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Houston Telegraph. / Supplemtne [sic] / Houston, March 9th, 1863. / Gen. Hood's Reports. / (Concluded) [caption title in one column, followed by dense text, printed triple-column on both sides of a folio sheet]

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $8.00
Details
$2,250.00
( US$)
Seller: Bartlebys Books
Title
Houston Telegraph. / Supplemtne [sic] / Houston, March 9th, 1863. / Gen. Hood's Reports. / (Concluded) [caption title in one column, followed by dense text, printed triple-column on both sides of a folio sheet]
Seller
Bartlebys Books (United States)
Description
Houston, TX: Houston Telegraph, 1863. Folio broadsheet newspaper supplement, 14 x 9 inches, printed on yellowed Confederate necessity paper, apparently made from corn husks. The text includes two communications from Brigadier General John Bell Hood, one detailing the Confederate victory at the Battle of Gaines' Mill (27 June 1862), and the other giving a lengthy report of his brigade's service in the first Battle of Rappahannock Station (22-25 August 1862), Second Bull Run (28-30 August 1862), and Antietam (17 September 1862). There are also extracts from the Northern press, a full printing of the song "John Brown's Body," and a February, 1863, report from Alexandria, Louisiana, recounting the capture of the Yankee gunboat "Queen of the West," and other events around the Red River fortifications and Vicksburg. Several tiny holes affecting a few letters, but a very good copy of a rare Houston, Texas, Confederate newspaper broadsheet. Folded. (59824). (#7640). According to the "Handbook of Texas": "The [Houston] Telegraph and Texas Register, later variously known as the weekly, tri-weekly, or daily Telegraph, was the earliest newspaper in Texas to achieve a degree of permanence. Begun on October 10, 1835, at San Felipe de Austin … the paper became the official organ of the government of the Republic of Texas organized a few months later." It went through several owners before Edward H. Cushing (1829-1879) became the sole proprietor in the late 1850s. "From 1861 to 1865 the Telegraph encountered the same difficulties as other Confederate papers. Cushing resorted to using wallpaper and wrapping paper. When the Federal forces closed the Mississippi River, Cushing organized a pony express to gather and forward the news, which was issued as rapidly as possible, either in regular or extra editions. So many extras were issued that on February 6, 1864, the 'Daily Telegraph' replaced the 'Tri-Weekly Telegraph.'
c.1845 Chocolate Wrapper

c.1845 Chocolate Wrapper

2 to 8 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $3.00
Details
$65.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Eclectibles
Title
c.1845 Chocolate Wrapper
Seller
Eclectibles (United States)
Condition
Good. Wear, creasing, nicks and minor short tears. Modern tape repair to larger closed tear to verso.
Description
New York, New York: John B. Rey, 1845. Good. Wear, creasing, nicks and minor short tears. Modern tape repair to larger closed tear to verso.. An elegantly designed chocolate wrapper, lithographed in gold on coated black paper, measuring approx. 6.5" by 8". Advertises "Chocolat à la Vanille" produced by John B. Rey of 33 Burling Slip, on the lower shore of Manhattan. Rey also manufactured cordials, syrups, bitters, and sweets of all descriptions.
Custom and Right

Custom and Right by Vinogradoff, Sir Paul

1 to 8 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $11.00
Details
$45.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange Ltd
Title
Custom and Right
Author
Vinogradoff, Sir Paul
Seller
The Lawbook Exchange Ltd (United States)
ISBN
9781584770480
Description
2000. ISBN-13: 9781584770480; ISBN-10: 1584770481. Vinogradoff, Sir Paul. Custom and Right. Oslo: H. Aschehoug, 1925. 110 pp. Reprinted 2000 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. ISBN-13: 9781584770480; ISBN-10: 1584770481. Hardcover. New. $45. * John M. Zane recommends this work, of which he comments "...the facts and ideas that are called legal can be studied with advantage from the same viewpoint as other branches of social phenomena, such as language, religion, folklore, or customs, that are not legal... The first chapter is called Methods of Jurisprudence, showing the manner in which law develops, sometimes in one way, sometimes in another...The next chapter deals with the particular factors of custom and legislation. It examines, without dogmatizing, the difference between the gradual acceptance of law by means of custom and the conscious, purposeful statement of a law by the law-making power. The next chapter takes a particular instance of the family organization as a fertile source of law in different stages. Finally the last chapter, entitled The Right of Appropriation, carries the discussion into the origins of property and the clashing interests of the individual in his freedom to acquire and contract as against the interests of the social organization. It is all in the easy method of a wise man talking, as if lecturing, upon topics, not seeking to exhaust, but to suggest. The book is stimulating. It will bear reading and rereading. Like all good books, it suggests more than it says..." John M. Zane, Yale Law Journal 35:1026-1027. Marke, A Catalogue of the Law Collection of New York University (1953) 929.