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The Lady in the Car (Japanese B2 Poster for the 1970 film)

The Lady in the Car (Japanese B2 Poster for the 1970 film) by Anatole Litvak (director); Sebastien Japrisot (novel); Samantha Eggar, Oliver Reed (starring)

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $10.00
Details
$275.00
( US$)
Seller: Royal Books
Title
The Lady in the Car (Japanese B2 Poster for the 1970 film)
Author
Anatole Litvak (director); Sebastien Japrisot (novel); Samantha Eggar, Oliver Reed (starring)
Seller
Royal Books (United States)
Description
Culver City, CA: Columbia Pictures, 1970. Japanese B2 poster for the obscure 1970 puzzle thriller, director Anatole Litvak's final directorial effort. A striking, muscular, and jazzy design. Ad agency secretary Eggar decides to take the awesome muscle car belonging to her boss on a weekend spree rather than parking it in the lot after dropping him at the airport. She soon finds herself recognized in places where she has never been, makes love to a hippie, lets the car become stolen property, and discovers erotic nude photos of herself in the apartment of a strange man she has never met. 20 x 28.5 inches. Unfolded, but with some small chips and shallow creasing at the extremities, Very Good plus overall.
[PROGRAM] The Gardeners' Club... Annual Chrysanthemum Show

[PROGRAM] The Gardeners' Club... Annual Chrysanthemum Show by Seidewitz, Edwin A.

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $4.00
Details
$150.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: lizzyoung bookseller
Title
[PROGRAM] The Gardeners' Club... Annual Chrysanthemum Show
Author
Seidewitz, Edwin A.
Seller
lizzyoung bookseller (United States)
Condition
Illustrated wraps. Good
Description
Baltimore: Thos. J Sheubrooks, 1896. Staplebound. Illustrated wraps. Good. 30 pages. 22 x 14 cm. Featuring illustrated local Baltimore advertising throughout. Introduction by Mr. Seidewitz, followed by six days of concerts by the 5th Regiment Orchestra, with Charles Weber - Musical Director. Rules of Governing the competition, award amounts and a full page listing the Patrons and Patronesses of the show. Covers rubbed at edges and lightly toned. Mr. Seidewitz was one of the foremost florists in Maryland, ex-Mayor of Annapolis (1899-1901), former president of the Rotary Club and the President of the Baltimore Florists' Exchange. This Exchange was said to be the first organization in America dedicated to the exchange of trees, plants, flowers, and seeds in addition to the general sharing of horticultural knowledge among horticulturists and tradesmen who bought and sold flowers. Oddly enough, after Mr. Seidewitz was successful in ushering this Exchange into fruition, even propelling the construction of a new building to house this mutual florists' association, Mr. Seidewitz became a cruel victim of bullying by Baltimore Society during the first World War. According to the book The Illusion of Victory: America in W.W.I by Thomas J. Fleming, "shortly after war was declared, the florist met some officers from several German ships that had been trapped in Baltimore's harbor since 1914. They were in a gloomy mood, lamenting their long separation from friends and family and the prospect of internment as enemy aliens until the war ended. Seidewitz bought them beer, and they drank together. Touched by their plight, the florist kissed one of them on the forehead in an attempt to comfort the man. Word soon swept Baltimore that Seidewitz had 'kissed a German.' His floral business collapsed. He was expelled from the Rotary Club, after directors refused to let him speak to the members in his own defense." On August 24, 1918 Seidewitz committed suicide by revolver while his family was downstairs in their home on Old Pimlico Road.