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Lot 364

An extensive archive of material relating to the Glasgow University Scottish Nationalist Association, spanning the years 1929-, comprising a large quantity of handwritten and typed correspondence; political debate programmes; part-filled minute book of the Glasgow University Gaelic League dated 1933-34; Policy and Propaganda Committee minute book dated 1934-38; membership cards for the Glasgow University Nationalist Drama Club, Dialectic Society and Ossianic Society; assorted dance cards; multiple issues of the Glasgow University Nationalist periodical; multiple issues of Nationality, The Scots Independent, An Phoblacht and The Free Man; numerous political pamphlets, an album of press cuttings etc. Condition Report:Available upon request

Lot 16

Original color lithograph on wove paper after Surrealist artist Joan Miro's series in the periodical Derriere le Miroir (Behind the Mirror.) First published by Galerie Maeght and printed by Atelier Mourlot, Paris. Housed in a white and black wooden frame with a white mat. Sight size: 10.50"L x 14.75"H. Frame size: 17.75"L x 21.50"H x 1.50"W. Artist: After Joan Miro (Spanish 1893-1983)Issued: c. 1970Country of Origin: SpainCondition: Age related wear.

Lot 17

Attributed to Edward Spencer for The Artificers' Guild Ltd., London Hand-Beaten Copper Circular Wall Mirror Early 20th century, the frame featuring six roundels featuring relief foliate scrolls within banded borders, with central convex plate and oak backing, unmarked.49cm diameterThe Artificers' Guild was founded by Nelson Dawson in Chiswick, London, in 1901, passing to Montague Fordham in 1903 before Edward Spencer was appointed Director in 1906; it proved a successful venture, deriving inspiration from the Arts & Crafts movement and at its peak had a staff of forty as well as taking on orphaned boys as apprentices; its work was featured in the influential periodical The Studio and exhibitions were held at the Fordham Gallery alongside major names of the Arts & Crafts movement; it closed down following the outbreak of WWII.The silvering with flecks, appears original but cannot say this with certainty, some slight knocks and misshaping to the outer edge, no major issues to note.

Lot 509

Periodical. The Yellow Book. An Illustrated Quarterly. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head. Volume VIII & IX - January & April, 1896. Original cloth, rubbed and edge worn. (2)

Lot 41

1761 The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle. Volume XXXI for the Year MCDDLXI. By Sylvanus Urban, Gent (pseudonym for Edward Cave). Printed for D. Henry at St. John's Gate. Illustrated with vignette engravings and plates including maps and diagrams. Quarter calf binding, gilt spine label, raised bands and marbled boards, spine rubbed commensurate with age, light wear to extremities, ownership inscription of D. Howell Peregrine to ffep dated 1963, ink spot to fore-edge, binding tight and pages clean. An early volume from this informative and popular 18th century periodical, started in 1731. 8vo.

Lot 175

A rare Second War ‘Persian Gulf’ D.S.C. group of twelve awarded to Captain R. E. T. Tunbridge, Royal Naval Reserve, later Senior Officer of the African Coastal Flotilla, engaged in clandestine boating operations on behalf of Combined Operations, SOE, MI9, OSS and other organisations Distinguished Service Cross, G.VI.R., the reverse officially dated 1942 and hallmarked London 1942; 1914-15 Star (S. Lt. R. E. Tunbridge. R.N.R.); British War and Victory Medals (Lieut. R. E. Tunbridge. R.N.R.); 1939-45 Star; Atlantic Star; Africa Star; Burma Star; War Medal 1939-45; Jubilee 1935; Coronation 1937; Royal Naval Reserve Decoration, G.V.R., the reverse hallmarked London 1922, mounted as worn, nearly extremely fine (12) £2,400-£2,800 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- D.S.C. London Gazette 10 March 1942: ‘For courage, enterprise and devotion to duty in operations in the Persian Gulf.’ The D.S.C. was awarded for Operation ‘Countenance’ in September 1941, the main objective of which was the seizure of the Abadan Oil Refinery and occupation of the Haft-I-Khel Oilfields. Operation ‘Countenance’ in fact comprised of three simultaneous operations, of which Tunbridge was a part of Operation ‘Crackler’, the embarkation at Basra of the 24th Indian Brigade in Naval craft, their transport down the river Shatt-al-Arab for 32 miles to Abadan, and the support of the landing on that island. The operation also involved the destruction or capture of the Persian sloop Palang berthed at Abadan. Whilst the landing operations were under way, Tunbridge brought H.M.S. Shoreham up form Fao and opened fire on the Palang at No. 11 jetty. The first salvo unfortunately caused a large fire and although gunfire was checked, the risk of the fire spreading was too great, and Tunbridge decided that it was necessary, owing to her nearness to the refinery, to sink her, which he duly did. Throughout the day Shoreham was moving up and down the river using her 0.5 machine gun to engage Persian troops along the jetties and from time to time firing a well directed 4-inch to remove an annoying post from a housetop. The whole refinery was in Allied hands by evening and although the Persian posts along the river front had fought with such tenacity and in many cases literally to the last man, the main body of Persian troops fled during the night, and the not inconsiderable garrisons of Khosrowabad and Qasbah at the south end of the island also withdrew across the Bahmanshir River. Enquiries of the villagers next day as to the reason for this precipitate withdrawal all gave the Naval gunfire and sinking of the Palang as the main cause of the consternation. M.I.D. London Gazette 2 January 1945: ‘For gallantry, enterprise and undaunted devotion to duty in hazardous operations.’ The official recommendation states: ‘These Officers and men [of the African Coastal Flotilla] have carried out a number of perilous secret operations in enemy held territory, mainly in France, Italy and the Adriatic... The work of the African Coastal Flotilla, particularly during the winter of 1943-44 when the clandestine organisations were preparing for the campaigns of 1944, has been of inestimable importance.’ The ‘African Coastal Flotilla’ was the cover name for the Navy’s clandestine boating organisation, formed to co-ordinate secret operations on behalf of Combined Operations, S.O.E., MI9, and various other Allied ‘irregular’ organisations, in the Mediterranean theatre. The A.C.F. reported directly to the Deputy Director of the Operations Division (Irregular) (DDOD(I)), a retired naval officer who had been seconded from the Secret Intelligence Service to the Admiralty to take charge of the clandestine sea operations involved in restoring our shattered intelligence organisations in enemy-occupied Europe. In every clandestine operation, the A.C.F. officer was the key figure, the man in charge, who alone knew where ‘Joeys’ were to be landed and was responsible for navigation to and from the pinpoint. The A.C.F. had their own surfboat crews, who were always used on operations, except those conducted on behalf of S.O.E., who preferred to take along their own men. All volunteers, they were a mixed collection of ratings recruited by D.D.O.D.(I) from various sources. Many of their exploits are told in Undercover Sailors - Secret Operations of World War II by A. Cecil Hampshire. The important role played by Captain Tunbridge in the story of the A.C.F. is best told in the words of the D.D.O.D.(I) himself. In a remarkable strongly worded attachment to the recommendation for Tunbridge’s M.I.D., he states: ‘In connection with the attached list of recommendations for honours and awards to the personnel of the ACF, DDOD(I) desires to submit the work of Captain Tunbridge to the notice of the Commander-in-Chief Mediterranean. Captain Tunbridge succeeded to the command of the African Coastal Flotilla in the spring of 1943 at a time when the fortunes of the flotilla were at a low ebb and the morale of the personnel lowered by the absence of active operations, and the difficulties in obtaining well found ships and suitable equipment. In the face of the overwhelming requirements of regular operations, no priority could be granted to the flotilla in its struggles to effect repairs to the ancient craft available, and no consideration could be given towards the provision of more suitable craft. Moreover, the prestige of the flotilla had been damaged by the depredations of “private navies” operating in the Mediterranean before the advent of DDOD(I). The zealous but unconstitutional conduct of the sponsors of the “private navies” had alienated the sympathy and understanding of local naval authorities who at best regarded irregular operations with amused tolerance and ridicule, or at the worst with impatience and hostility. Captain Tunbridge therefore, fresh from the relatively straightforward business of the sea, was faced with a formidable task with at first nothing to help him beyond directives and signals and letters of encouragement from DDOD(I) coupled with periodical personal visits from the latter and as much equipment as DDOD(I) could scrape together in the UK. In the sixteen months Captain Tunbridge has been in command he has, with the assistance of the Commander-in-Chief’s staff, not only succeeded in building up a highly efficient force, but has restored the confidence of the flotilla in its work; has overcome the prejudices of local naval authorities, with the result that the flotilla now enjoys the maximum assistance in its work, and, above all, Captain Tunbridge has succeeded in removing the convictions of the clandestine authorities in the Mediterranean (since they have been largely deprived of their private navies) that the formation of the African Coastal Flotilla would hamper rather than advance their interests. This last achievement has been won at the expense of an outwardly strictly neutral attitude to all clandestine authorities and the exercise of exceptional patience, cunning and tact, for such is the ‘prima donna’-like temperament of those engaged on underground or subversive activities that had the slightest preference been shown to one more than the other (except as ordered by Allied Forces HQ) the competitors would have immediately seized the opportunity as an excuse to re-embark on private sea-going enterprises, chaos would have again resulted and the just prejudices of local naval authorities never overcome. Thus it will be seen that Captain Tunbridge in addi...

Lot 326

Mercure François. Mercure François, ou, l'Histoire de nostre temps, sous le regne du tres-Chrestien Roy de France & de Navarre, Luuys XIII, 5 volumes (volumes 10-13 & 15), Paris: Jean & Estienne Richter, 1625-31, engraved frontispieces to volumes 12 & 13, folding table to volume 11, volume 10 title repaired at foot, lower corners of pp. 25-32 in volume 12 excised, a few leaves close -trimmed at top margin, some toning and occasional light water stains, bookplates, later half calf, joints and edges a little rubbed, 8vo QTY: (5)NOTE:First published annually in 1611 and continued until 1648, the periodical was the first to be written in French rather than Latin.

Lot 425

MEDICAL INTEREST: A small group of early 20th century bound periodical journals, 'LUNACY AND MENTAL DEFICIENCY' and treatment of 'FEEBLE MINDEDNESS'. Most bound in original blue wraps.

Lot 68

MAGICAL PERIODICAL. MAHATMA, various years:1899: 11/12 lacking February edition. 12 pages in each, all with Hamley's stamp on the first 2 pages. 2 with rusting staples, some traces of adhesive to spines, light folding and creases due to age.1900: 7/12 issues1901: 11 issues1902: 11 issues1903: 5 issues

Lot 157

Antiquarian Book Monthly Review.  8 bound vols. of this periodical commencing with vol. 1 no. 1. Illus. & adverts. Quarto. Half brown cloth & full blue cloth. 1974-1981.

Lot 495

Bubblegum Cards - a collection of vintage 1960s / 1970s bubble gum cards, all part-sets, to include: 1967 Apjac Productions 'Planet Of The Apes' (64 cards), 1966 Banner Productions 'Tarzan' (61 cards), 1966 National Periodical Publications Ltd 'Batman' (47 cards), A&BC Bubblegum 'Battle Cards,' (48 cards), 1968 ATV 'Joe 90,' (29 cards), Macleans Tooth Paste 1966 'Batman,' (38 cards), A&BC 'Flags Of The World,' 1967 ATV Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons, Wall's Icecream 'Doctor Who,' 'Barratt & Co Ltd 'Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons,' and many others. Along with some football related cards 'Greatest Stars Of Football,' and some cigarette cards. Most bundled into part sets, some loose. 

Lot 140

An Arts and Crafts oak armchair, c.1920; an early 20th century oak periodical rack, c.1930 (2)

Lot 882

DC Thomson and Co Ltd (Periodical) from the Hornet and Victor set to include Top Cup Teams, International Cup teams, Great Stars of Football, Famous Teams in Football History, Star Teams of 1961, Cup-Tie Stars of all Nations, Top Players and Teams (7)

Lot 917

DC Thomson and Co Ltd (Periodical) from the Rover, Wizard, Hotspur World Cup Footballers Set of 64, All uncut examples housed within plastic pages

Lot 17

Evans (Myfanwy, editor) Axis. A Quarterly Review of Contemporary Abstract Painting & Sculpture, no.1-8 [a complete set], 6 colour plates after Picasso, Ben Nicholson, Hélion, John Piper, Miró & Paul Nash, illustrations, original printed wrappers, a little rubbed and soiled, spines slightly frayed, vol.1 lightly spotted, 1935-37 § Fowler-Wright Hugh) & others. Piper in Print: Books, Periodicals & Ephemera, one of 384 copies signed by Fowler-Wright, illustrations, many colour, original cloth-backed pictorial boards, Church Hanborough, Artists' Choice Editions, 2010 § Be; and c.15 others on John Piper, mostly catalogues or pamphlets, 4to & 8vo (c.25) *** Important and influential periodical devoted to abstract art, with contributions by Herbert Read, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Nash, John Piper etc. No.3 concerns the sculpture of Brancusi, Moore, Hepworth and Calder, No.5 the International Exhibition of Abstract Painting, Sculpture and Construction, and No.7 contains an essay on Santhal Painting by W.G. & Mildred Archer. The editor, Myfanwy Evans, married John Piper in 1937.

Lot 545

Periodical: The Irish Sword. Jn of the Military History Society of Ireland issue no. 53/54/55/56/57/58/60/61/62/63/74/78/87/88/89/90/91/92/93/94/95/96/97/98/99. 25 issues

Lot 375

Dowson (Mrs. Aubrey, compiler). The Women's Suffrage Cookery Book, London: Women's Printing Society, circa 1910, occasional minor toning or marks, stitching partially broken, endpapers foxed and hinges split, orignal red cloth-backed pictorial boards, upper cover depicting 3 women and a small child, spine faded and frayed (and with a small hole), covers rubbed (especially to corners and edges) and with some marks, small 4to QTY: (1)NOTE:Scarce suffrage cookbook, published by the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) to raise money for the cause. The British Library gives the date as approximately 1912, but the book was announced in an issue of the periodical 'The Common Cause' on 18th November, 1909. There are two different cover designs for the work, one with two children standing below an apple tree, and ours, depicting three women and a small child. It is not known which variant was the first, but ours appears to be the rarer of the two and, with its depiction of three strong women, more appropriate.The book contains a wide variety of culinary, household, and medical receipts, for example: 'Brains (For Invalids), Mrs. Julian Osler, Edgbaston; 'Llanberis Pudding', Mrs. W. Ryland, Edgbaston; 'Method of washing Handkerchiefs when travelling', Mrs. Vincent, Camberley; 'Chicken stuffed with Saccotosh', Miss Otter, Chelsea; 'Soubise Soup', Miss Dorothea M. Goldring, Claygate; 'To make Basins and Pans Fireproof', Mrs. Gayton, Merstham; 'Fairyland Pudding', Mrs. Buckley, Edgbaston. Two further recipes at the end are entitled 'Menus for Meals for Suffrage Workers' and 'Recipe for Cooking and Preserving a Good Suffrage Speaker', contributed by Mrs. Bertrand Russell, Bagley Wood, the latter with such amusing instructions as 'First: Butter the speaker, when asking her to come, with a stamped addressed envelope, post-card, or telegraph form for a reply ... Fifth: Do not let her cool too rapidly after the meeting, but place her considerately by a nice bedroom fire, with a light supper to be taken in solitude ...'.

Lot 136

Rockcliffe (J R), (pseud Louis Douglas, Sheffield based entertainer): His first music and writings book, with handwritten and printed poetry and monologues; mention of being sole proprietor of “Happy Moments”, an entertainment periodical, these poems, jottings and monologues were sometimes performed in the Surrey Theatre, Sheffield and other Sheffield venues, with cuttings tipped or pasted into this, small quarto leather album, this is worn with loss. Mainly his sketch and act material, many initialled, 148pp, all filled, c1860-70s. 

Lot 32

John Bull.  Full run of Vol. VIII of this periodical, nos. 369-420. In two vols. Quarto. Revenue stamp to each issue. 6th January to 28th December, 1828.

Lot 253

Fantasio.  10 bound quarto vols. of this French comic periodical. Col. wrappers, plates & illus. 1919 to 1927 plus 1930.

Lot 157

The Carlisle Magazine & The Cumberland Magazine or Whitehaven Monthly Miscellany.  Bound vol. containing issues of The Carlisle Magazine for 1776 & some issues of The Cumberland Magazine (commencing at vol. 1), 1778/1779; also The Democrat, 10 loose issues of this Carlisle published periodical, c.1868-1870, an issue of The Brampton Herald for 1871 & others.

Lot 354

Le Musée du Livre, a quantity of fascicules of the decorative Belgian periodical, circa 1912 - 1920s, with large number of plates including colour lithography, (condition varies)please see additional images

Lot 86

Cruikshank (George).- Kenrick (Thomas) The British Stage, and Literary Cabinet, 6 vol., 67 engraved plates, 53 hand-coloured etchings (most portraits of actors or actresses in roles), 17 by George Cruikshank (all in vol.1 & 2) and 17 by Robert Cruikshank, those in vol.1 & 2 with 12 signed by George Cruikshank in ink manuscript at foot of image, the others initialled by him or with his note identifying them as by his brother or not, including two states of plate 1 (see below), with reprints of old plays at end of vol.6, text lightly browned, some offsetting from plates, January 1817- February 1822 § Theatre (The); or, Dramatic and Literary Mirror (The), vol.1 [all published], 9 hand-coloured etched plates of actors by I.R.Cruikshank, 1819, together 7 vol., uniformly bound in handsome later crushed brown morocco, gilt, by Rivière & Son, spines gilt in compartments, inner gilt dentelles, te.g., others uncut, [Bobins 866; Cohn 461], 8vo *** A fine set of this scarce periodical, including the companion volume and with annotations by George Cruikshank. The first plate in vol.1 has a pencil note to verso, "An extremely curious portrait, evidently done for this book's first number and changed for the one by Cruikshank which is much better". On recto at the foot of the image George Cruikshank has written in ink, "Not by any of the Cruikshank family" and on the following Cruikshank plate, "IR. not GC.". Cohn notes, "The plate to Part 1, "Mrs.Davenport", is found in two states...in fact the plate seems to have been re-engraved". In that he is evidently correct but he assumes that our first version is the second state rather than the first. Cohn also states that 20 of the plates are by George, in this he is also mistaken as George has annotated January 1817, February & November 1818 as being not by him and April 1818 by both him and Robert. Library Hub records only 3 printed versions: BL, Queen Mary University of London, University of Warwick.

Lot 298

Periodical Accounts Relative to the Baptist Missionary Society, 3 Vols, first edition, title-page, folding sheet music and verse, further engraved plates, later mottled calf gilt by A. Roberts, Windsor, 8vo, London: printed by J. W. Morris, 1800-1805.some pages creased and slightly trimmed, some plates with foxing and darkening, occasional spotting, volume three title page stained.

Lot 46

DICKENS (CHARLES)The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, FIRST EDITION IN BOOK FORM, VERY EARLY ISSUE, 43 etched plates (including frontispiece and additional title) by R. Seymour, R.W. Buss and 'Phiz', with half-title and Directions to the Binder leaf, plates with the usual foxing, mostly in margins but heavy and affecting image in some cases, modern red calf gilt, spine with decorative tooling and lettering in gilt, 8vo (212 x 127mm.), Chapman & Hall, 1837Footnotes:AN EXCEPTIONAL COPY OF 'PICKWICK' IN BOOK FORM: WITH ALL THE EARLY ISSUE TEXT POINTS, ALL THE KEY PLATES IN THE FIRST STATE, AND ONE OF 'THE RAREST OF ALL PICKWICK PLATES'.Text:Rather remarkably, this copy has every first issue point noted by Hatton & Cleaver, with the exception of the impossibly rare early page variant ('only twice has it come under writer's notice', Hatton & Cleaver, p.56), being page 261 with the signature mark N2 rather than the correct X2 as in our copy. Plates:The present copy has the vast majority of the plates in the first state recorded by either Johannsen, Miller & Strange or Hatton & Cleaver (or all three), including the Seymour plates, and also has the two Buss plates. A few of the plates are Hatton & Cleaver's 'second plate', but according to Johannsen at least two of these are not genuine second plates but simply have the page number burnished out.Copies with the first plate ('Mr. Pickwick addressing the Club') in the first state are particularly scarce, John F. Dexter suggesting that of the first issue of 400 copies of part 1, 'I very much doubt whether more than 50 impressions in first state were obtained from the first set of steels' (Johannsen, p.2). Also present here is the extremely scarce Plate 14, one of two incorrectly paginated (as 169): 'In point of rarity, however, none exceed the two plates as originally etched for Part 6. To quote again the words of J.F. Dexter, 'they are the greatest rarity known to me in this book'' (Hatton & Cleaver, p.22). Plate 15 has the correct page number (154).List of plates with Johannsen and Hatton & Cleaver references:1. Mr Pickwick Addresses the Club: Plate A, First state, signature faint but visible.2. The Pugnacious Cabman: Plate A, First state, signature legible. 3. The Sagacious Dog: Plate A, the gun with hammer and trigger and no break in the barrel. Johannsen, Miller & Strange and J. Christian Bay all disagree with Hatton & Cleaver's assertion that the first state has the break in the gun.4. Dr. Slammer's Defiance of Jingle: Plate A, First state.5-7: All Plate A, First state.8-9: The two Buss plates.10. The Breakdown: Plate A, First state (the 'NE' in 'NEMO' just visible under magnification).11. The First Appearance of Mr. Samuel Weller: Plate A1 (cane showing a break), First state, with 'NEMO' signature.12. Mrs. Bardell Faints in Mr Pickwick's Arms: Plate A2 (faces slightly retouched), First state.13. The Election at Eatonswill: Plate A1 (staff faintly etched), First state.14. Mrs. Leo Hunter's Fancy-Dress Dejeune: Plate A (with incorrect page number 169, making it 'the rarest of all Pickwick plates'), First state.15. The Unexpected Breaking-Up of the Seminary for Young Ladies: Plate A (correctly paginated 169), First state.16-21. All Plate A.22. Christmas Eve at M. Wardle's: Plate A, First plate.23. The Goblin and the Sexton: Plate B1 (knot in place of a face in tree trunk), First plate.24. Mr. Pickwick Slides: Plate A, First state.25. The First Interview with Mr. Sergeant Snubbin: Plate B1 (no roll of paper), Second plate.26. The Valentine: Plate A2 (with number burnished out), Second plate, first state. This and all following plates have no etched page number.27. The Trial: Plate B1, Second plate, first state.28. The Card Room at Bath: Plate A, First plate.29. Mr Winkle's situation when the door blew to: Plate B1, Second plate..30. Conviviality at Bob Sawyer's: Plate A, First plate.31. Mr Pickwick Sits for his Portrait: Plate B1, Second plate.32. The Warden's Room: Plate A, First plate.33. Discovery of Jingle in the Fleet: Plate A, First plate.34. The Red-nosed Man Discourseth: Plate B1, Second plate.35. Mrs Bardell Encounters Mr. Pickwick in the Prison: Plate A, First plate.36. Mr Winkle Returns under Extraordinary Circumstances: Plate A, First plate.37. The Ghostly Passengers in the Ghost of a Mail: Plate B1, Second plate.38. Mr. Bob Sawyer's Mode of Travelling: Plate A, First plate.39. The Rival Editors: Plate A, First plate.40. Mary and the Fat Boy: Plate A, First plate.41. Mr. Weller and His Friends Drinking to Mr. Pell: Plate A, First plate.42. Frontispiece: Plate A, First plate.43. Etched title: Plate A: First plate.References:Albert Johannsen, Phiz Illustrations from the Novels of Charles Dickens, 1956; Thomas Hatton & Arthur. H. Cleaver, A Bibliography of the Periodical Works of Charles Dickens,, 1933; W. Miller & E.H. Strange, A Centenary Bibliography of the Pickwick Papers, 1936; J. Christian Bay, ('The Pickwick Papers', in Amateur Book Collector I, December 1950, pp.7-8).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: •• Zero rated for VAT, no VAT will be added to the Hammer Price or the Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 370

Trade cards, Film / Cinema selection approx. 80 mainly larger / premium sized. Periodical and other issues including Film Fun, Boys Cinema, Woman's Weekly, Film Pictorial some Anonymous issues etc. Sold with "Danmarks Film Serie" album complete cards stuck in with inner pages detached from cover. (fair/vg)

Lot 1071

KANDINSKY WASSILY: (1866-1944) Russian painter, one of the pioneers of abstraction in western art. T.L.S., Kandinsky, one page, 4to, Berlin, 22nd May 1933, to [Andre] de Ridder, in French. Kandinsky informs his correspondent that he has just received a tribute from Christian Zervos and continues to remark 'Je vous prie bien de trouver le moyen de trouver une bonne place pour cet hommage. Vous vouliez me faire parvenir toutes les correctures vers le 15 mai. Je suppose que vous attendiez l'hommage de M. Zervos. J'espere encore toujours que le Cahier parraitra la fin de ce mois!' (Translation: 'Please find a way to find a good place for this tribute. You wanted to send me all the corrections around 15th May. I suppose you were waiting for the tribute from Mr. Zervos. I still hope that the Cahier will appear at the end of this month!'). In a postscript Kandinsky further writes 'Si vous n'avez plus besoin des photos, je vous prie bien de me les rendre: on me demande souvent des photos et je n'ai pas des dupplicats' (Translation: 'If you no longer need the photos, please return them to me: I am often asked for photos and I do not have duplicates'). Some very light, extremely minimal age wear and a very small tear to the right edge, VGAndre de Ridder (1888-1961) Belgian art historian and editor-in chief of Cahier, a chronicle of artistic life in Brussels. A special edition of the periodical devoted to Kandinsky was published in July 1933 under the title 'Selection Chronique de la Vie Artisque XIV Wassily Kandinsky - Editions Selection Anvers 1933'Christian Zervos (1889-1970) Greek-French art historian, critic, collector, writer and publisher who founded the magazine Cahiers d'Art in 1926.

Lot 339

Restall, James Andrew (British, 1859-1938); b. Birmingham ENGLAND, Tit-Bits Magazine, a silver Award of Merit medal by J.A. Restall, two standing females and a kneeling male representative of the arts, music and literature, rev. robed figure of Justice standing left, holding a scroll being inscribed by a winged infant, named (Awarded to Mr George Smith for Success in Competitions, October 1900), hallmarked Birmingham 1900, 57mm, 94.96g (cf. Noonans 264, 873). Extremely fine and attractively toned £100-£150 --- Provenance: Baldwin Auction 70, 28 September 2011, lot 826; bt J. Lis, July 2012 Tit-Bits from all the interesting Books and Newspapers of the World, more commonly known as Tit-Bits, was a weekly magazine founded by George Newnes (1851-1910) in Manchester on 22 October 1881 as a direct response to the Elementary Education Act of 1870, which introduced education for children aged 5 to 12 and hence produced a new young generation able to read. From the outset the magazine was a mass-circulation commercial publication on cheap newsprint which, after relocating to London in the mid 1880s, soon reached sales of between 400,000 and 600,000, and by the turn of the twentieth century became the first periodical in Britain to sell over a million copies per issue. Publication ceased in June 1984.

Lot 96

An Edwardian brass and mahogany magazine or periodical rack, c.1905

Lot 264

Herschel (William), Everard Home, William Hyde Wollaston and others, contributors.- Philosophical Transactions..., 4 parts in 4 vol., engraved plates, some folding, original wrappers, some covers detached or lacking, wear to spines uncut, 1796 & 1820-21; and c.30 others, Philosophical Transactions and similar, 4to & 8vo; sold not subject to return (c.35)*** The volumes mentioned comprising 1796 part 2, 1820 parts 1 & 2 and 1821 part 2. Papers include:Herschel: "On the periodical Star & Herculis"; "On the action of crystallized bodies on homogenous light"; "On the aberrations of compound lenses and object glasses". Home: "On the peculiarities that distinguish the manatee"; "On the mode of formation of the canal... of the Proteosaurus".Wollaston: "On the methods of cutting rock crystals for micrometers".

Lot 39

Ɵ&nbspHOROLOGICAL PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONSANTIQUARIAN HOROLOGYA long run complete with indices from volume I (December 1953) to XXVII (December 2003), all issues are original print runs and are in original separate soft bindings as issued, (qty). 

Lot 40

Ɵ&nbspHOROLOGICAL PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONSHOROLOGICAL JOURNALAn extensive collection of issues including the first from volume 1 (September 1858) and ending with the December 1939 issue from volume 81, including complete runs (mostly bound) for volumes 15 (September 1872 to August 1873); 18 (September 1875 to August 1876); 20-22 inclusive (September 1877 to August 1880); 24 (September 1881 to August 1882); 35-39 inclusive (September 1892 to August 1897); 41 (September 1898 to August 1899); 43 (September 1900 to August 1901); 55-58 inclusive (September 1912 to August 1916); 70 (September 1927 to August 1928); 74 (September 1931 to August 1932) and 77-79 inclusive (September 1934 to September 1937), (qty).For full list see images included in the online listing for this lot. 

Lot 426

TWO BOXES OF RAILWAY EPHEMERA to include Weekly Notices, Staff Periodical Notices, Staff Regulations, Rule Books, etc

Lot 2150C

Assorted periodical volumes and issues; concerning architecture and building, mostly early to mid 20th century. To include: Builders journal, Architect journal and The architect. (8 boxes)

Lot 2150B

Assorted periodical volumes and issues; concerning architecture and building, mostly early 20th century, some late 19th. To include: Building news, The architect, The architect and builders journal, Architect journal and The builders journal.(8 boxes)

Lot 2150A

Assorted periodical volumes; concerning architecture and building, mostly early 20th century, some late 19th. To include: The architect, The builder, Building news and The architect and contract response. (8 boxes)

Lot 2150

Assorted periodical volumes; concerning architecture and building, mostly early 20th century, some late 19th. To include: The architect, Building news, Academy Architecture, The builder, The architect and contract response and Bulding. (9 Boxes)

Lot 765

Young America (weekly publication) New York 1856, volume No 1 all published - only No 1 has a title page, 312pp incl index. On page 310 it states that the title is to change to Yankee Doodle. Bound in modern red cloth, gilt lettered spine, an extremely rare periodical, Copac lists only one earlier similar title that closed in 1848. In very good condition

Lot 93

1930 British & I Lions Glossy Periodical Pullout Photo Display: 25" x 19", huge double-page spread on glossy paper from a NZ periodical, using all Crown Studios, Wellington's portraits in kit and their official team photograph (as in our lots 86, 87 and 97). Had been folded but in VG condition for age: perfect for framing and display. Part of the WGM Bonner 1930 BRFT Lions Collection

Lot 24A

Irish Arts Review Periodical: de Breffny (B.), Mulcahy (John)etc. Irish Arts Review - An International Quarterly Magazine for Connoisseurs, Vol. I No. 1 Spring 1984 - Vol. 35 No. 2, 2018, together 14 yearly Vols. & 77 (ex. 82) parts. Illus. thro-out, all in orig. bindings. As a periodical, w.a.f. (1)

Lot 460

A collection of 1966 Batman trading cards, Greenway Prods & 20th Century Fox, and National Periodical Publications approx 120+ cards, incomplete runs with some duplicates. (Qty)

Lot 204

Northern History.  A run of this periodical from vol. 1 to vol. 35. Orig. card wrappers. 1966-1999.

Lot 509A

Burns, Robert Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect Two volumes, New Edition, T. Cadell and William Creech, Edinburgh, 1794 Gay, John Poems on Several Occasions Volume the First, J. Tonson, London, 1731 The Mirror, a Periodical Paper Published at Edinburgh in the Years 1779 and 1780. W. Gilbert, P. Byrne and W. Porter, Dublin, 1790 Etc. Condition Report:Available upon request

Lot 78

The Studio / Studio International. An important and influential Art Periodical covering the period from 1947-1975, some 130 issues; together with a number of Graphis from the 1970's (8 bags in total)

Lot 475

U.S. Constitution first printing in a periodical magazine, The Columbian Magazine dated September 1787, pages 615-674. The Constitution starts on page 658 with the wrap word "we", with page 654 having an engraved plate of a soldier crab and a remarkable tooth. This issue is particularly noteworthy in that it is possibly and most likely the first magazine publication of the first form of the Federal Constitution of September 17, 1787 listed on the contents page under the running title "The new Plan for a Foederal [sic] Government" but with no preliminary title or introduction. Evans 20280. Sabin 14869. Approximate Dimensions:h. 7.8" w. 4.875"Condition:This September edition is missing 6 leaves and two plates: Meteorological plate, fold-out illustration of "A View of the Natural Bridge in Virginia." Missing pages 623-630 & 633-636. This example being previously bound with brown calf

Lot 554

The Pennsylvania Evening Post newspaper dated October 8, 1776, #268. Stating Georgia is free by a declaration made by John Hancock that the new constitution frees all people from the hand of the British. Declared in Savannah and was followed by a firing of guns and a celebration of independence. The periodical has grey matting with a black frame. Framed with glass on both sides. Approximate Dimensions:Visual portion of document: h. 9.5", w. 15.5" Frame: h. 16.25", w. 22.25"Condition:Previously bound and now lain flat in the frame has usual period toning and a small damp stain at the bottom, otherwise in very nice condition.

Lot 571

Georgia pre-revolutionary war history detailed account of its early struggles with colonialism. This document is a sworn disposition such printed in the periodical describing the intense circumstances surrounding the ongoing naval and ground fight for Georgia involving Fort Frederica and the British naval invasion planned as well as a deposition from a sailor who was captured and held onboard the ship the Pretty Nancy who gave a full account of the hardships of war. Descriptions of casualties, naval battles, types of cannons used on board ships and the different described ships and types of shot used. This document is housed under black matting covered in glass and surrounded in a detailed brown frame. Approximate Dimensions:document h. 11" w. 6.5" frame h. 16.5" w. 12"Condition:The paper is fresh and bright having a hint of a horizontal crease and with a penciled number 14 in upper left corner being away from any lettering.

Lot 608

Nice grouping of 10 historic American newspapers and magazines, starting with the July 11, 1835 issue of the Boston Evening Gazette on to the National Ingelligencier December 19th 1850, including The new York tribune of July 5, 1864 and (2) copies of the New York herald dated June 16, 1864 with the News and Courier of Charleston, S.C. dated December 1, 1876 then periodical news magazines including A Ballous Pictorial dating to March 17, 1855 and Harpers Weekly dated December 21, 1861, May 17, 1862 and November 15, 1862. Approximate Dimensions:Sizes as per printed.Condition:The newspapers have usual toning on edges with mixed foxing generally still bright paper with one of the June 16, 1864 newspapers being toned and fragile the other quite clean with and containing an odd misprint on the bottom of the front page

Lot 708

Seven volumes of The Century Magazine, bound. The date and volume numbers include, 1882 vol 2 & 3; 1883 vol 4; 1884 vol 6(2); 1885 vol 7 & 8. Bound in similar three quarter brown toned leather with marbled overlays and with gilted lettering of the periodical and the volume placed on the spine. Includes many great authors and poets such as Mark Twain's first appearance of Huckleberry Finn such as found in 1885 in volume 7: 1. Huck and the Grangerford Feud (pages 269-278); 2. Royalty on the Mississippi (pages 544-567); 3. Jim's Investment and King Sollermun (pages 456-458).with many interesting reads of many subjects of the time. Approximate Dimensions:Approximate size h. 9.5" w. 7"Condition:These will show some shelf wear, including some scuffing wear to the edges. Some cracking at the hinges and occasional toned pages and/or foxing with volume 8 having writing inside covers. These will show some shelf wear, including some scuffing

Lot 709

A set of 8 bound editions of The Century Magazine. The date and volume numbers include: 1883 vol 4; 1885 vol 8; 1887 vol 11; 1890 vol 17; 1892 vol 21; 1894 vol 25; and January to June 1894. Bound in similar three quarter dark brown toned leather with marbled overlays and with gilt lettering of the periodical and the volume placed on the spine. Includes many great authors and poets such as Mark Twain. Approximate Dimensions:Each book: h. 10", w. 7", d. 2.25Condition:These will show some shelf wear, including some scuffing wear to the edges. Some cracking at the hinges and occasional toned pages and/or foxing with volume 8 having writing inside covers. These will show some shelf wear, including some scuffing

Lot 494

A Group Of Four Pictures To include an original Art Nouveau lithograph of semi-naked woman by Armand Rassenfosse (1862-1934), published in the Belgian periodical Le Musée du Livre, December 1907, 19.5cm x 15cm; a 20th century watercolour of woodland, unsigned, 15cm x 24cm; another pastel/watercolour of a Scottish landscape (?), usigned, 24cm x 33.5cm; and a framed 19th century hand-coloured print after John Varley Senior (1778-1842), 13.5cm x 18cm (4)

Lot 20

(DICKENS, CHARLES). Thomas Hatton and Arthur Cleaver, The Bibliography of the Periodical Works of Charles Dickens. Published 1933 by Chapman & Hall, London. First edition, limited to 750 copies. The definitive bibliography for Charles Dickens in parts. Original buckram and dust jacket. Fine and looks unused. Loosely inserted is a "complimentary slip from Thomas Hatton to J. J. Grindley of Leicester" and with the authors address blind stamped into the heading 23, Alexander Road, Leicester. The first two pages of the introduction and the last two pages in the book are uncut. Approximate Dimensions:h. 10.375", w. 7"Condition:Fine and fresh as printed, hinges are clean and with out wear. Small rub and dent at the bottom of spine below printers name. inside the front cover is an ex libris bookplate with owners name removed with a penciled number notation at the

Lot 20

Collection of rare works in Urdu on various subjects all 8vo (various dimensions) and contemporary Indian half cloth bindings unless otherwise stated, variable condition (wear to bindings, contents generally browned and with various tears and repairs). Including:[Periodical]. Al-'Aziz. Agra: Munshi Abdul 'Aziz, 1907. Approx. 14 numbers in 1 volume, each issue with decorative title-page (with title imposed on a globe in early cases), lithographic illustrations throughout, contents including: dedicated number on women ('Zinana number'), including articles on Zeb-un-Nissa Begum, women's fashion, etc., portraits of Queen Alexandra, women from different nations (Parsi, Russian, French, etc.); dedicated number on Afghanistan, with portraits of Habibullah Khan, Inayatullah Khan, etc.; other numbers including portraits of Lala Lajpat Rai, a possible suffragette (British woman in white sash with fist raised), binding shaken;[Women in Islam]. Sammelband, comprising: 1) Qiran al-sa'dayn fi-huquq al-zawjayn ['The Happy Conjunction of the Rights of Married Couples']. Mumbai: Matba' Haydari, 1300 AH [1882/3 CE], second leaf repaired; 2) Hadiyat al-Nisa ['The Women's Gift']. Madras: Matba' Mazhar al-'Aja'ib, 1304 CE [1886/7 CE]. 3) Tanbih al-Nisa' ['Notice to Women']. Mumbai: Matba' Fath al-Karim, 1301 AH [1883/4 CE]; and 3 other texts;[Islamic law] Muhammad 'Abd al-Hayy al-Luknawi (1848-1886). Muqaddimah al-Hidaya ['Prologue to "The Guide"]. [No place:] Matba' Mustafa'i, 1290 AH [1873/4 CE]. 4to, contemporary patterned full cloth, in Arabic with Urdu commentary;[Kashmir]. Kashmiri Magazine. Lahore: Rifah-i 'Am Steam Press, 1911. Several issues in 1 volume, halftone photographic plates depicting Kashmiri notables (one loose);[Bible; Gospel of Matthew; Urdu]. Mata ki tasnif. Ludhiana, Punjab: American Mission Press, 1888;Muhammad Misbah al-Din. Misbah al-Adab ['The Lamp of Literature']. Moradabad: Matba' Nira-i A'zam, 1903;and 8 others similar including Fasnamah-i 'Aja'ib, Nawal Kishore Press, 1890 (illustrated), etc.(14)

Lot 364

An Edwardian Art Nouveau mahogany periodical stand, the sides pierced with organic motifs, sledge base, 87cm high, 44cm wide, 25.5cm deep, c.1905

Lot 370

Autographs. A collection of twelve signatures of female actresses and entertainers displayed as one, mid-20th c, including Ginger Rogers, Jean Simmons, Jane Russell, Pier Angeli, Anne Baxter, Greer Garson, Rosemary Clooney, Gloria Grahame, Maureen O'Hara, Jeanne Crain, etc., each illustrated with a portrait clipping from a newspaper or periodical, former album leaves mounted and framed, 68.5 x 93cm

Lot 90

Crime & Punishment. [Carter (Samuel)], The Law of Executions, first edition, London: Printed by the Assigns of Richard and Edward Atkins Esqs; for Robert Battersby, 1706, black-ruled title-page, occasional Gothic Black Letter, [xvi], 323, [1] (blank), [18] (index), [2] (publisher's advert), toned, broad lower-margin unevenly cropped, contemporary calf boards, rebacked, now split with some rubbed losses, the Law Library of Los Angeles County's copy, title and two text leaves with their perforated stamp, pastedown with their labels and endpapers with their ink stamp, 8vo, [provincial printing] The Genuine Account of the Trial of Eugene Aram, For the Murder of Daniel Clark, Late of Knaresborough, in the County of York [...], third edition, York: Printed by A. Ward, for C. Etherington, Newcastle upon Tyne: Re-printed by Order for the Proprietor, 1759, [ii], 42pp, foxed, occasional chipped or uneven edges, but without any loss of text, with [7]pp of later manuscript and periodical clippings, c. 1830, early 19th c calf over papered boards, perished and disbound, verso of title with manuscript ownership inscription: J. Campbell Burroughs/Southampton, title-page verso and last leaf (i.e. F1) with small, ?private Selbourne Library stamps, 8vo, [provincial printing] Paul (Sir George Onesiphorus), Proceedings of the Grand Juries, Magistrates, and other Noblemen and Gentlemen, of the County of Gloucester, on Designing & Executing a General Reform in the Construction and Regulation of the Prisons of the Said County, third edition, Gloucester: Printed by D. Walker, et al., 1808, [iii]-viii, [9]-87, lacking half-title, in-keeping 20th c quarter-calf over marbled boards, title lower-margin with former library stamp, not affecting letters, 8vo, [&] Townsend (William C), Modern State Trials, volume I only, 1850, 20th c morocco over cloth, some wear, etc., 8vo, (4)

Lot 205

Chambers (R., editor). The Book of Days. Illustrated with numerous portraits, views etc., relating to each month of the year. Collected from numberless sources, 12 volumes, London: printed by W. Davy at the Dryden Press for his friend James Gibbs, 1872, additional half-title and letterpress title printed in red and black to each volume, the two original printed titles (Chambers, 1869) bound in, extensively extra-illustrated with over 2000 engraved plates, portraits, wood-engravings, advertisements, playbills, pamphlets, press cuttings, periodical extracts, fashion plates and other illustrations, each volume representing a month of the year, mostly 17th, 18th and 19th century, but including a few earlier, some hand-coloured or printed in colour, some double-page or folding, the majority neatly trimmed, window-mounted and inlaid to uniform size, a few with manuscript annotations or captions, various sizes, one or two plates with slight repairs, a few light spots, burgundy morocco gilt bookplate of W. A. Foyle, Beeleigh Abbey to front pastedown of each volume, top edge gilt, remainder untrimmed, contemporary uniform crimson half morocco gilt, each volume stamped in gilt to upper cover 'Cecil C. Balfour, light edge wear and some marks, thick 4to, 27.5 x 19 x 7.5 cmQTY: (12)NOTE:Provenance: Cecil C. Balfour (1849-1881); W. A. Foyle, Beeleigh Abbey (bookplate).Specially bound for Cecil C. Balfour (1849-1881), with his name stamped in gilt to the upper cover of each volume. His elder brother Arthur Balfour was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1902 to 1905, and is best known for the 'Balfour Declaration' of 1917, which ultimately led to the creation of the state of Israel.The wide range of unusual and entertaining extra illustrations include allegorical, pastoral, natural history, literary, social, sporting and political subjects.Amongst the earlier Old Master prints are Mercurius by Jan Sadeler and Maarten de Vos, 1585 (Hollstein 523), Hyems by Jacob Matham after Goltzius, 1589, January ('Dum glacialis...') by A. Collaert after H. Bol, 1585, a 15th century illuminated leaf on vellum with border decoration of flowers and 14-line illumination of a saint raising a man from the dead in gold and colours, Martius by Jan Collaert, circa 1609/10, Scaramouche, circa 1700, an early copper engraved version of Durer's Annunciation (from the Small Passion), probably late 16th or early 17th century, etc.Prints from the 18th and 19th centuries include a lithographic portrait of W. A. Mozart by Adoph Friedrich Kunike, circa 1820, a small stipple engraved oval portrait of Ignatius Sancho, by Bartolozzi after Gainsborough, an engraved portrait of Phillis Wheatley, nego servant to Mr. John Wheatley, of Boston, 1773, Gall & Spurzheim's Symbolical Head (in colour), a sepia aquatint view of the High Street from the Country Market Place, Philidelphia, a large colour aquatint entitled Boxing Match for One Hundred Pounds, 1818, etc.

Lot 113

New Bon Ton Magazine; or, Telescope of the Times, 3 volumes (of 6), May 1818-October 1819, containing issues 1-3, 5, 7-18 bound in three volumes, lacking issues 4 and 6 to first volume, 14 hand- coloured caricature plates, (no colour plate present to issue number 1 and 8), some scattered spotting and marks, one or two plates with closed tears, contemporary uniform straight-grained red half morocco, gilt decorated spines, 8vo QTY: (3)NOTE:Sold as a periodical, not subject to return

Lot 371

[BOER WAR, etc.] [PERIODICAL] Black & White Budget vols 1-6 bound in 5, 4to, illus., publisher's cloth gilt & blind, L., 1899-1902 (5).

Lot 372

[MARITIME PERIODICAL] The Blue Peter, 4to, vols 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12 & 16, bound without wrappers, not subject to return, L., 1925-1936 (7).

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