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The suit made for and worn by Bill Shankly on the occasion of his OBE investiture at Buckingham Palace, a two-piece grey wool suit made by his Liverpool-tailor Denis Newton; sold together with a photostat of a photograph of Bill Shankly holding his OBE after the Buckingham Palace ceremony; and three various publications with references to his tailor Denis Newton (5)
Dickens, Charles. Autograph letter signed, to the publisher Thomas Longman "My Dear Longman. If Wednesday next will suit you, we shall be happy to dine with you on that day in compliance with your pleasant invitation. In saying "We", I answer for the Trio. Faithfully yours, Charles Dickens, Devonshire Terrace, Fourteenth February 1844, Thomas Longman Esquire". . Note: The Letters of Charles Dickens, Pilgrim Edition, Vol. 12, page 589. The reference to 'the Trio' is there assumed to infer Dickens himself and his close friends John Forster and Daniel Maclise.
Appianus (of Alexandria). Appianou Alexandreos Romaika. Appiani Alexandrini Rom. Historiarum, Punica, siue Carthaginiensis, Syriaca, Parthica, Mithridatica, Iberica, Annibalica, Celticae & Illyricae Fragmenta Quaedam. Item, De Bellis Ciuilibus libri V. Henr. Steph. Annotationes in Quasdam Appiani Historias, & in Conciones per pp.[12],x,767 (to sss6 only, bound without 2nd portion), woodcut illust. to title (with early signature and also bookplate to verso), occ. spotting, bound with Arrianus (Flavius), Arriani (qui alter Xenophon Vocatus suit) De Expedit. Alex. Magni, Historiarum Libri VIII. Ex Bonavent. Vulcanii Brug. nova Interpretatione..., Excudebat Henr. Stephanus, [Geneva], 1575, pp.[12],198,68,[12], woodcut eng. to title, few marginal notes throughout volume, modern qtr. calf gilt, folio. Adams A1352 & A2010. (1)
A COMPLETE CARTRIDGE RE-LOADING OUTFIT, including a lee cartridge bench mounted re-loading press with interchangeable heads set for .45 ACP and 38/357 magnum, together with dies for .308 rifle and .32 auto ammunition, as well as a range of propellant charge dispensers also there is a reading bullet and charge weighing balance two auto primers set up on a wall mounted board for .45 and .38, in addition (for collection from our Norfolk premises) there is approx 200x .308 cases, 50x .32-20 Winchester cases, 50x .32 auto, 50x .38 special as well as a quantity of bullets to suit these cartridges. (qty)
Harris (Frank). The Bomb, published by the Author, New York, 1920, b & w plts., several leaves with closed tears, mostly to lower blank margin, upper hinge split, lacking rear free endpaper, orig. cloth gilt, spine darkened and rubbed, 8vo. Inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper: 'To dearest Paddy from "Pat" the author Frank Harris who loves her dearly June 1920'. Frank Harris was one of the most infamous characters of the late 19th and early 20th century. He made his name as a journalist and author, and was a key figure of the literary and political scene. He was a friend to both Bernard Shaw and Oscar Wilde, and amongst many others he also knew H.G. Wells, Max Beerbohm, Winston Churchill, Aleister Crowley, George Moore and Arnold Bennett. He was notably outspoken and candid, which did not suit the tenor of the times, but it was the publication of his autobiography in 1922 'My Life and Loves' which finally destroyed his reputation. This work immediately scandalised the society of his day with its unshrinking depiction of sexual matters. 'The Bomb', Harris's first novel, is set among the anarchist victims of the events surrounding Chicago's Haymarket Square bombing of 1886. It evoked a chorus of praise amongst reviewers, for example, 'The Times': "'The Bomb' is highly charged with an explosive blend of Socialistic and Anarchistic matter, wrapped in a gruesome coating of 'exciting' fiction... Mr. Harris has a real power of realistic narrative... The tense directness of his style, never deviating into verbiage, undoubtedly keeps the reader at grips with the story and the characters." First published in 1908, this edition was a small print run published by the author. (1)
Andy Warhol, 1928-1987 SOUPER DRESS colour silkscreen on paper and cotton A-line dress overall: 99 by 55cm.; 37.25 by 21.5in. This dress is 'one size fits all' and has an adjustable hem line to suit most heights. Literature Mark Francis, The Warhol Look: Glamour, Style, Fashion, New York 1997, illustration of another example
Georgian wine funnel with reeded decoration to the detachable rim and small personal engraving. Length measures 4 3/4ins (12cm), weight 2.756ozt (85.74gms). Hallmarked Edinburgh, no date letter, sponsors mark reads JH. The wine funnel has some surface scratches and is very tarnished. The collar is dented quite badly but still fits into the body fairly well. The collar is not hallmarked. The hallmark on the funnel is rubbed but still legible. There is an engraved mark that shows an arm holding the helmet from a suit of armour, with the words 'Ut Simparatior' above. This crest was registered by the Clephane family of Carlsogie, Scotland in 1802.
Shropshire. Morden (Robert), Shrop Shire, [1680], engraved playing card map, hand coloured in outline, 95 x 60 mm, mounted, together with 4pp. of accompanying text from the same work describing Shropshire. Cowling 145. A reprint of the first edition of 1676. This edition does not bear the suit mark. (1)
Olympic & Commonwealth Games memorabilia, Olympic material dating from 1972, including commemorative souvenirs, head square, pin badges, GB handbooks, BOA reports, a 1984 GB track suit top & t-shirt, a folder of posters, the IOC publication 'The Olympic Movement', a 1988 GB Olympic team holdall etc.; Commonwealth including a 1978 representation plaque set with a pin badge, England team handbooks for 1978, 1982 (two), 1990 & 1998, Council Reports for 1982 (two), a 1986 England team tracksuit top and sweat shirt, other official clothing and official pin badges (a qty.)
Christie, Agatha A collection of 17 early works, First editions, all lacking dustwrappers, comprising: The secret adversary 1922 [lacking backstrip, tape marks, ex-library], Murder on the links 1923 [boards damaged. heavily rubbed], The man in the brown suit 1924 [rebacked, foxing], The big four 1927 [rubbed, stain on upper board, lacking rear endpaper], The underdog 1929 [hinges split, backstrip faded], The murder at the vicarage 1930 [foxing], Lord Edgeware dies 1933 [boards faded and stained], The hound of death 1933 [Partial dustwrapper, ink inscription], Parker Pyne investigates 1934 [boards stained], Why didn't they ask Evans? 1934 [boards stained, backstrip loose], Death in the clouds 1935 [stained and faded], Cards on the table 1936 [faded, foxing], Murder in Mesopotamia 1936 [sunned], Dumb Witness 1937 [faded, foxed], Hercule Poirot's Christmas 1939 [faded, foxed], One, two buckle my shoe 1940, Three Act Tragedy 1935 [faded] (17)
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19303 item(s)/page