Mare Booksellers


Ten around the 10th


We are very excited to debut the first selection of a collection of The Revolution, an influential journal published by Susan B. Anthony. This month we are offering issues from 1868, many of which contain bold, forward thinking writing by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, addressing sexual and physical abuse in marriage, divorce and other subjects often considered taboo in the mid 19th century. A few also contain contributions by Susan B. Anthony. They are being sold individually, since it is a broken run, but we are open to selling them en bloc. We also have many issues from 1869 to 1872 which we are preparing to catalog, and on which we welcome inquiries.


And fear not, we've also included our usual assortment of zines, ephemera etc., for your perusal. (Revolution found at the end of the10, we're making you work for them)


These are brand spanking new, so not yet on our website.

You can make it yours by contacting us via email or phone.

Items subject to prior sale.

Free domestic shipping.

#1 LGBTQ+, Punk, Zines

Pugmire, Wilum et al. Punk Lust #18. Wilum Pugmire, Publisher. Seattle: 1997. Side stapled wraps. 8 ½ by 11 inches. 12 pp. Different colored paper stock throughout. Second to last issue of this self-described “militant homo punk publication,” created in 1981 by Wilum Pugmire. Perhaps better known for his horror writing, Pugmire used this zine to unite LGBTQ+ and punk culture, all tinged with his taste for horror. In this issue Pugmire includes the writing of several authors, offers his own personal reflections, etc. NEAR FINE condition. Very light edgewear. $100.00

#2 Zines, Riot Grrrl, Punk

Hopper, Jessica et al. Hit it Or Quit It. Triple Issue, #s 5, 6, 7. Jessica Hopper, Publisher. Los Angeles: no date, circa 1995. Illustrated wraps. 8 ½ by 7 inches. 56 pp., including covers. Black and white illustrations throughout. Issue numbers 5, 6 , and 7, written in 1994/95, of this sporadically published zine sometimes associated with the riot grrrl movement. Created by Jessica Hopper, an author who has contributed to Punk Planet and various magazines, as well as working as a publicist for a variety of indie and punk bands. Includes pieces on what it’s really like to work at Hooters; spending 64 hours on a Greyhound bus; interviews with Come, Trenchmouth and others. VERY GOOD condition. Minor creasing and curling at the corners. Minor wrinkling. $55.00 

#3 African American, Fraternal Organizations

Stewart, H.A. The Paramount Progressive Order of Moose Promotional Handbill/Flier. Paramount Progressive Order of Moose, Publisher. St. Louis, MO: no date, perhaps circa 1922. Single sheet, 8 ½ by 11 inches. A promotional piece issued by the founder and director of the Paramount Progressive Order of Moose, an African American fraternal organization very similar to the Loyal Order of Moose. The Loyal Order of Moose did not allow African Americans into their organization, so this, and other similar organizations, were founded to serve the needs of African Americans. This piece discusses plans to build a tabernacle to care for the “old and decrepit,” and states it seeks to educate boys and girls, and provides free medical aid to its members, all in an effort to “make our race self supporting.” It is not clear how long the organization lasted, but perhaps into the 1930s. It was subject to a lawsuit brought by the Loyal Order of Moose who declared the Paramount Progressive Order of Moose infringed on their intellectual property, including logo, and it is likely the organization folded after the suit. GOOD condition. Moderate chipping and tearing along the extremities, with minor loss. Minor toning and wrinkling. $300.00

#4 African American Ephemera

Robeson, Paul (performer). The Horace Bushnell Memorial Hall Presents On the Occasion of its First Anniversary Paul Robeson Negro Singer. Wednesday Evening January 14, 1930 (1931?) at 8:15 o’clock. Horace Bushnell Memorial Hall, presumed publisher. Hartford, CT: no date, presumed 1930 (1931?) Side stapled booklet. 8 pp. A program to an event celebrating the first anniversary of the Horace Bushnell Memorial Hall in Hartford, Connecticut, an event that featured Paul Robeson performing a song recital. Some online sources indicate that the hall was built in 1930, with Robeson performing in 1931. The booklet features instructions for those taking private cars, a biography of Paul Robeson, a program for the evening, etc. Paul Robeson was a sports figure, actor and singer, as well as a leading civil rights activist for many years. Due to his perceived support of communism, a 1952 performance in Hartford caused a riot of protesters. GOOD condition. Horizontal fold crease present. Moderate soiling and minor staining. Some wrinkling. $50.00

#5 Native American, Photography

Rau, William H. (photographer). Montana Crow Indian Squaw and Pack Pony Lantern Slide (titled as written). Rau Art Studios, Inc., Publisher. Philadelphia: no date, presumed late 1800s, early 1900s. 4 by 3 ¼ inches. Black and white photo. A lantern slide produced by American photographer William H. Rau. Rau traveled extensively, producing stereo cards and lantern slides of his trips, and depicting events such as presidential inaugurations, the World’s Fair, etc. According to Rau, lantern slides were the most pleasurable form of photography for him. Much of his work is held in the Smithsonian, and his work has been exhibited in several museums. This slide depicts the back of a Native American woman in Montana, presumably from the Crow tribe, riding away from the camera. GOOD condition. Some scuffing, fading and soiling to the glass. $75.00

#6 Native American, Photography

Rau, William H. (photographer). Montana Crow Indian Lantern Slide (titled as written). Rau Art Studios, Inc., Publisher. Philadelphia: no date, presumed late 1800s, early 1900s. 4 by 3 ¼ inches. Black and white photo. A lantern slide produced by American photographer William H. Rau. Rau traveled extensively, producing stereo cards and lantern slides of his trips, and depicting events such as presidential inaugurations, the World’s Fair, etc. According to Rau, lantern slides were the most pleasurable form of photography for him. Much of his work is held in the Smithsonian, and his work has been exhibited in several museums. This slide depicts a Native American in Montana, presumably from the Crow tribe, wrapped in a blanket. GOOD condition. Paper label with title MISSING a portion, resulting in some loss of explanatory text. Some scuffing, fading and soiling to the glass. $75.00

#7 World's Fair, Americana

I Have Seen the Future. Futurama Exhibition Pinbacks, Car 3D style cardboard glasses and 1939 New York’s World Fair Futurama Postcard. No publishers, places or date. All mounted to a thin piece of paper measuring 8 ½ by 11 inches. The Futurama Exhibit at the 1939 World’s Fair was created by Norman Bel Geddes and sponsored by General Motors, and consisted of a moving ride that toured various concepts of the future as envisioned by Geddes. 30,000 people a day lined up to tour the exhibit, one that focused on the automobile and highways as ushering in a utopian society. The items here include two of the same pinback, reading “I have seen the future,” with a note on the reverse about touring the exhibit. The 3D style glasses are made in the shaped of the front of a futuristic looking car. The postcard depicts part of a color model featured in the exhibit. Pinbacks in VERY GOOD condition with light wear. Glasses and postcard mounted to the paper, thus GOOD only, although each only has minor wear. Some writing apparent on the reverse of the postcard. Mounting paper rather worn, with two ripped hole punches along the left edge. $55.00

#8 Zines, Pop Culture, Consumerism

Tosches, Nick et al. Slant. Issue Nine. Spring, 1997. Urban Outfitters. Philadelphia, PA: 1997. Large format tabloid newspaper. 32 pp. Color art throughout. Last issue of this newspaper style work that sought to adopt a zine style look. Created by the retail clothing store, Urban Outfitters, the paper embraced an anti-consumerism consumerism tone, using the trendy 1990s jaded/ironic worldview to subtly scorn everything, while branding itself as alternative to the mainstream (as alternative as a multinational corporation can be). The zine/paper used noted comic artists and graphic designers for much of the work. This issue with a piece by Nick Tosches, among others. Art by Ward Sutton, etc. GOOD condition. Horizontal and vertical fold creases present, with some tearing at the intersection of the folds. General toning. Minor soiling. Minor chipping and tearing along the edges. $60.00

#9 Pinbacks, Pop Culture, Women's Studies

Five Pinbacks featuring Female Performers, circa 1890s (only 3 pictured). Includes Sadie Martinot, Mrs. Kendal, Theresa Vaughan, Tennye Poole and Louise Montague. Sweet Caporal Cigarettes, Producer. No place or dates, presumed early to mid 1890s. Celluloid style faces, with solid metal backs imprinted with Caporal Cigarettes advertising copy. Stickpin style backs, although the Tennye Poole pin is missing the stickpin. Three with metal rims around the face, two without. All measure approximately 7/8 inches in diameter and feature a portrait photo of the performer. All the performers were either singers or actors or both, being at the top of American pop culture in the 1890s. Pinbacks in GOOD condition, with uneven moderate toning and fading. Some with minor soiling and/or foxing to the faces. The imprints on the reverse of all are very worn and barely legible. (will sell individually too) $125.00

#10 Pinbacks, Pop Culture, Women's Studies

Anna Held, Come Play With Me Pinback. Whitehead and Hoag, Producer. Newark, NJ: circa 1896 based on patent date on the reverse. Celluloid pinback with paper back. Stickpin style back. Approximately 7/8 inches in diameter. Paper on the reverse reads, “F. Ziegfeld, Jr., Mgr Anna Held." A pinback promoting Polish-French actress and singer Anna Held. Working in Europe, Held was “discovered” by Florenzo Ziegfeld in London in 1896, and was persuaded by him to return to New York with him. Ziegfeld, a master promoter and user of media, fed American papers semi-lurid or exotic tales of Held, creating a public sensation before she even arrived. From 1896 to 1910 she was one of Broadway’s most popular actors. Held and Ziegfeld were common law spouses, until Ziegfeld began an affair in 1909 with another actress and married yet another performer in 1914. GOOD condition. Image of Held very toned and faded, with the words barely visible on the face. $55.00

The Revolution

1a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony Susan B.; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. July 9, 1868. Vol. II. No. 1. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp.


Early issue of the Revolution, a groundbreaking and influential newspaper produced by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and Parker Pillsbury. The paper was established to provide a voice to activists and suffragists such as Stanton and Anthony, whose voices were marginalized by the mainstream press, as well as many abolitionist publications with whom they had been previously allied. Anthony and Stanton advocated for an amendment giving suffrage to women, along with the amendment sponsored by abolitionists that would give Black men the right to vote. Many abolitionists actively discouraged Stanton and Anthony from pursuing their amendment until the amendment enfranchising Black men passed, creating a rift in the abolitionist movement, as well as the women’s suffrage movement. Feeling betrayed by abolitionists and Republicans who initially supported them, they established the Revolution with financial help from George Francis Train, a Democrat who supported women’s rights, but was openly racist. As the name indicates, The Revolution adopted a combative, radical tone, with Stanton and others unafraid to take on critics. The paper openly discussed sexual and physical abuse in marriage, and advocated better divorce laws that would offer women a way to escape abusive marriages. In 1869, the paper broke with Train, who had supplied very little of the funding he initially offered. It published until 1872, struggling to make expenses along the way.


This issue publishes an address by Susan B. Anthony at Tammany Hall; several articles by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, including one on the Workingmen’s Convention; a response to a letter from a subscriber complaining about the cost per issue, where the paper points out the flaw in the writer’s mathematics, etc. POOR/FAIR condition. Front and rear page DETACHED from the rest. Heavy toning, moderate soiling and some staining to the front page. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $300.00


2a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony Susan B.; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. July 16, 1868. Vol. II. No. 2. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with several articles written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, including a lambasting of the Democratic Party, with another piece not treating Republicans kindly either. She also discusses the Peoples Party, etc. A short piece by Susan B. Anthony present, addressing the beginning of volume 2 of the Revolution. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. Front and rear leaf separating from the rest of the piece, but still intact. $400.00


3a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony Susan B.; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. July 23, 1868. Vol. II. No. 3. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy article written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on US prisons and prison reform. Many shorter, anonymous articles on suffrage, labor and other topics present, as well as a brilliant and scathing retort against the Warrick Indiana Herald, which while reviewing the Revolution, calls “women’s suffrage an absurdity and an evil.” GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $250.00


4a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony Susan B.; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. August 13, 1868. Vol. II. No. 6. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy article written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton providing “editorial correspondence,” on politics, Democrats and Republicans, etc. Many shorter, anonymous articles on suffrage, labor and other topics present.” GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. Front and rear leaf separating from the rest of the piece, but still intact and tenuously holding on. $250.00


5a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony Susan B.; Kirk, Eleanor; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. August 27, 1868. Vol. II. No. 8. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy article written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton providing “editorial correspondence,” discussing mostly a visit with Anson Lapham and a trip in upstate New York. Many shorter, anonymous articles on suffrage, labor and other topics present.” Eleanor Kirk discusses at length, “the Marriage Question Again.” Two longer pieces present, one on the 14th amendment, written by someone with the initials W.F.C. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $250.00


6a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. September 3, 1868. Vol. II. No. 9. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy article written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on women’s suffrage in Texas, as well as a shorter piece asking, “What is a Democrat?” Two short pieces on the front page look at a new suffrage movement in Boston regarding 18 year old boys, and woman suffrage in Michigan. An anonymous piece discusses “Indian Troubles in Kansas,” describing attacks on white settlers by various tribes in the region. The author asserts that the Native American image as described by Longfellow, (peaceful) is wrong and asserting that “murder and plunder are their ruling spirit.” GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. Front and rear page tenuously attached along the spine. $300.00




7a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. September 10, 1868. Vol. II. No. 10. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy column written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on her travels in the US, spanning almost two pages. Very small paragraph by Susan B. Anthony present soliciting 6 to 8 women for potential employment. A few pieces discuss voting rights for Black men. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. Small hole in the upper front page. $300.00


8a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. September 17, 1868. Vol. II. No. 11. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy column written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on her travels in the US, spanning almost two pages. Another piece by Stanton discusses the upcoming presidential election and the potential affiliation of the Revolution with the Democrats. Three small paragraphs by Susan B. Anthony, one on the National Unitarian Convention, the National Workingmen’s Congress, and one soliciting more subscribers. A few pieces discuss voting rights for Black men. GOOD condition. Small piece torn from the upper edge of one leaf, and another from the bottom corner of the last leaf. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $300.00


9a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. September 24, 1868. Vol. II. No. 12. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy column (editorial correspondence) written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on her travels in the US, spanning almost two pages. Another piece by Stanton discusses on “Miss Becker and the Difference of the Sexes.” A lengthy piece prints a meeting/public event by the Women’s Council in Mount Vernon, New York, that brought together women taxpayers. This prints the discussion between Susan B. Anthony and others. GOOD condition. Small piece torn from the upper edge of one leaf, and another from the bottom corner of the last leaf. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $400.00


10a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. October 1, 1868. Vol. II. No. 13. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy column (editorial correspondence) written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on her travels in the US, spanning almost two pages. Other pieces by Stanton discuss “National Labor Congress;” “Frank Blair on Woman’s Suffrage;” and “Adah Isaacs Menken.” Two lengthy pieces print quotes, speaking from two meetings of the Workingwoman’s (Workingwomen’s) Association, printing the discussion between Susan B. Anthony and others. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $400.00


11a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. October 15, 1868. Vol. II. No. 15. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy profile of Anna Elizabeth Dickinson written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton as well as an essay on marriage and mistresses that questions legal rulings favoring men in marriage over women. Also present is an essay by actor and writer Olive Logan, titled “U.S”. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. Small tear affecting the title at the top of the first page, appearing to have happened during the printing. $300.00


12a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Pillsbury, Parker et al. The Revolution. October 22, 1868. Vol. II. No. 16. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a continuation of a lengthy profile of Anna Elizabeth Dickinson written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton as well as an essay on marriage and divorce that highlights domestic violence and abuse faced by many women in marriage, and the little recourse they had to escape it. Also present is an essay a convention of African Americans in Utica, including a printing of a letter written by Susan B. Anthony written to the convention. Another short paragraph by Anthony introduces a new lecturer. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $350.00


13a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, et al. The Revolution. November 12, 1868. Vol. II. No. 19. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a piece, “The Dignity of the Ballot,” and an account of the Boston Woman’s Suffrage Convention, both written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. Small crease to the lower front page corner. $300.00


14a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, et al. The Revolution. November 19, 1868. Vol. II. No. 20. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a front page “Appeal for Equal Suffrage,” undersigned by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Abby Hopper Gibbons, Mrs. Horace Greeley, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Smith Miller. With two pieces, “Hester Vaughan” and "Our Children at School,” both written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. GOOD condition. Front page separating from the spine, somewhat tenuously attached. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. Minor staining to the front cover. $300.00


15a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, et al. The Revolution. November 26, 1868. Vol. II. No. 21. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy request for continued support for “The Revolution,” especially financial, undersigned by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. With another piece, “Bread and Babies,” being a harshly satirical piece, mocking men afraid of women voting, by hypothesizing women as incapable of raising children, written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $300.00


16a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, et al. The Revolution. December 3, 1868. Vol. II. No. 22. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy piece on Hon. Henry Wilson, being harshly critical and mocking, written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. GOOD condition. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $300.00


17a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, et al. The Revolution. December 10, 1868. Vol. II. No. 23. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a lengthy column (editorial correspondence) written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton wherein she discusses her time in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania, as well as the case of Hester Vaughn. There are two other lengthy articles on Hester Vaughn, one written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Vaughan was tried and convicted of murdering her newborn baby, to which she gave birth alone. The circumstances around the birth and death the child were murky, and she was sentenced to death by an all male jury. The Revolution took up her case, seeking her pardon, and inferred she was raped. Stanton and Anthony attracted a lot of publicity to the case. Vaughn was eventually pardoned by the governor of Pennsylvania and sent back to England. The cause proved a bit divisive for Stanton and Anthony and the Revolution, with modern historians asserting it helped to set back their work for women’s suffrage. FAIR condition. Front leaf DETACHED, with the binding a bit fragile. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $300.00


18a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, et al. The Revolution. December 24, 1868. Vol. II. No. 25. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This with a lengthy editorial by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on a proposed amendment for manhood suffrage, harshly criticizing the amendment. FAIR condition. Front and rear leaf very tenuously attached, with the binding a bit fragile. Front leaf being held on by a torn small section of margin. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $200.00


19a. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, et al. The Revolution. December 31, 1868. Vol. II. No. 26. Susan B. Anthony, Proprietor; R.J. Johnson, Publisher. New York: 1868. Side sewn journal. Approximately 12 ¼ by 9 inches. 16 pp. This issue with a continuation of a lengthy profile of Anna Elizabeth Dickinson written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, as well as five shorter pieces by her: “The Old Year Gone,” “Roll up the Petitions,” “Henry Ward Beecher,” “Henry James on Woman,” and “Hearth and Home.” A short column by Susan B. Anthony is present, thanking their helpers. Also of note is a report on the Working Women’s Association, by Sarah Norton, in which she reports in detail on the work of rag pickers in New York City. GOOD condition. Rear leaf very tenuously attached, with the binding a bit fragile. Rear leaf also rather toned. Several fold creases present, with other general wrinkling. Minor toning and scattered soiling in the interior. $350.00

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