely have realized there was still a war on in China. the scenes of daily life were sunny and optimistic the faces smiling and content as people undertook the "reconstruction" of the North. An interesting example of wartime propaganda done with artistic flair and psychological skill. Quite unusual. Not present in the National Diet Library in Japan though Tokyo University seems to have a copy. There are a few institutions in the US that have incomplete runs LOC Harvard Cornell & Stanford plus it would appear that Yale has a full set. Good condition and complete. unknown books
194089451940. 1 vols. One full red calf corporate ledger titled "Yachting Incorporated"; one green cloth stock ledger with the remains of a Yachting label on the upper cover; two green cloth books of stock certificates each labeled "Yachting Incorporated Preferred Stock" and one such book labeled "Yachting Incorporated Common Stock"; a similar book of stock certificates of Kennedy Brothers Incorporated; two appointment books with tide tables for 1937 and 1938; and a brown expanding legal-size folder of documents. 1 vols. An Archive Concerning Yachting Magazine. John C. Kennedy was successively treasurer then president of Yachting Inc. publishers of Yachting Magazine and retained this archive after the magazine changed hands in the late 1930s. Included in this material are the corporate records of the Kelmo Corporation into which Yachting Inc. was merged in 1924 it later separated and was re-merged in 1940 records of the Yachting Board of Directors' meetings primarily concerning financing and including the meeting agreeing to sell all the capital stock to Kennedy; the actual books of issued and unissued common and preferred stock certificates of Yachting Inc. a book of shares of common stock of Kennedy Brothers Incorporated transferring Yachting stock to the Kennedys; the original 1923 signed option agreement by which Yachting's owners transferred for $40000 the total outstanding stock common and preferred and the actual stock certificates themselves and the original agreement of Oswald Garrison Villard conferring for $15000 his title and interest in the magazine--name records and other assets; Yachting's corporate income tax returns for 1927 and 1933 and some later tax and real estate correspondence; a lengthy Price Waterhouse report concerning the history and financial condition of Yachting as of January 1924 and a less encouraging special balance sheet and P&L for 1933; a 1933 recapitulation of book sales; and balance sheets and stock certificates of related companies. <br/> <br/> Also included are two 4 x 7" black leatherette books "Tide Tables and Daily Log" for l937 and 1938 in which John C. Kennedy has recorded his daily activities from July 7 l937 thru December 31 1938. Of particular interest are the efforts made in the fall of 1937 to interest Roy E. Larsen of Time Inc. in the purchase of Yachting Magazine by Time--a proposition which Larsen declined. The entries for 1938 deal mostly with Kennedy's growing financial worries and the decline of his sister's and his own health: it comes as a shock to learn that the author of these almost unbearably poignant entries was only 50 years old. On June 28 Kennedy reports the transfer "which took away my last of Yachting after 15 yrs." <br/><br/> In addition the archive contains the original certification of the familiar "Yachting" logo as a U.S. trade-mark registered June 3 1924; the original certificate registering the same in Canada dated January 20 1925; the unsigned carbon of a 1935 deposition by John C. Kennedy with accompanying schedule showing Yachting Inc.'s stock portfolio at the time of its sale in 1933 at a loss of $144000; the magazine's copy of a signed agreement to publish "The Model Yacht" by John O. Berg; a corrected draft of a document changing the corporate name of Yachting Inc. to Kelmo Corporation dated October 26 1939; 5 insurance policies with photostats of applications on the life of John C. Kennedy; his U.S. passport issued 1924; his autograph 2-pp enumeration of property to be divided among the heirs of his mother along with photographs and correspondence concerning her grave; and other papers including his agreement to lease from Jules S. Bache his 112-ft. diesel yacht "Colmena" for July and August 1931 for $13500--a unique souvenir of happier days. Altogether an archive of engrossing interest for the business and sporting historian alike. unknown books
1858871021858. MAGAZINE. A FLORAL WORLD AND GARDEN GUIDE. London: Groombridge and Sons 1858-1876. 19 volumes. Each volume collects a year's periodical issues; and each is illustrated throughout with wood-engraved text illustrations. Most volumes include some plates. Later years from 1869 to 1876 include a dozen full color plates in each volume. The 19 volumes offered here contain a total of 117 plates of which 106 are color. The first six volumes are bound in publisher's decorated brown cloth and the remaining volumes in publisher's decorated dark green cloth. There is occasional spotting throughout the text and to the odd plate. About three of the plates from the later volumes have a moderate crease. Some minor wear at heads and extremities of volumes yet an appealing set. A run of this length is seldom seen. unknown books
1902242740Shanghai: North China Herald 1902. First. hardcover. very good. 4 volumes: Volume I - IV. Profusely illustrated tinted in black & white red blue green purple and sepia. Several large folding plates. 4to 3/4 rust morocco decorative yellow cloth; hinges repaired leather spines chipped and worn with most of volume missing but repaired. Shanghai: North China Herald 1902-1905. First Editions. Scarce. Internally fine with worn but sound bindings.<br/><br/> North China Herald unknown books
197024032New York: The New Yorker Magazine 1970. 1 vols. Image 14 x 20 inches matted and framed to 20 x 26 inches overall. 1 vols. Image 14 x 20 inches matted and framed to 20 x 26 inches overall. Original George Price New Yorker Cartoon Drawing. From the collection of James H. Heineman.<br/>Caption reads "And here goes the gun signalling the start of the season.". The New Yorker Magazine unknown books
197024031New York: The New Yorker Magazine 1970. 1 vols. Image 19 x 21 inches matted and framed to 24 x 25-1/2 inches. 1 vols. Image 19 x 21 inches matted and framed to 24 x 25-1/2 inches. Original George Price New Yorker Cartoon Drawing. From the collection of James H. Heineman.<br/>Caption reads "I'll be at Georgette's Laundramat and Bar-and-Grill". The New Yorker Magazine unknown books
1927879731927. MAGAZINE TEIKOKU HATSUMEI KYÔKAI. HATSUMEI THE INVENTION 41 issues. Tokyo Maru-no-uchi. Magazines bound Western style in decorated wrappers. 1927 - 1943. About 26 x 19 cm in size. This important magazine began in 1905. The Imperial Science and Invention Society that published the magazine built a permanent research facility for inventors in the Meguro area in Tokyo about the time of the earthquake. The magazine continued after the war and is still in publication today. This group of issues is as follows: Vol. 24 1927 #s 3457; Vol. 27 1930 #s 9 & 11; Vol. 29 1932 #s 5 & 7; Vol. 34 1937 #s 6-12; Vol.35 1938 #s 9 & 10; Vol.36 1939 #9; Vol.37 1940 #s 246-9 12; Vol.38 1941 #s 2-41012; Vol.39 1942 #s 24-68912; Vol.40 1943 #s 1245. The earlier issues are dedicated to civilian inventions though as war looms in the late 30s and arrives in the 40s the inventions grow warlike as well. However in 1943 there is a strange cover photo of a torn Japanese flag seemingly hanging at half staff - odd message indeed in the middle of a total war. Overall good or better condition with occasional soiling and edgewear. Very unusual in the marketplace. unknown books
198330473Lenox Ma: United Artists 1983. First edition. Paperback. Very Good. Sold here together is the complete eighteen issue run of United Artists a second generation New York School poetry journal edited by Mayer and Warsh. One of the last of the great poetry mimeo magazines. Each issue tended to focus on substantial work by a handful of poets. Some occasional rust to staples but overall a handsome clean very good set. Tall side-stapled wrappers. The first fifteen issues had very simple printed covers; the final three issues had cover art. Individual issues of this magazine can often be found on the web but complete sets are few and far between. United Artists paperback books
196630688New York: Elephant 1966. First edition. Paperback. Very Good . Complete three volume set of John Perreault's small press mimeo revolution era poetry magazine. All three issues in very good or better condition. Issue No. Two is especially uncommon. Dimensions and quality of printing vary with each issue. All in stapled wrappers printed on rectos only. Anne Waldman James Brody Thomas Clark Ted Berrigan and much more. Warhol provides the cover artwork for the first issue. Elephant paperback books
1942878591942. FRONT MAGAZINE SUGIHARA Jirô editor. DAI TÔA KENSETSU GAHÔ Ajia no Mamori - Teikoku Kaigun. Tokyo Nippon Denpo Showa 17 1942 Photo-illustrated wrappers. 42.3 x 29.7 cm. This is the Japanese language home edition of the great propaganda magazine FRONT which appeared in some 15 different languages. This edition combines the first and second number dedicated to the Imperial Navy and its "defense of Asia"including amazing photo plates some folding of the attacks on European holdings in Southeast Asia and the attack on Pearl Harbor. The work combined the talents of some of the most important of Japan's photographers working under the direction of Kimura Ihei. The layout was designed under the direction of Hara Hiromu. Our copy is in very good condition inside and out. Very unusual and very important. unknown books
198523728New York: The New Yorker Magazine 1985. 1 vols. Image 8-1/2 x 9 inches matted to 15 x 17 inches overall. 1 vols. Image 8-1/2 x 9 inches matted to 15 x 17 inches overall. Original Handlesman New Yorker Cartoon Drawing. From the collection of James H. Heineman.<br/><br/>Exhibited at the Museum of Cartoon Art Ryebrook NY 1988-89 and the Art Institutes of Dallas and Houston TX 1990. The New Yorker Magazine unknown books
200416117JSan Francisco: Chronicle Books 2004. First edition Second printing. Large quarto. Playboy Magazine Founder Hugh Hefner's Copy. From the library of Hugh Hefner with a Hefner bookplate and a letter of provenance from the Hugh M. Hefner Foundation. Opening with an introduction by Hugh Hefner this is a terrific collection of comics which appeared during 50 years of publication of Hefner's Playboy Magazine. The Playboy Magazine founder was an avid book and art collector movie aficionado and print lover and his library was loaded with items like this reflecting his passions. Bound in the publisher's glossy red boards. Contents clean and bright. Boards square and tight. In the illustrated dust jacket and uncommon publisher's wraparound title band with the jacket being really sharp and the band being lightly worn. Chronicle Books hardcover books
198422147Zurich: Parkett Verlag 1984. First Edition. Paperback. Fine. Issue number 2 of this long running art journal. This issue features collaborations with artist Sigmar Polke a piece on Gary Indiana architecture in Berlin and much more. A fine as-new copy still in shrinkwrap. By far the scarcest issue of this magazine. Original Polke multiple included. Parkett Verlag paperback books
201730095Nice: Provence 2017. First edition. Paperback. Near Fine. Complete eight issue set of this marvelous magazine published out of Nice over an eight year span. A magazine with serious aspirations to art art spaces artist books culture and more. All issues in very good or better condition most are essentially fine. Quite scarce as a set. Random issues do appear on the market from time to time but sets are difficult to come by. Essays photographs artwork and more. Provence paperback books
197822872EChicago: Playboy Magazine 1978. First Edition. Playboy Magazine Founder Hugh Hefner's Copy with his bookplate affixed to the inner front cover and a letter of provenance from the Hugh M. Hefner Foundation. Illustrated catalogue issued to accompany an exhibition of illustrations artworks and photographs that have appeared in Playboy Magazine over its first 25 years of publication selected by longtime Playboy Magazine Art Director Arthur Paul. Illustrated throughout in color and black & white. 8†x 8†staplebound unpaginated. About fine condition with just a hint of handling to the covers and a faint bit of discoloration 4†x 2†to the upper right corner of the front cover in printed wrappers. Hugh Hefner was an avid book and art collector movie aficionado and print lover. The first issue of Playboy was October 1 1953 with Marilyn Monroe as the first centerfold and its final printed issue was released on March 17 2020 with the magazine now available online. The magazine played an important part in the so-called ‘sexual revolution’ and still remains one of the most recognizable brands in the world. Notable for its nude and semi-nude centerfolds the magazine also published a wide variety of short stories by such significant writers as Arthur C. Clarke Ian Fleming Vladamir Nabokov Ray Bradbury Saul Bellow P.G. Wodehouse Chuck Palahniuk Roald Dahl Haruki Murakami and Margaret Atwood. Then there were the interviews and terrific cartoons by Jules Feiffer Shel Silverstein Gahan Wilson and more. Playboy Magazine unknown books
164273401London 1642. hardcover. very good. 14pp. 4to later 1/2 calf upper margins trimmed close. Ex-lib stamp on verso of title. London: R.H. 1642. First Edition. Scarce. Very good .<br/><br/> STC Wing M 248 locating only the Huntington and Harvard copies in America.<br/><br/> unknown books
199524142New York: The New Yorker Magazine 1995. 1 vols. Image 13 x 15 inches matted to 18 x 21 inches overall. 1 vols. Image 13 x 15 inches matted to 18 x 21 inches overall. Original Cline New Yorker Cartoon Drawing. From the collection of James H. Heineman. The New Yorker Magazine unknown books
199524027New York: The New Yorker Magazine 1995. 1 vols. Image 16 x 13 inches matted to 22 x 18 inches ovedrall. 1 vols. Image 16 x 13 inches matted to 22 x 18 inches ovedrall. Original Michael Witte New Yorker Drawing. From the collection of James H. Heineman. The New Yorker Magazine unknown books
183753662Washington D.C.: Langtree & O'Sullivan March 4 1837. Folio broadside approx. 14" x 8" double column text beneath a running head; stained and toned and with two paper repairs on the verso and several small chips in the left margin affecting a few words and letters. With promotional blurbs by Andrew Jackson and a reviewer for the Richmond Enquirer. Not in American Imprints. OCLC locates the Trinity Newberry Virginia and the AAS copies only. There was also a quarto bifolium version of the same. <br/><br/> Langtree & O'Sullivan, March 4 unknown books
23727New York: The New Yorker Magazine n.d. 1 vols. Image 10-1/2 x 13 inches matted and framed. Fine. 1 vols. Image 10-1/2 x 13 inches matted and framed. Original Leo Cullum Cartoon. From the collection of James H. Heineman.<br/><br/>Exhibited at the International Cartoon Festival Knokke Belgium 1991. The New Yorker Magazine unknown books
1927017458Chicago IL: Illinois State Department; Reserve Officers' Association of the US; National Defense Magazine 1927. Book. Very good condition. Paperback. First Edition. Quarto 4to. Eleven issues of this uncommon magazine. Includes Vol. I Nos. 4-9 May June Jul-Aug Sep-Oct Nov Dec and Vol. II Nos. 1 2 4 5 and 7 Jan-Feb Mar May-Jun Jul Nov-Dec. Protected in a clamp binder with original paperback bindings intact. The edges are lightly soiled and shelfworn with a few pages with small tears. One issue has a few ownership labels affixed to the rear cover and there is one instance of pencil notations in one issue. Devoted to the preservation and development of the responsibilities rights and privileges of citizenship under the Constitution of the United States and to the complete fulfillment of the National Defense Act of 1920. The Official Publication of the Illinois State Department Reserve Officers' Association of the US The 86th Infantry Division Association ROTC Unit of the Chicago Public High Schools and including CMTC Recall A Journal of the Citizens' Military Training Camps. Contributors include Max Mason B.S. Patterson Amos Alonzo Stagg T.J.J. Christian Leroy F. Smith C.S. Boucher C.R. Gildart Mrs. Delwin M. Campbell Edward N. Wentworh Elam L. Clarke Abel Davis John W. Thalman Mrs. Bessie Stuart Smith Alfred Sidney Story M.E. Hulse Grant M. Miles Paul Weeks James M. Shute Justus Stalnaker Mrs. Vinton Earl Sisson A.G. Weppler Grant M. Miles Howard A. Lepper W.L. Velie Jr. Joseph T. Ryerson Lloyd D. Mielenz Bess C. Sweeney W.A. Rosenfield C.B. Robbins W.A. Oldfather C.L.H. Ruggles H.A. Jung Grace H. Brosseau William Green Howard P. Savage George C. Seaman Joseph M. Woods Tom R. Wyles Justus Stalnaker Fred E. Busbey Edward N. Wentworth J.J. Kelly T.D. Bonneville Charles G. Dawes William Lassiter Carlos E. Black Ferre C. Watkins Mrs. Sydney Leighton Smith Walter C. Cole Edward N. Wentworth Charles C. Haffner Charles P. Summerall Helen Douglas W.J. Patterson D.C. Shull Dwight R. Davis Noble Brandon Judah Harris Lanning David Kinley W.T. Merry W.F. Lodge William M. Mumm Ralph R. Bush Walter Dill Scott S.B. McKinney Mrs. James A. Patten Kenneth L. Wilson E.G. Chapman Mary Allison Goodhue W.B. Shearer Foster S. Elroy and C.A. Rogers Jr. First edition. Illinois State Department; Reserve Officers' Association of the US; National Defense Magazine Paperback books
18709894Chicago 1870. Nos. 1 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 11. Ten issues lacking only No. 5. Each is 16pp stitched caption title as issued. Scattered dustsoil foxing and light to moderate wear. Good. <br/><br/> An unusual magazine published from 1869 through 1872 devoted to the themes of commerce and protectionism. The first article explains "Why Irishmen should vote for Protection" reminding that 'free trade' means "British free trade;" and argues that even Adam Smith would support a policy of protection for the U.S. Subsequent issues elaborate and assert "The interest of the South in Protection" as well as that of the West and "the colored man." <br/>FIRST EDITION. Not in Lomazow Ante-Fire Imprints Eberstadt Decker Sabin. OCLC records nine locations as of February 2021. unknown books
1855159588New York: Samuel Hueston 1855. First. hardcover. near fine. Frontispiece portrait and illustrated throughout with 48 other steel engraved portrait plates protected by tissue. 505pp. Short thick 4to. Beautifully bound in original thick leather with charming gilt-stamped pictorial covers and spine a.e.g. N.Y.: Samuel Hueston 1855. First edition. A near fine copy.<br/><br/> Samuel Hueston unknown books
198024036New York: The New Yorker Magazine 1980. 1 vols. Image 12 x 12-1/2 inches matted to 19 x 21 inches overall. 1 vols. Image 12 x 12-1/2 inches matted to 19 x 21 inches overall. Original Ed Fisher Cartoon Drawing. From the collection of James H. Heineman. The New Yorker Magazine unknown books