Magazine supplement a-b

29
2005 Supplement Page 1 THE FOLLOWING IS A CATALOG OF NEW ACQUISITIONS OF THE STEVEN LOMAZOW, M.D. COLLECTION SINCE THE COMPLETION OF AMERICAN PERIODICALS IN 1996. (*) DENOTES THAT THE ITEM SUPERSEDES THE PREVIOUS LISTING OF THE SAME NUMBER. THE REMAINDER ARE EITHER NEW TITLES OR ADDITIONS TO PREVIOUSLY CATALOGUED TITLES. THESE ITEMS ARE LISTED ALPHABETICALLY AND NUMBERED WITH AN "S" PREFIX. 2005 SUPPLEMENT AMERICAN PERIODICALS A MISCELLANY OF NEW MATERIAL IS PRESENTED. THERE IS ALSO NEW AND ORIGINAL RESEARCH ,ANDAMORE AGGRESSIVE PURSUIT OF HIGHLIGHTS OF PULPAND LITTLE MAGAZINES, BOTH BEING DIVERSE AND COMPLEX. ABOUT 800 NEW ITEMS ARE COMPREHENSIVELY CATALOGUED. INADDITION, THEREARE LISTINGS OF "HAMBURGER HELPER" FIRST ISSUESANDAN UPDATED INDEX. It is interesting to note the period from after the Civil War to the turn of the twentieth century, a large number of magazines, usually of a humorous or scandalous nature, were published. Despite their allegedly large circula- tions (though many of them clearly exaggerated these numbers) and volume numbers suggesting long publica- tion runs, many of them are virtually unknown, unlisted in ULS or represented by only a few scattered issues. Complete runs of even some quite well-known titles such as Wasp, Truth or Once a Week, the direct descendant of Collier's and McCall's, do not exist. This speaks for the amazingly ephemeral nature and rarity of even the most popular and collectible titles and adds an even greater thrill to the hunt for American periodicals of this era. Over the last few years, the incredible proliferation of the Internet has changed the way the antiquarian book trade is conducted. Auctions such as eBay, book-selling search sites such as Bibliofind, Bookfinder, Alibris and Advanced Book Exchange, as well as thousands of individual websites now permit the avid collector or dealer to spend countless hours sitting at the computer pursuing his or her interests. This is now effecting the type of material seen at book fairs, with many of the highly marketable items, particularly those of lower price, never getting past the computer screen. The amount of dealers at fairs is perceptably shrinking. Non-internet book searching is becoming much less evident. Old staples such as Antiquarian Bookman have ceased to exist. In the new millennium, this trend will undoubtedly persist. Many of the major auction houses are now starting on-line bidding. Eventually (and sadly) it will not at all be necessary to leave one's chair to buy or sell antiquar- ian books or periodicals, and the alluring aroma of old dusty bookstores will be no more than a memory!

description

An annotated catalog of magazines collected 1995-2005

Transcript of Magazine supplement a-b

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2005 Supplement • Page 1

THE FOLLOWING IS A CATALOG OF NEW ACQUISITIONS OF THESTEVEN LOMAZOW, M.D. COLLECTION SINCE THECOMPLETION OF AMERICAN PERIODICALS IN 1996.

(*) DENOTES THAT THE ITEM SUPERSEDES THE PREVIOUS LISTINGOF THE SAME NUMBER. THE REMAINDER ARE EITHER NEW

TITLES OR ADDITIONS TO PREVIOUSLY CATALOGUED TITLES.THESE ITEMS ARE LISTED ALPHABETICALLY AND NUMBERED WITH

AN "S" PREFIX.

2005 SUPPLEMENT

AMERICAN PERIODICALS

A MISCELLANY OF NEW MATERIAL IS PRESENTED. THERE IS ALSO NEW AND ORIGINALRESEARCH , AND A MORE AGGRESSIVE PURSUIT OF HIGHLIGHTS OF PULP AND LITTLE

MAGAZINES, BOTH BEING DIVERSE AND COMPLEX. ABOUT 800 NEW ITEMS ARECOMPREHENSIVELY CATALOGUED. IN ADDITION, THERE ARE LISTINGS OF

"HAMBURGER HELPER" FIRST ISSUES AND AN UPDATED INDEX.

It is interesting to note the period from after the Civil War to the turn of the twentieth century, a large number ofmagazines, usually of a humorous or scandalous nature, were published. Despite their allegedly large circula-tions (though many of them clearly exaggerated these numbers) and volume numbers suggesting long publica-tion runs, many of them are virtually unknown, unlisted in ULS or represented by only a few scattered issues.Complete runs of even some quite well-known titles such as Wasp, Truth or Once a Week, the direct descendantof Collier's and McCall's, do not exist. This speaks for the amazingly ephemeral nature and rarity of even themost popular and collectible titles and adds an even greater thrill to the hunt for American periodicals of this era.

Over the last few years, the incredible proliferation of the Internet has changed the way the antiquarian booktrade is conducted. Auctions such as eBay, book-selling search sites such as Bibliofind, Bookfinder, Alibrisand Advanced Book Exchange, as well as thousands of individual websites now permit the avid collector ordealer to spend countless hours sitting at the computer pursuing his or her interests. This is now effecting thetype of material seen at book fairs, with many of the highly marketable items, particularly those of lower price,never getting past the computer screen. The amount of dealers at fairs is perceptably shrinking. Non-internetbook searching is becoming much less evident. Old staples such as Antiquarian Bookman have ceased to exist.In the new millennium, this trend will undoubtedly persist. Many of the major auction houses are now startingon-line bidding. Eventually (and sadly) it will not at all be necessary to leave one's chair to buy or sell antiquar-ian books or periodicals, and the alluring aroma of old dusty bookstores will be no more than a memory!

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Welcome to the supplement of American Periodicals! It has been nine years since the first edition and countlesshours of bookfairs, ephemera shows, and internet searching. This edition shows the fruit of all that searching.

HOW TO USE THIS BOOK

(NUMBER) TITLE.Volume/issue number; Place of publicationSizeNumber of listings in Union List of Serials; Run information

Description.References.

The numbers of new entries are consecutive with a prefix "s" for supplement. Titles cited in the first edition of AmericanPeriodicals continue their original number. Film periodicals are prefixed by the previous system, divided into fan (f), trade(tr) and in house (h) sub-categories.

The number of listings in Union List of Serials, third edition, 1963, reflects holdings in all major libraries in the U.S andCanada. It is an index of relative rarity, though any holding, however incomplete is included. It can be inferred thatindividual volumes are scarcer and issues in original wrappers even moreso.

Items are referenced to those cited in the first edition, most frequently Mott, Kribbs and Albaugh.

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(S1) ADVENTURE.New York: V. 1 no. 1; November 1910Pictorial wrappers; 7 x 10ULS: 8. N 1910+. My 3, 18, 1920 never issued.

Probably the most important pure adventure pulp magazine, running forover 800 issues. It was financed by Butterick & Co., the publishers of thesuccessful fashion magazine Delineator. It attracted the best writers ofthe genre and, for a time, was edited by Sinclair Lewis. One of its featuresled to the founding of The American Legion. Rockwell Kent providedillustrations in the 1920's.

(S2) ADVISER; OR VERMONT EVANGELICAL MAGAZINE.Middlebury, Vt.: V. 1 no. 1-12; January - December 1809OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-7, Ja 1809-D 1815

A monthly published to relieve religious "destitution" in the frontier areas of Vermont. Edited by a group of12-14 ministers.Albaugh 3.

(S3) AERO MECHANICS. AVIATION SIMPLIFIED.New York: V. 1 no. 1; August 1929Pictorial wrappers; 8 1/2 x 11 3/4ULS: 7.V. 1-2 no. 3; Ag 1929-Jl 1930. In ULS and after v. 1 as Aero News and Mechanics. Merged into Scienceand Invention.

A simplified approach to aviation. Initially an illustrated bedsheet pulp, though not a fiction magazine. Editedby Augustus Post and published by Experimenter Publishing. A scarce title.

A COMPLETE RUN OF THE FIRST AVIATION MAGAZINE IN AMERICA

(AV1) AERONAUTICS.New York: V. 1 no. 1-12; October 1893 - September 1894QuartoULS: 15. All published.

The pioneer periodical in its field. Published by M.N. Forney of theAmerican Engineering and Railroad Journal, it was well illustrated andcontained news and technical aspects of ballooning and attempts atheavier than air flight. Rare and important.Mott IV: 335.

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(S4) AESTHETE 1925.New York: V. 1 no. 1; February 1925White pictorial wrappers; 5 1/2 x 8 3/8ULS: 4. All published.

Editor Walter Hankel's important satirical reply to an attack on theaesthete group by Ernest Boyd in American Mercury. Scarce.Hoffman: pp. 227-28, 275.

THOREAU'S "CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE"

(S5) AESTHETIC PAPERS.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; 1849OctavoULS: 0. All published.

A landmark of literary Americana, published and edited by Elizabeth PalmerPeabody, featuring Henry David Thoreau's "Resistance to Civil Government"as well as works by Emerson, Hawthorne, and other important transcenden-talist essays. Quite rare and valuable (only 50 original subscriptions), it wasissued originally in wrappers, intended as a periodical, but lasted only oneissue.Chielens I: pp. 3-8; Gohdes: pp. 143-56.

(S6) AGORA. A KANSAS MAGAZINE.Salina, Ks.: V. 1 no. 1; July 1891Yellow wrappers; 6 1/4 x 9 3/4ULS: 12. V. 1-5, 1891-96

An important, sparsely illustrated miscellany, initiallyquarterly, then monthly, edited by C.B. Kirtland and, later,T.E. Dewey, later published in Topeka. It contained some ofWilliam Allen White's early writing.Mott IV: 97.

(S7) ALL OUTDOORS.New York: V. 1 no. 1; Autumn 1913Pictorial wrappers; 10 1/4 x 12 7/8ULS: 4. V. 1-9 no. 5, Aut 1913-F 1922

A scarce, well-produced outdoor sporting magazinepublished by W.A. Miles. The cover is by N.C. Wyeth.

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(S8) AMATEUR SPORTSMAN.New York: V. 1 no. 1; March 1889Blue wrappers; 9 1/8 x 11 5/8ULS: 20+ (1 with volume 1). V. 1-57 no. 5, Mr 1888-N 1917. Ap-Jl1912 as Illustrated Outdoor World; Ag 1912-Ap 1913 as IllustratedOutdoor World and Recreation; After O 1914 and in ULS asRecreation. Merged into Outer's Book.

The earliest published title of an eventual merger of outdoorsporting journals which unified under the title Recreation. By nomeans an amateur journal, a well-produced, illustrated 16 pagemonthly "published in the interest of the amateur sportsman of thecountry for their entertainment and instruction".

(S9) AMERICA. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OFTHE PEOPLE. FREE THOUGHT, FREE SPEECH,FREE LABOR.Washington, D.C.: V. 1 no. 1; May 1881Masthead; 12 1/2 x 18 1'2ULS: 0.

An eight-page monthly published by Gilmour &. Co.

AN UNRECORDED ILLUSTRATED NEW YORK WEEKLY

(S10) AMERICAN.New York: V. 1 no. 2; March 17, 1877Masthead and pictorial wrappers; 11 x 16ULS: 0.

An upscale, unknown, well-produced weekly, profusely illustratedmiscellany, featuring political satire cover art and centerspread byCharles Kendrick. Published by the American News Company.This is yet another example of a quality publication of this era towhich any academic reference has disappeared.

(S11) AMERICAN BEAUTIES. A MAGAZINE OF STORY-TELLING PICTURES.Philadelphia: V. 1 no. 1; October 1925Pictorial wrappers; 8 x 11ULS: 0.

A profusely illustrated monthly featuring tasteful drawings andphotographs of beautiful women.

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(A682A) AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL.Philadelphia: V. 1 no. 1-12; January - December 1861Octavo

The first volume of the first American periodical devoted to beeculture, edited by Samuel Wagner.

(S12) AMERICAN BOOKSELLER. DEVOTED TO THEINTERESTS OF THE BOOK, STATIONARY,NEWS AND MUSIC TRADES.New York: V. 1 no. 1-12; January 1 - June 15, 1876OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-2, Ja 1 1876-Je 17 1893. Supersedes AmericanBookseller's Guide (1869-75).

A semi-monthly trade journal published by the American NewsCompany, loaded with advertising and publishing news. Subtitlevaries.Mott III: 235; IV: 127.

(S13) AMERICAN CHECKER REVIEW. A SEMI-MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THEINTERESTS OF DRAUGHT PLAYERS.Chicago: V. 1-3 no. 5; May 1, 1888 - June 30, 1890White wrappers; octavoULS: 5. V. 1-6, 1888-Ag 1897.

One of the best of a plethora of checker magazines of this era. Editedby James P. Reed and Charles Hefter.Mott IV: 382.

(S14) AMERICAN CHEMICAL REVIEW: A JOURNAL FOR THE MANUFACTURE OFSPIRIT, BEER, SUGAR, STARCH, VINEGAR, AND FOOD AND DRINK INGENERAL.Chicago: V. 1-2 no. 7; March 1882 - February 1883QuartoULS: 12. V. 1-6 no. 5, Mr 1882-Ap 1887. V. 6 no. 1-2 as Zymotechnic Magazine.

An illustrated monthly edited by J. E. Siebel, devoted principally to the brewing of beer. Pages of advertisingfollow each issue.Mott III: 110.

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(S15) AMERICAN COTTON PLANTER. A MONTHLYSOUTHERN RURAL MAGAZINE, DEVOTED TOIMPROVED PLANTATION ECONOMY, THEADVANCEMENT OF SOUTHERNHORTICULTURE, MANUFACTURES, AND THEDOMESTIC AND MECHANICAL ARTS.Montgomery, Ala: V. 12 no. 9 (nsv. 2 no. 9); September 1858.Yellow wrappers; 7 x 11ULS: 14. V. 1-4, 1853-56; nsv. 1-5 1857-61.

A scarce magazine of the pre-Confederate deep south, reflecting itscultural and economic environment, its slogan being "the Negro, thebale, and the rail". Edited by N. B. Cloud, M. D. and Charles A.Peabody.Mott II: 89.

(S16) AMERICAN CRICKETER. AJOURNAL DEVOTED TO THENOBLE GAME OF CRICKET.Philadelphia: V. 1-7 no. 246; June 28, 1877 -December 25, 1884QuartoULS: 8. V. 1-52 (no. 1-868), 1877-Ap 1929.

Published weekly from May until November andmonthly from November thru May under theauspices of the Cricketers' Association of the United States, D. S. Newhall, president. These volumes belongedto Robt. S. Newhall. This magazine also contains the earliest articles about Tennis in an American periodical.Mott III: 220; IV: 377.

(S17) AMERICAN DRAMATIC REVIEW.New York: V. 1 no. 1; 1891Masthead; 10 1/2 x 14 3/4ULS: 0.

A cheaply produced illustrated review of "important theatricalproductions". This is a "Sample Copy".

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(S18) AMERICAN FARMING.New York and Chicago: V. 1 no. 1; February 1906Photographic wrappers; 9 9/16 x 12 1/4ULS: 20+. After v. 1 no.1 merged into Garden Magazine. In ULS asFarming.

A well-produced agricultural monthly published by Doubleday,Page and Company.

(S19) AMERICAN FORGET-ME-NOT.New York: V. 1 no. 1; January 1888Blue Wrappers; 6 1/4 x 9 1/2ULS: 0. V. 1-4, 1888-92.

One of four cheaply produced literary monthlies started in NewYork in 1888. Edited by John B. Ketchum.Mott IV: 3n.

(320A) AMERICAN GARDENER'S MAGAZINE.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; January 1835Brown wrappers; 5 5/8 x 8 3/4

(S20) AMERICAN HOME JOURNAL.Chicago: V. 1 no. 1; May 1897Pictorial wrappers; 9 3/4 x 13ULS: 3 (none with v. 1). V. 1-11, My 1897-S 1903. After Mr 1898 and inULS as Conkey's Home Journal.

A scarce illustrated monthly, featuring sheet music in each issue, pub-lished by the W.B. Conkey Co.

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(S21) AMERICAN HOROLOGICAL JOURNAL,DEVOTED TO PRACTICAL HOROLOGY.New York: V. 1-2 no. 12; July 1869 - June 1871OctavoULS: 14. V. 1-5 no. 3, Jl 1869-S 1873. Merged into Jewelers’Circular.

Devoted principally to articles about the measurement of time butalso making reference to astrology. Mott emphasizes the latter.Mott III: 113n

(S22) AMERICAN INDIAN.Tulsa, Ok: V. 1 no. 1; October 1926Photographic wrappers; 10 3/8 x 13 1/4ULS: 15. V. 1-5 no. 4, O 1926-Mr 1931.

An illustrated monthly published by the Society of OklahomaIndians devoted to "Oklahoma History - Indian Lore - Current News ofIndian Life".

(A731A) AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; January 1867Orange wrappers; 6 3/8 x 9 1/2

(S23) AMERICAN JOURNAL OF IMPROVEMENTS IN THEUSEFUL ARTS, AND MIRROR OF THE PATENTOFFICE IN THE UNITED STATES.Washington: V. 1 no. 1-4; January, February, March - October,November, December 1828OctavoULS: 19. All published.

A quarterly journal documenting the technology of the time, editedby I. L. Skinner, illustrated with fold-out technical drawings of theinventions.

(S24) AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INSANITY.Utica, N.Y.: V. 1 no. 1; July 1844White wrappers; 5 1/4 x 8 1/4ULS: 20+. Jl 1844+. In ULS and after Ap 1921 as American Journal ofPsychiatry.

An important psychiatric journal, initially a quarterly edited byofficers of the New York State Lunatic Asylum. This copy is anextremely well-produced reproduction of a presentation from thewife of the principal editor to the noted mental health reformer,Dorothea Dix.Mott II: 85.

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(S25) AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PALMISTRY.Chicago: V. 1 no. 1; September 1897Gray pictorial wrappers; 6 3/4 x 10ULS: 0.

An unrecorded monthly illustrated journal of palm-reading,probably issued by the National School of Palmistry. Edited byComte de Saint Germain.

(S26) AMERICAN JOURNAL OF THE MEDICALSCIENCES.Philadelphia: V. 1-2 no. 4; November 1827 - August 1829.OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-26, 1828-1841; nsv. 1, 1841+. Supersedes Philadel-phia Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences.

One of the most important medical journals of the nineteenthcentury. A quarterly established by Dr. Nathaniel Chapman,monthly after 1888. Illustrated with hand-colored engravings.Volume one is the second edition. Volume two is in original boardswith the original paper label.Mott I: 566-68.

(S27) AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY.New York: V. 1 no. 1-12; February 1882 - January 1883OctavoULS: 20+.

An early (if not the earliest) monthly American publication devoted to these areas, edited by T.A. McBride, L.C.Gray and Edward Spitzka. At this time, Neurology and Psychia-try were very closely linked.

THE FIRST AMERICAN LAW JOURNAL

(S28) AMERICAN LAW JOURNAL ANDMISCELLANEOUS REPERTORY.Baltimore: V. 1; 1808OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-6; 1808-17. V. 4-6 also as new series. Supersededby Journal of Jurisprudence (157).

The first law journal published in America. Edited by John E.Hall Esq., who also edited Port Folio (51).Mott I :154.

(S28A) AMERICAN LAW JOURNAL.Baltimore: V. 5; 1814Octavo

This volume is primarily devoted to the legal controversybetween Edward Livingston and Thomas Jefferson. It contains "The Proceedings of the Government of theUnited States in Maintaining the Public Right to the Beach of the Missisipi (sic), adjacent to New-OrleansAgainst the Intrusion of Edward Livingston" prepared and with additional notes by the Author. The three mapsused to illustrate the case are present. This is one of very few original Jefferson appearances in an Americanperiodical. Rare, valuable and important.

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(S29) AMERICAN MAGAZINE.New York: Nsv. 1 (osv. 6) no. 1-6; May - October 1887Octavo, grey cloth publisher's bindingULS: 20+. V. 1-9, O 1884-Ap 1887. V. 1-5 as Brooklyn Magazine.

A well-produced illustrated miscellany in the style of Century and Scribner's. The content is miscellaneous,though with more emphasis on religion. The original series, Brooklyn Magazine, was founded by Edward Bok,who went on to revitalize the Saturday Evening Post, and Frederick L. Colver (this volume is a presentation copyof the manager, Colver). It was moved to New York by Standard Oil's R. T. Bush and was a financial disaster.Mott IV: 44-45.

(299A) AMERICAN MAGAZINE OF USEFUL ANDENTERTAINING KNOWLEDGE.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; September 1834Brown wrappers; 7 7/8 x 11 7/8

The first issue in original wrappers.

(1133A) AMERICAN MERCURY.New York: V. 1 no. 1; January 1924Decorative boards; folio

This being #147 of 200 of a larger size limited edition speciallybound for friends of the editors and publishers. Uncut andunopened. Also, v. 1 no. 1-4, octavo, in publisher's binding.

(S30) AMERICAN MISCELLANY OF ROMANCE,LITERATURE, NEWS, INSTRUCTION ANDAMUSEMENT.Boston: V. 1 no. 1-51; April 8, 1865 - March 24, 1866Masthead; quartoULS: 4. V. 1-6, 1865-71.

A weekly compilation of original and reprinted materialpublished by James H. Brigham & Co. In ULS as American Miscel-lany, A Magazine of Complete Stories.Mott III: 39n.

(S31) AMERICAN MONTHLY.Washington, D.C.: V. 1 no. 1; July 1892White wrappers; 6 1/4 x 10ULS: 20+. Jl 1892+. V. 43- 71 no. 11, Jl 1913-N 1937 and after Je 1946and in ULS as Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine. V.71 no.12-v. 80 no. 6, D 1937-Je 1946 as National Historical Magazine.

The official organ of the National Society of the Daughters of theAmerican Revolution. It was edited between 1917 and 1935 bynovelist Natalie Sumner Lincoln. According to Mott, it ended in 1946.It was more literary than its sister magazine, the Magazine of theDaughters of the American Revolution (1022).Mott IV: 140.

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(129A) AMERICAN MONTHLY MAGAZINE AND CRITICALREVIEW.New York: V. 1 no. 1; May 1817Blue wrappers; 5 1/4 x 8 3/4

Unlike the first issue illustrated in the original edition, the front wrapper ofthis state (likely the second) of this edition features a woodcut of the placeof publication seen on later issues. The advertising on the outer rearwrapper is different and the contents are listed on the inner front wrapper.An interesting variant.

(S32) AMERICAN MOTORIST.Stamford, Ct. and New York; V. 1 no. 1; April 1909Pictorial wrappers; 6 3/4 x 10ULS: 21 (6 with v. 1). V. 1-22 no. 9, Ap 1909-S 1930. Superseded by Holiday(1146).

The official organ of the American Automobile Association, replete withinformative articles, maps and advertising. Rare and important.

TWO SCARCE POE APPEARANCES

(S33) AMERICAN MUSEUM OF LITERATURE AND THEARTS.Baltimore: V. 1 no. 3; November 1838OctavoULS: 22. V. 1-2, S 1838-Je 1839

A scarce monthly edited by Nathan C. Brooks and J. Evans Snodgrass.This issue is notable for the first printings of "The Psyche Zenobia" and"The Scythe of Time" by Edgar Allan Poe.Mott I: 345; Kribbs 64.

THE BILL OF RIGHTS

(22f) AMERICAN MUSEUM, OR UNIVERSAL MAGAZINE.Philadelphia: No. 38; February 1790Green wrappers; 4 7/8 x 8 3/4

This issue contains the supplement with the first and only contempo-rary magazine printing of "Amendments to the Constitution", which inits final form is The Bill of Rights.

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(22g) AMERICAN MUSEUM: OR, ANNUAL REGISTER OF FUGITIVE PIECES ANCIENTAND MODERN.

Philadelphia: V. 1: 1797OctavoULS: 20+. All published

After a hiatus of 4 years, Matthew Carey attempted an annual volume as a direct continuation of his monthly ofthe same title. The effort lasted for only this one volume. Content is quite similar to the prior publication withmiscellaneous content with an emphasis on politics.

(S34) AMERICAN PATRIOT.Newburgh, N.Y.: V. 1 no. 1; December 1898Photographic wrappers; octavoULS: 0.

A well-produced, unrecorded monthly patriotic magazine, illus-trated with photographs. The embossed and gilt cover is particu-larly attractive.

(S35) AMERICAN PENNY MAGAZINE AND FAMILYNEWSPAPER: WITH NUMEROUSILLUSTRATIVE AND ORNAMENTAL WOODENGRAVINGS, FOR THE DIFFUSION OFUSEFUL KNOWLEDGE, AND MORAL ANDRELIGIOUS PRINCIPLES.New York: V. 1 no. 1-52; February 8, 1845 - January 31, 1846OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-6 no. 2; F 8 1845-F 1850. In ULS and after v. 2 asDwight's American Magazine.

A weekly knowledge magazine edited by Theodore Dwight.Mott I: 364-65.

(S36) AMERICAN PROTESTANT.New York: V. 1 no. 1-12; June 1845 - May 1846OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-5 no. 7, Je 1845-D 1849. United with Foreign Evangelical Society Quarterly Paper to formChristian World.

A monthly, published under the direction of the American Protestant Society.

(S37) AMERICAN PUBLISHER.Hartford: V. 1 no. 3: June 1871Masthead; 14 1/4 x 21ULS: 2. V. 1-2, Ap 1871-D 1872.

A newspaper format monthly edited by Orion Clemens. Seven of the issues (unfortunately not this one) containoriginal appearances of the publisher's brother, Mark Twain.BALP: p. 11.

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(473C) AMERICAN REVIEW: A WHIG JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO POLITICS ANDLITERATURE.New York: V. 1 no. 1 (new series); January 1848Gray wrappers; 6 1/4 x 9 1/2

The first issue of the new series of this important organ of the Whig party. It is interesting to note how politicalparties at this time issued their own monthly journals, see Democratic Review.

(S38) AMERICAN RURAL HOME.Rochester, N.Y. : V. 1 no. 1-52; January 7 - December 30, 1871Masthead; folioULS: 8 (2 with volume 1). V. 1-21, 1871-1891.

"A weekly journal devoted in general to the best interests of rural homes everywhere and having as its specialobjects the dissemination of agricultural and horticultural news and knowledge; the educating and refining ofthe home circle; the uplifting and ennobling of the home life. Illustrated with 100 engravings". Conducted byA.A. Hopkins and G.F. Wilcox.

(S39) AMERICAN SOCIALIST. DEVOTED TO ENLARGEMENT AND PERFECTION OFHOME.Oneida, N.Y.: V. 1 no. 1; March 30, 1876Masthead; FolioULS: 15. V. 1-4, Mr 30 1866-D 25 1879. Supersedes Oneida Circular ( 568).

A weekly production of the utopian Oneida Community, " to make a faithful public record of facts relating to theprogress of Socialism". Edited by John H. Noyes.Mott II: 207n; III: 300.

(S40) AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTIONOF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS BULLETIN.New York: V. 1 no. 1-10: November 1909 - November 1910Brown wrappers: octavoULS: 6. V. 1-6 no. 5: N 1909-My 1915

Illustrated with photographs. The annual report of this organiza-tion is much more common and dates from 1866.

(S41) AMERICAN SOLDIER.New York: V. 1 no. 1; July 1893Pictorial wrappers; 10 3/8 x 13 3/8ULS: 0.

An unrecorded, beautifully illustrated monthly devoted to civilwar soldier's benefits and causes of the GAR.

(S42) AMERICAN SPECTATOR.Boston: V. 1- 2 no. 12; August 1886 - July 1888Mathead; large folioULS: 3 (none complete). V. 1-4 no. 5, Ag 1886-F 1891.

A, sparsely illustrated newspaper-sized monthly miscellany "devoted to the interests of the home, edited by R.C.Flower.

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(S43) AMERICAN TEMPERANCE MAGAZINE, AND SONS OF TEMPERANCEOFFERING.New York: V. 1-2 no. 12; January 1, 1851 - May? 1852OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-4 no. 1, Ja 1 1852-Ja 1853. In ULS and after v. 1 as American Temperance Offering and Sons andDaughters of Temperance Gift.

A literary venture edited by S.F. Cary, also containing finelyengraved portraits and biographical sketches of leadingmembers of the society.

(S44) AMERICAN TRACT MAGAZINE.New York: V. 1 no. 1; June 1824OctavoULS: 20+. Superseded by American Messenger (438).

A bimonthly (through O 1827) publication of the AmericanTract Society, illustrated with woodcuts.Albaugh 47.

(40a) AMERICAN UNIVERSAL MAGAZINE.Philadelphia: V. 2 no. 9-14; April 3 - June 13 1797Octavo

The second volume, complete with the six plates called for in Lewis.

(S45) AMERICAN VETERINARY JOURNAL.Boston: V. 1 no. 1-12; September 1851 - August 1852White wrappers; octavoULS: 17. V. 1, S 1851-Ag 1852; nsv. 1-4 no. 3, O 1855-Mr 1859

Probably the first American veterinary journal, illustrated withengravings and edited by G. H. Dadd.

(S46) AMERICAN WHEELMAN.Buffalo, N.Y.: V. 1 no. 1-17; March 5 - June 25, 1892White wrappers in black publisher's binding; quartoULS: 0.

A rare, well-produced weekly bicycle magazine published byD. H. Lewis & Co. It is loaded with well-illustrated advertising.A beautiful and very scarce and valuable repository of earlybicycling material.

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(S47) AMERICAN WHIST PLAYER.Boston; V. 1 no. 1; July 1898Pictorial wrappers; 8 x 11 1/4ULS: 0.

An unrecorded monthly journal of the American Whist Club ofBoston. One article presents the history of Bridge Whist.

(S48) AMERICANA.New York: V. 1 no. 1, (ns)v. 1 no. 1;February 1932, November 1932Pictorial wrappers; 8 3/4 x 12 1/4ULS: 4. V. 1 no. 1-4, F-Jl 1932; nsv. 1-2 no. 1, N 1932-N 1933.

An important, controversial, highly political, profusely illus-trated, monthly satire and humor magazine edited by AlexanderKing. Contributors include e. e. cummings, James Thurber andco-editors Gilbert Seldes and George Grosz.Sloane: pp. 15-16.

PUBLISHED BY FIORELLO LA GUARDIA

(S49) L'AMERICOLO.New York: V. 1 no. 1; November 15, 1925Pictorial wrappers; 9 3/8 x 12 1/2ULS: 2. V. 1-2 no. 48, N 15 1925-O 1926

A scarce weekly Italian language illustrated general interest magazine published by Fiorello H. La Guardia, thefuture Mayor of New York City. A little-known chapter in the illustrious life of "The Little Flower".

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THE "STAR SPANGLED BANNER" IN WRAPPERS

(107I) ANALECTIC MAGAZINE.Philadelphia; V. 5 no. 23; November 1814Yellow wrappers; 5 7/8 x 9 1/8

This is the acknowledged first non-newspaperappearance of F. S. Key's poem set to the music of"Anacreon in Heaven", "Defence of FortMcHenry", later known as "The Star SpangledBanner". Uncommon in the bound volume, veryscarce in original wrappers.Streeter 1070.

THE FIRST AMERICAN LITHOGRAPH

(107J) ANALECTIC MAGAZINE.Philadelphia: V. 14 no. 79; July 1819Brown wrappers; 5 7/8 x 9 1/8

This magazine contains the Bass Otis lithographrecognized as the first published in America. Scarcein wrappers.

(S50) ANNALS OF SCIENCE; BEING ARECORD OF INVENTIONS ANDIMPROVEMENTS IN APPLIEDSCIENCE: INCLUDING THETRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICANASSOCIATION FOR THEADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE.Cleveland: V. 1 no. 1-24;October 15, 1852 - November 15, 1853White wrappers (V. 1 no. 1); 6 5/8 x 10 1/8ULS: 20+. V. 1-2 no. 5, O 15 1852-My 1854.

Published by the Cleveland Academy of NaturalScience. Edited by Hamilton L. Smith, A. M.

(S51) ANTI-TOBACCO GEM ANDTEMPERANCE BRIEF, ILLUSTRATED.Melvin Village, N.H.: V. 1 no. 1; Autumn 1883Masthead; 9 1/8 x 11ULS: 0.

An unrecorded illustrated quarterly conducted byC.H. Shepherd.

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(S52) ANTI-TOBACCO JOURNAL.Fitchburg, Ma: V. 1 no. 1; November 1859Illustrated masthead; OctavoULS: 17. V. 1-2, 1859-64; nsv. 1-2, 1872-73.

An illustrated quarterly with a temperance-like fervor against the use oftobacco, published by George Trask.

(S53) ANTI-TRUST.Philadelphia: V. 1 no. 1; July 1903Pictorial wrappers; 9 1/4 x 12 1/4ULS: 0.

A spectacular, unrecorded illustrated monthly magazine devoted to anti-trust.This particular issue is devoted to the tobacco trust but the prospectusstates it will address all trusts. It is illustrated with satiricalcartoons by "Hy Gage" and L. F. Hart and published by theNational Anti-trust Publishing Company, D. C. Beard (thefuture founder of the Boy Scouts), president. The motto is"Fearless of Any, Honest with All" and there is considerableadvertising for anti-trust tobacco products.

(S54) ANTI-TRUST MAIL ORDER HERALD.Denver, Co.: V. 1 no. 1-2; March-April 1908.Pictorial wrappers; 10 1/4 x 13 3/4ULS: 0.

A well-produced, unrecorded illustrated monthly devoted toanti-trust products, published by Flood's Anti-Trust Groceryand Market. There are pricelists and a lot of advertising. Thisis the Library of Congress copyright copy.

(S55) ANVIL.Moberly, Mo.: V. 1 no. 1; May 1933White wrappers; 8 1/4 x 10 7/8ULS: 14. V. 1-3 (no. 1-13). My 1933-O/N 1935. SupersedesRebel Poet. United with Partisan Review to form PartisanReview and Anvil.

An important radical,leftist magazine, editedby Jack Conroy.Contributions to thisissue include two poemsby Langston Hughes.

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THE FIRST MAGAZINE PUBLISHED IN DELAWARE

(S56) APOLLO: OR, WEEKLYLITERARY MAGAZINE.Wilmington De.: V. 1 no. 1-10, 12-23;February 12 - July 20, 1805Masthead; quartoULS: 1. V. 1 no. 1-35, F 12-O 19(?) 1805.

A very rare weekly literary and humormagazine printed and published by H. Niles.The only other file is at the Library of Congress, which afterissue 23 is fragmentary (see Lewis). The first magazinepublished in Delaware.Kribbs 85.

(S57) APOLLO.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; November 1882Masthead; 9 1/4 x 11 3/4ULS: 0.

An unrecorded 16-page monthly music journal edited by T.D.Tooker.

(S58) AQUATIC MONTHLY, AND NAUTICALREVIEW. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTSOF THE YACHTING AND ROWINGCOMMUNITY.New York: V. 1 no. 1-12; June 1872 - May 1873OctavoULS: 18. V. 1-8, Je 1872-0 1876; nsv. 1-4, Ap 1879-Mr 1881. In ULSand new series as Brentano's Monthly, Devoted to the Interestsof All Pastimes by Field and Water.

Contains news from around the United States relating to yachtingand rowing, racers and racing. It is illustrated with five albumenphotographs and fold-out plans. Edited by A. Peverelly.Mott III: 211.

(98A) ARCHIVES OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE.Philadelphia: V. 1 no 1-4; July 1810 - April 1811Octavo

Edited by James Mease, this volume contains articles primarily ofagricultural interest and is illustrated with one engraving.

(98B) ARCHIVES OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE.Philadelphia: V. 1 no. 1; July 1810.White wrappers; 6 x 9 1

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(S59) ARENA.New York: V. 1 no. 1; December 1928Pictorial wrappers; 8 1/2 x 11 3/4ULS: 0.

A scarce monthly sports magazine published by ArenaPublishing Co. There are articles on Babe Ruth andLou Gehrig. The cover illustration and lead storyfeature Jack Dempsey.

(S60) ARENA QUARTERLY.New York: V. 1 no. 1; June 1900Brown wrappers; 6 1/4 x 9 5/8ULS: 3. All published.

Intended as a quarterly, illustrated with photographs,edited by N.O. Fanning. It appears to be related to theother Arena but is less radical. This issue is devotedlargely to New York City affairs, including a number ofarticles about the subway system.

(S61) ARGOSY. AN ILLUSTRATED MONTHLYMAGAZINE DEVOTED TO LITERARY,SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS INTERESTS.Elmira, N.Y.: V. 1 no. 1; March 1893Brown pictorial wrappers; 6 3/8 x 9 1/2ULS: 0.

An unrecorded illustrated miscellany edited by J.W.Roberts, unrelated to the concurrent fiction pulpmagazine of the same name.

(S62) ARIZONA GRAPHIC.Phoenix, Arizona Territory: V. 1 no. 1, V. 1 no. 28;September 16, 1899, March 24, 1900Blue wrappers (v. 1 no. 1, colors vary); 10 1/2 x 13 3/4ULS: 3. V. 1 no. 1-28, S 16 1899-Mr 24 1900.

A rare, well-produced and very early weekly " illus-trated journal of life in Arizona" edited by Paul Hull.Contains local advertising and articles of local culture,including considerable Native-American content.

(S63) ARK, AND ODD FELLOWS' WESTERNMONTHLY MAGAZINE. A MONTHLYPERIODICAL DEVOTED TO THECAUSE OF ODD FELLOWSHIP.Columbus, Oh.: V. 1-2 no. 12;January 1844 - December 1845OctavoULS: 17 (none with volume 1). V. 1-17, 1844-60.

A non-illustrated fraternal monthly edited by John T. Blain and Alex. E. Glenn. The first volume is not locatedelsewhere.

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(690A) ARMY AND NAVY JOURNAL.New York: V. 1 no. 1; August 29, 1863Quarto

(S64) ART FOLIO.Providence, R.I.: V. 1 no. 1; Spring 1883Brown wrappers; 11 1/4 x 16ULS: 6. V. 1-2 no. 3, Je 1883-Ag 1884.

This is the Worcester edition of this quarterly illustrated miscellanywith an emphasis on art.Mott III: 186.

ILLUSTRATED WITH RARE IMAGES BY J.C.LEYENDECKER AND ROSE O'NEILL

(S65) ART IN DRESS.No place: No number; Fall/Winter 1899Pictorial wrappers; 8 1/4 x 10 1/2ULS: 0.

A very rare semi-annual illustrated humor magazine used as asales vehicle by Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothiers, featuringnumerous early illustrations of J.C. Leyendecker and a poemand illustration by Rose O'Neill Latham, creator of theKewpies. It was distributed by dealers, this one by Gemmill,Burnham & Co. of Hartford, Ct.

(S66) ART JOURNAL.New York: Nsv. 1 no. 1; January 1875Blue wrappers; 10 1/4 x 13 3/8ULS: 20+. Nsv. 1-13, 1875-87.

A monthly new series of the British London Art Journal,published by D. Appleton & Co. Illustrated with fine engrav-ings "with extensive additions devoted to American Art and Americantopics".Mott III: 186.

(425A) ARTIST.New York: V. 1 no. 8; April 1845Blue pictorial wrappers; 6 3/4 x 10 3/4

A lovely, artistic wrapper on the last issue prior to the merger intoLadies' National Magazine, later Peterson's.

(S67) ASPEN. THE MAGAZINE IN A BOX.New York: V. 1 no. 1; 1965Pictorial box: 9 1/4 x 12 /1/2

An avant-garde, highly-collected arts magazine published bi-monthly.Its unique design is of various articles, including a record, laid into aself-contained box. The third issue is particularly desireable andexpensive due to its design by Andy Warhol.

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(S68) ASSEMBLY'S MISSIONARY MAGAZINE: OR EVANGELICAL INTELLIGENCER.Philadelphia: V. 3 no. 1; nsv. 1 no. 1-5, January, July - November 1807OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-3. no. 6; nsv. 1-3, Jl 1807-09. V. 1-2 as General Assembly's Missionary Magazine.

An early Evangelical monthly, illustrated with engravings, which are mostly portraits of ministers.Albaugh 293; Lewis: p. 7.

(S69) ATHENIAN AND LITERARY GAZETTE.Philadelphia: V. 1 no. 1; December 17, 1833Masthead: 9 1/4 x 12 1/2ULS: 0.

An unrecorded weekly literary journal published by Blackwood & Co.. This is a "specimen" number of 16pages, containing reviews, original poetry and reprinted fiction. It was anticipated to have semi-annual volumesand illustration.Not in Kribbs.

(S70) AT HOME AND ABROAD. AN ILLUSTRATED JOURNAL FOR FAMILY READING.New York: V. 1 no. 1; July 4, 1868Masthead; 9 1/4 x 12 3/4ULS: 0.

A weekly illustrated literary miscellany.

(S71) AUTHOR'S JOURNAL.New York: V. 1 no. 1; February 1895Brown wrappers; 9 3/8 x 11 5/8ULS: 3. V. 1-3, F 1895-Jl 1896. Merged into Editor.

A monthly "Devoted to the Interests of Writers".

(S72) BALLOU'S DOLLAR MONTHLY MAGAZINE.Boston: V. 1 no. 1-6; January - June 1855OctavoULS: 20+. V. 1-77, 1841?-Ap 1893. After F 1865 and in ULS as Ballou's Monthly Magazine.

A minor literary monthly edited by Maturin M. Ballou. ULS is probably incorrect in stating it began in 1841.Kribbs: 103; Mott II: 31; III: 39n; IV: 3n.

(S73) BALLOU'S PICTORIAL.Boston: V. 12 no. 23; June 6, 1857Folio

Page 364 contains a portrait of Captain J.W. Watkins signed "W.H". The earliest magazine appearance ofWinslow Homer. History Buff.com lists 266 Magazine engravings in 13 different magazines between 1857 and1881. Actually there are 267 in 14 magazines- see Young Sportsman (S736)! This illustration is not in Beam.

(S74) BALM OF GILEAD AND PRACTICAL UNIVERSALIST.Concord, Manchester, and Nashua, N. H.: V. 1 no. 1-52; July 16, 1842 - July 15, 1843Masthead; FolioULS: 10. V. 1-4, Jl 16 1842-Ag 9 1845.

A Universalist miscellany edited by local preachers. Some of the literary content are very early contributions byMrs. H. B. Stowe.

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(S75) BALTIMORE LITERARY MONUMENT.Baltimore: V. 1 no. 1-5;October 1838 - March 1839 (none issued January 1839)OctavoULS: 19. V. 1-2, O 1838-O 1839

A monthly literary magazine edited by T.S. Arthur. It supersedes theweekly Baltimore Monument. The half-title retains the title BaltimoreMonument.Mott I:381a; Kribbs 105.

(S76) BALTIMORE WEEKLY MAGAZINE.Baltimore: V. 1; April 26, 1800 - May 26, 1801QuartoULS: 11. All published.

A scarce weekly non-illustrated literary miscellany published by JohnB. Colvin. This volume consists of 56 unnumbered issues, containingpredominantly original and selected serial fiction.Mott I: 122; Kribbs 111.

(S77) BASEBALL MAGAZINE.Boston: V. 1- 2 no. 2; May - December 1908OctavoULS: 20+ (2 with volume 1). My 1908+.

The pre-eminent baseball publication of its era. Contains well-illustratedarticles and replete with advertising. V. 1 no. 1 is second edition. Earlyvolumes are scarce. This volume is bound in publisher's green cloth.

(S78) BEAU.New York: V. 1 no. 1-3; October - December 1926Pictorial wrappers; 9 x 12 (v. 1 no. 1)ULS: 2.

A monthly men's magazine edited by Samuel Roth, who alsoat this time edited Two Worlds (1141) and Two WorldsMonthly. "Devoted to the Comforts and Luxuries of Living",it features Art Deco covers, good illustration and miscella-neous articles of interest to upscale gentlemen.

(S79) BEE. AN ILLUSTRATED COMIC WEEKLY.New York: V. 1 no. 3; June 1, 1898Pictorial wrappers; 11 1/2 x 14 1/4ULS: 3. V. 1 no. 1-11, My 16-Ag 2 1898.

A short-lived but scarce and important serio-comic weekly,employing lithographic covers and full-page supplement. Itfocused on satire of Spanish-American War issues. Thissupplement features a satirical image of Joseph Pulitzer. Theowner, editor and principal cartoonist was J.C. Cory.Sloane: pp. 30-31

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(1126A) BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS.New York: V. 2 no. 12; August 1924Pictorial wrappers; 8 1/8 x 11 3/4

The first issue after the change in title from Fruit, Garden and Home(1126).

(S80) BIBELOT. A REPRINT OF POETRY AND PROSEFOR BOOK LOVERS.Portland, Me.: V. 1 no. 1; Ja 1895Gray wrappers; 4 5/8 x 6 1/4ULS: 20+. V. 1-21, Ja 1895-1925.

Thomas Mosher's tasteful, though controversial, monthly anthologyof reprinted poetry and prose, in chap-book format. This issue isdevoted to "Lyrics from William Blake".Mott IV: 424-27.

(S81) BICYCLING WORLD AND ARCHERY FIELD.Boston: V. 1 no. 1-26; November 15, 1879 - October 30, 1880Masthead; quartoULS: 12 (5 with volume 1). V. 1-70, N 15 1879-Ja 26 1915. Title varies.Merged into Motorcycle and Bicycle Illustrated, later AmericanBicyclist and Motorcyclist. In ULS as Bicycling World andMotor-Cycle Review.

A scarce semi-monthly journal of bicycling and "other politeathletics" edited by Charles E. Pratt. Advertising is found at theend of each issue. This volume is in a brown publisher's binding.

AN UNRECORDED HUMOR MONTHLY

(S82) BIFF! A MAGAZINE OF FUN.Dayton, Oh.: V. 1 no. 1; June 1911Pictorial wrappers; 6 x 9ULS: 0.

A well-produced unrecorded monthly illustrated humor magazine,edited and illustrated by M.S. Dunkelberger (a.k.a. Dunk).Not in Sloane.

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(S83) BIRD LORE.New York: V. 1 no. 1; February 1899Photographic wrappers; 6 1/4 x 9 1/4ULS: 20+. F 1899+. In ULS and after 1940 as Audubon Magazine.

This is the true predecessor of the present Audubon Magazine, notthe one of this title (956) which began in 1887. Also, v. 1-6, octavo.Mott IV: 310n.

(S84) BLACK MIRROR. A MAGAZINE DEVOTED TOPAINTING.Chicago: V. 1 no. 1; November 1903Black pictorial wrappers; 4 7/8 x 6 5/8ULS: 7. V. 1-7, N 1903-1912.

A monthly chap-book style "magazine of the colorists", modeled after thestyle of Elbert Hubbard's Philistine, designed to present objective criticalessays of American art. The editor is not identified. A memorial of JamesMcNeil Whistler and mention of such as Mary Cassatt are presented.

(S85) BLUE PENCIL MAGAZINE.New York: V. 1 no. 1; February 1900Red pictorial wrappers; 6 1/8 x 12 5/8ULS: 5. V. 1-2, F 1900-N 1901.

A peculiar, illustrated monthly miscellany issued by the Blue Pencil Club.Among the club's more prominent members was R.F. Outcault, creator ofThe Yellow Kid and Buster Brown.

(S86) BOB TAYLOR'S MAGAZINE.Nashville, Tn.: V. 1 no. 1; April 1905.Pictorial wrappers; 7 x 9 3/4ULS: 20. V. 1-12, Ap 1905-D 1910. AfterJa 1907 and in ULS as Taylor-TrotwoodMagazine. Merged into Watson'sJeffersonian Magazine, Later Watson'sMagazine.

A southern oriented monthly miscel-lany, named after and published by theGovernor of Tennessee.

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(S87) BOHEMIAN.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; December 1900Yellow pictorial wrappers; 5 1/4 x 10 3/8ULS: 9. V. 1-17 no. 6, D 1900-D 1909. Supersedes Future.

A fairly long-running monthly chapbook of illustrated short stories andpoetry.Mott IV: 177n.

(S88) BOOK-LOVER. A MAGAZINE OF BOOK LORE.San Francisco: V. 1 no. 1; Autumn 1899White wrappers; 9 x 12 1/8ULS: 20+. V. 1-5, 1899-Je 1904. Merged into Booklover's Magazine .

A well-produced non-illustrated quarterly conducted by W. E. Price "Beinga Miscellany of Curiously Interesting and generally Unknown Facts aboutthe World's Literature and Literary People; now newly arranged, withIncidental Divertissement, and all very Delightful to Read". An "Edition DeLuxe" of 100 copies is also offered.

(S89) BOSTON PRICE-CURRENT AND MARINEINTELLIGENCER.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; September 7, 1795QuartoULS: 0

A weekly commercial paper printed by J. and J. N. Russell, designed as"the first attempt... to present to the public as perfect a view of theCommercial and Mercantile Concerns of the United States, and ofEurope, as far as relates to our own country". Very possibly, the firstcommercial magazine published in America.

(S90) BOSTON QUARTERLY REVIEW.Boston: V. 1 no. 1-4;January - October 1838Brown wrappers; 6 x 9 1/2(no. 1)ULS: 20+. V. 1-5. Ja 1838-O1842. Merged into UnitedStates Magazine and Demo-cratic Review. In 1844,resumed publication asBrownson's Quarterly Review.

Edited by Orestes AugustusBrownson, it contains many ofthe earliest roots of theTranscendentalist movement.Mott I: 685-91; Kribbs: 136;Gohdes: 38-82; Chielens I: 77-81.

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(528A) BOYS' AND GIRLS' MAGAZINE AND FIRESIDECOMPANION.Boston: V. 1 no. 1; January 1848Brown wrappers; 5 1/2 x 7 7/8

(S91) BRITTAN'S JOURNAL OF SPIRITUAL SCIENCE,LITERATURE, ART AND INSPIRATION.New York: V. 1 no. 1-4; January - October 1873OctavoULS: 5. V. 1-2, Ja 1873-O 1874

A quarterly, illustrated with engraved portraits. One of manyjournals in this era devoted to spiritualism.Mott III: 82n.

(F35A) BROADWAY AND HOLLYWOOD "MOVIES".New York: V. 1 no. 5; November 3, 1930Pictorial wrappers; 8 1/2 x 11ULS: 0.

A seldom encountered illustrated fan magazine.

(S92) BROOKLYN, THE QUEEN OF THE ATLANTIC.Brooklyn: V. 1 no. 1; December 12, 1892Masthead; 11 1/4 x 16ULS: 0.

A rare weekly illustrated miscellany with much content of localinterest. Edited by George A. Coonee. Page headings are, simply,Queen.

(S93) BROOKLYN LEADER.Brooklyn, N.Y.: V. 1 no. 19; July 17, 1880Pictorial wrappers; 13 1/2 x 19 1/2ULS: 0.

An unrecorded, eight-page Republican illustrated weekly. Thecover contains a large, well-accomplished, but unsigned anti-Hancock political cartoon. It may have been published exclusively forthe Campaign of 1888.

(S94) BROOM.Rome, Italy: V. 1 no. 1; November 1921White pictorial wrappers; 9 1/2 x 13ULS: 20+. V. 1-6 no. 1, N 1921- Ja 1924. Not published Mr 1922, Ap-Jl1923.

An important and highly-sought magazine of art and literature edited byHarold Loeb and, initially, also by Alfred Kreymborg. It selected "fromthe continental literature of the present times, the writings of exceptionalquality most adaptable for translation into English". The first issuepublished in America was for August 1923.Hoffman: 101-107; Chielens II: 46-52.

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(S95) BULL.New York: V. 2 no. 3, 5, 7, 8; May, July, September, October 1917Pictorial wrappers; 8 1/2 x 12ULS: 10. V. 1-2 no. 8 Mr. 1916-O 1917.

A scarce, well-produced illustrated political humor magazine. Areflection of one view of the pre-WW1 mood in America. A wonder-ful caricature of Theodore Roosevelt adorns the back cover of theMay issue. The last issue was banned from the mails by the U.S.Post Office due to its blatantly anti-British and isolationist senti-ment.

A SCARCE ARTS AND CRAFTS MONTHLY

(S96) BUNGALOW MAGAZINE. AN ILLUSTRATEDMONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTEDEXCLUSIVELY TO ARTISTIC BUNGALOWHOMES.Seattle, Wa.: V.1 no. 1; August 1912Photographic and pictorial wrappers; 7 5/8 x 10 1/2ULS: 18 (3 with volume 1); V. 1-7 no. 3, Ag 1912 - Mr 1918.

A scarce, beautifully designed monthly edited by D.E. Hooker,containing detailed plans and photographs of homes built in theArts and Crafts style. A blueprint supplement in also included.

(1101A) BUSTER BROWN STOCKING MAGAZINE.New York: June 1906; No numberPictorial wrappers; 5 1/4 x 7 3/4

The cover of this issue of this rare magazine features a beautifulchromolithographic image of R.F. Outcault's Buster Brown and Tige.

(1101B) BUSTER BROWN STOCKING MAGAZINE.New York: January 1906; No numberPictorial wrappers; 5 3/8 x 7 3/4

Another issue of this scarce magazine. This issue is in mint conditionin the original illustrated mailing envelope!

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(S97) BUSY BROWNIESPhiladelphia: V. 1 no. 1; January 5, 1897Pictorial wrappers; 6 3/8 x 9 1/4ULS: 0. V. 1 no. 1-12.

A rare weekly children's magazine featuring PalmerCox's famous Brownies.

According to Cox authority, Wayne Morgan, BusyBrownies was issued first in a series of 12, which camein 32, 16 & 12 page variations. The 32 page versioncame with ads or merchant stamps. The 16 page versioncame with ads, without ads, was offered as a premiumand as a supplement to the Philadelphia Inquirer. A 12page version was both a premium and a give-away as a“set of Palmer Cox Primer”.

A much rarer series called The Picturesque WorldSeries was known to be included in Sunday editions fornewspapers such as the Albany Times Union.

In 1890 Palmer Cox found that the Hubbard Brothersowed him money for the sales of "The Queer People"series. This was a rather handsomely produced series of books (small quarto like the Brownie books) of Cox’sfunny animal material. The Hubbards sought to profit from the new popularity of the Brownies with this series.In an effort to settle with the Hubbards, Cox signed a promissory note allowing the Hubbards to break-up thematerial and make up the money he was owed. What resulted was a series of books which went through a seriesof publishers and became cheap and ugly until long after the turn of the century.

The Hubbards kept some of the work for purposes of advertising. This material is much more interesting for the19th century researcher than the above mentioned books (by reprinters such as Hurst, Conkey, Donohue andothers). This is one of many forms this material took. It seems to have had a retail presence while also beingincluded in newspaper Sunday Supplements. The material is not as rare as eBay sellers suggest. Full sets inpublic collections are rare, however.

THE FIRST SUCCESSFUL PERSONAL COMPUTERMAGAZINE

(S98) BYTE.Peterbourough, N. H.: V. 1 no. 1-6; September 1975Pictorial wrappers; 8 1/4 x 10 3/4S 1975+.

The first of the personal computer magazines, edited by Carl T.Helmers and published by Wayne Green. A scarce and a veryimportant milestone in the history of twentieth-century magazines.An offshoot of an Amateur Radio magazine, 73, the initial print runwas 50,000. Helmers published an earlier journal, ECS, which neverattained a circulation of more than 300. The original brown papermailing sleeve is also present.