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President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in Accordance with Article II of the U.S. Constitution, Formally Seeks the “Advice and Consent” of the Senate to an International Treaty

President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in Accordance with Article II of the U.S. Constitution, Formally Seeks the “Advice and Consent” of the Senate to an International Treaty by Franklin D. Roosevelt

3 to 5 days for delivery
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$9,000.00
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Seller: The Raab Collection
Title
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in Accordance with Article II of the U.S. Constitution, Formally Seeks the “Advice and Consent” of the Senate to an International Treaty
Author
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Seller
The Raab Collection (United States)
Description
27/01/1939. “To the end that I may receive the advice and consent of the Senate to ratification of the revised regulations, I transmit herewith a certified copy of the revision of the General Radio Regulations annexed to the International Telecommunications Convention…” A rare letter of any president to the U.S. Senate, and the first seeking the Constitutionally required “Advice and Consent” that we have ever seenThe International Radiocommunication Conference was the first of the administrative radiocommunications conferences. It dealt with telegraph as well as telephone issues and was held simultaneously with the Administrative Telegraph and Telephone Conference in Cairo in 1938, under the banner of the International Telecommunication Conferences. The Telegraph Consultative Committee (CCIT) was reorganized and would function similarly to the Telephone Consultative Committee (CCIF). The CCIT would, from now on, be charged with the study of rate questions submitted to it by a plenipotentiary or administrative conference.The unification of code and plain language rates for telegrams within the European regime was adopted. The new fixed rate for coded telegrams was changed to 92% of the existing rate of plain language telegrams. The Telephone Regulations were modified to include the establishment of “reversed-call charges” and “urgent aircraft calls.” Urgent aircraft calls would be given priority over all other types of calls except urgent government calls.Participants agreed to use English as a supplementary language in conferences and meetings. The United States offered translating services for both of the conferences and compiled unofficial English translations. A vote determined that the Bureau would be responsible for future translations. A committee was created to resolve issues related to voting and to establish a recommendation for the next conference. A report was compiled and was approved for future voting at conferences.The increased demand and need for frequencies on intercontinental air routes was recognized. It was also decided that higher technical standards for transmitters through improved tolerance and band tables would be established. Limits were placed on the use of spark sets and maritime use was restricted to three frequencies. In addition, modifications were made to the regulations of the Maritime Mobile Service.The Radio Consultative Committee (CCIR) was reorganized. It would now be charged with the study of both technical and operations questions. Interval meetings would be held every three years.Changes were made to the Additional Radio Regulations with the establishment of a maximum charge of 20 centimes for radiotelegrams in the aeronautical service and the adoption of detailed regulations for new radio maritime letters.The Final Protocol to the General Radio Regulations was adopted and the agreement was ready to be ratified by the nations involved.A treaty is a binding agreement between nation-states that forms the basis for international law. Thus the agreement that resulted from this Conference was a form of treaty, and treaties signed by the United States must be ratified by the U.S. Senate to become law. Article II of the United States Constitution provides that the president ""shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two-thirds of the Senators present concur.” President Roosevelt formally sought the Advice and Consent of the Senate to the Conference agreement.Typed letter signed, The White House, Washington, January 27, 1939, “TO THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES”. “To the end that I may receive the advice and consent of the Senate to ratification of the revised regulations, I transmit herewith a certified copy of the revision of the General Radio Regulations annexed to the International Telecommunications Convention, signed at Madrid on December 9, 1932, adopted on April 8, 1938 by the International Telecommunication Conferences which convened at Cairo, Egypt, on February 1, 1938 to revise these regulations as well as the Additional Radio Regulations and the telephone and telegraph regulations also annexed to the Madrid Convention but which were not signed for the United States.Accompanying these revised general radio regulations is a certified copy of the Final Protocol to the General Radio Regulations, in which reservations thereto made by certain governments are recorded. The attention of the Senate is invited to the accompanying Report by the Secretary of State and to the Report of the Chairman of the Delegation to the Cairo Conference relating to the General Radio Regulations.”Letters of presidents to Congress are rarities.
POEMS

POEMS by (BINDINGS - ZAEHNSDORF). WILDE, OSCAR

2 to 7 days for delivery
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$6,760.00
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Seller: Phillip J. Pirages Fine Books and Medieval Manuscripts
Title
POEMS
Author
(BINDINGS - ZAEHNSDORF). WILDE, OSCAR
Seller
Phillip J. Pirages Fine Books and Medieval Manuscripts (United States)
Description
London: David Bogue, 1881. FIRST EDITION, First Issue. 192 x 126 mm. (7 1/2 x 5"). ix, [1], 236, [1] pp. EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE CRIMSON MOROCCO, INTRICATELY GILT, BY ZAEHNSDORF (stamp-signed and dated 1909 on front turn-in), covers framed in gilt, with delicate pointillé cornerpieces surrounding inlaid green morocco drawer handles and oblique floral tools, raised bands, spine panels densely gilt in the pointillé style of Bozerian, with stems of flowers radiating from pairs of inlaid green drawer handles, turn-ins gilt-ruled, red silk endleaves, top edge gilt, other edges untrimmed. Original (slightly soiled) gilt limp vellum binding bound in at rear. Mason 304. A few trivial spots internally, but A VERY FINE COPY--the leaves fresh, clean, and wide-margined, and the binding lustrous and virtually unworn. This is a finely bound copy of the first edition of Wilde's first book of poetry, and his first substantial work of any kind. The collection is made up of 61 poems, 31 of which appear here for the first time. Many reflect Wilde's delight in his visit to the art towns of Italy; other poems, such as the tender "Resquiescat," written in memory of Wilde's sister Isola, who had died at the age of eight, show a more personal emotional sentiment. According to Mason, "the first printing (June 1881) consisted of 750 copies, of which only 250 copies were used for the first edition, the remaining 500 being equally divided between the second and third editions." Wilde himself oversaw the layout and design of the book, choosing the handmade Dutch paper on which it is printed, and the design of prunus blossoms on the vellum binding, here bound in at the rear. The only published books by Wilde to appear before the present work were his student poem "Ravenna," which was named the "Newdigate Prize Poem" at Oxford for 1878 (issued in wrappers), and his drama "Vera; or, the Nihilists," printed in 1880, of which Mason had knowledge of only two copies. Our attractive binding is a fine example of the work of the Zaehnsdorf firm, long a top-ranked English bindery. Born in Pest, Hungary, Joseph Zaehnsdorf (1816-86) served his apprenticeship in Stuttgart, worked at a number of European locations as a journeyman, and then settled in London, where he was hired first by Westley and then by Mackenzie before opening his own workshop in 1842. His son and namesake took over the business at age 33, when the senior Joseph died, and the firm flourished under the son's leadership, becoming a leading West End bindery. Over the years, Zaehnsdorf employed a considerable number of distinguished binders, including the Frenchman Louis Genth (who was chief finisher from 1859-84), and trained a number of others, including Roger de Coverly and Sarah Prideaux. A family-run business until 1947, the Zaehnsdorf bindery continued to produce consistently attractive and innovative designs executed with unfailing skill..
Chace, The Turf, and the Road, The

Chace, The Turf, and the Road, The by ALKEN, Henry; NIMROD; APPERLEY, Charles J.

7 to 14 days for delivery
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$950.00
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Seller: David Brass Rare Books, Inc.
Title
Chace, The Turf, and the Road, The
Author
ALKEN, Henry; NIMROD; APPERLEY, Charles J.
Seller
David Brass Rare Books, Inc. (United States)
Description
London: John Murray, 1837. Alken Off To The Races With Apperley In The Saddle First Edition [ALKEN, Henry, illustrator]. NIMROD (pseud. of Charles J. Apperley). The Chace, The Turf, and the Road. With Illustrations by Henry Alken, and a Portrait by D. Maclise. London: John Murray, 1837. First edition in book form, originally serially published in the Quarterly Review. Octavo (8 3/4 x 5 3/8 in; 223 x 135 mm). xx, 301, [1, printer's slug], [18, publisher's catalogs] pp. Thirteen hand-colored plates, some in aquatint, with tissue guards, and plain, stipple-engraved portrait frontispiece. Publisher's original pictorial green cloth with gilt vignette and borders blocked in blind, expertly recased. Gilt decorated spine. Spine very slightly faded, still an excellent copy. Housed in a later green cloth clamshell case. Charles James Apperley (1777-1843), English sportsman and sporting writer, better known as Nimrod, the pseudonym under which he published his works on the chase and on the turf. A devoted fox-hunter, around 1821 Apperley began to contribute a series of articles to The Sporting Magazine, under the pseudonym of "Nimrod," that covered horse races, hunt meets and other sporting events. His references to the personalities of the people he knew or met at such events helped to double the circulation of the magazine within a few years. Mr. Pittman, the proprietor of The Sporting Magazine, gave Nimrod a handsome salary and defrayed all the expenses of his tours. He also gave Nimrod a stud of hunters. After Pittman's death, the proprietors of the magazine sued Apperley for the money that had been advanced. To avoid imprisonment, Apperley moved to Calais in 1830, where he supported himself by writing. Apperley is best known for his two books, The Life of a Sportsman, and Memoirs of the Life of John Mytton, both of which were illustrated with colored engravings by Henry Thomas Alken. Apperley eventually returned to England and died in Upper Belgrave Place, London, on 19 May 1843. The Plates: 1. Preparing to Start. 2. Getting Well Off. 3. The Race - Epsom. 4. The Melton Hunt. 5. Getting Away. 6. A Queerish Place. 7. A Pull Up. 8. The Lane. 9. Whissendine Brook. 10. The Death. 11. It's The Comet, &c. 12. The Regulator. 13. The Quicksilver Mail. Podeschi 152. Siltzer. p. 73. Schwerdt I, p. 36.
Wholphin: DVD Magazine of Rare and Unseen Short Films, No. 7

Wholphin: DVD Magazine of Rare and Unseen Short Films, No. 7

5 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $7.00
Details
$60.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Books Tell You Why, Inc.
Title
Wholphin: DVD Magazine of Rare and Unseen Short Films, No. 7
Seller
Books Tell You Why, Inc. (United States)
ISBN
9781934781128
Condition
As New
Description
As New. 2008. 1934781126 . As New copy, still in original shrinkwrap .