I don't need to tell any of you that week in and week out we auction
hundreds of items that sell for low, low prices. But our* current Sunday
items (*235 movie magazines, presskits, glass slides, and German
programs)comprise one of our better Sunday auction to date, and yet
there are lots of
excellent items still at low, low prices!

*IT SEEMS LIKELY THAT THESE "SUNDAY" ITEMS ARE GETTING "LOST IN THE SHUFFLE"
OF THE POST-NEW YEAR'S HANGOVERS, AND THAT MANY BIDDERS ARE STILL OFF WORK
AND NOT WHERE THEY USUALLY BID. IF YOU LIKE GETTING COOL ITEMS AT GREAT
PRICES, WHY NOT MAKE A NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION TO START CHECKING OUT OUR
SUNDAY ITEMS EVERY SINGLE SUNDAY?*

If you have the slightest interest in these sizes, I *STRONGLY* urge you to
check out the Sunday items closing in just 8 hours, even if just to "window
shop", because they include *LOTS* of really great ones (and you are certain
to have never seen many of them before!).

How great are the current values? Well, these are ending in just eight
hours, and they include 35 that are still at $1 each, 111 at $3 each or
under, and 159 at $7 each or under! And there are lots of great items in
these "bottom 159" items!

Look at these examples (and these are truly just a tiny handful our of many,
many,* MANY* incredible bargains):

*SCREEN ROMANCES magazine November 1946, Tyrone Power & Gene Tierney in The
Razor's Edge!* very good to fine, currently *SEVEN DOLLARS**!**
9h205 O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU? presskit '00 Coen Brothers, George Clooney,
John Turturro *very good to fine, currently *SIX DOLLARS** (AND IT INCLUDES
TWO SUPPLEMENTS, NINE STILLS, 5 35mm SLIDES, AND THE COLOR FOLDER!)*
*THOUSAND & ONE NIGHTS German program '50 Keyes, Wilde, Rex Ingram as the
Genie, different! *"very good to fine" condition, currently *SIX DOLLARS!*
*SERVANTS' ENTRANCE glass slide '34 Janet Gaynor, Lew Ayres, written by
Samson Raphaelson *"very good to fine" condition, currently *FIVE DOLLARS!*
*MOVIE MIRROR magazine April 1934, Joan Blondell in raincoat with umbrella
by Mila Baine *"very good" condition, currently *SEVEN DOLLARS!
***

Of course, once you get *OVER* $7, you start hitting lots and lots of
"better" titles, but an awful lot of those are currently at
*VERY*reasonable prices, far under what some of them have sold for in
the past
(the ones we can find any record of selling in the past!) including:
9h088 HIGH SIERRA glass slide '41 Humphrey Bogart as Mad Dog Killer Roy
Earle, sexy Ida Lupino!
9h001 MOVIE MIRROR magazine January 1934, wonderful art portrait of sexy
Jean Harlow!
9h014 SCREEN LIFE magazine February 1941, great art of Judy Garland by
McGowan Miller!
9h015 SCREEN LIFE magazine March 1941, wonderful cartoon art of Clark Gable
by McGowan Miller!
9h097 MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM glass slide '35 Shakespeare, cool completely
different sexy artwork!
9h115 THIS GUN FOR HIRE glass slide '42 great c/u of Alan Ladd holding
unconscious Veronica Lake!
9h011 MOVIE MIRROR magazine November 1934, really cool art of Katharine
Hepburn by Alice Mozert!
9h018 SCREEN LIFE magazine July 1941, wonderful cartoon art of Mickey Rooney
by McGowan Miller!
9h016 SCREEN LIFE magazine May 1941, wonderful art of Cary Grant with pipe
by McGowan Miller!
9h064 SCREENLAND magazine May 1948, Judy Garland & Gene Kelly starring in
The Pirate!
9h020 SCREEN LIFE magazine September 1941, wonderful art of skater Sonja
Henie by McGowan Miller!
9h086 GRACIE ALLEN MURDER CASE glass slide '39 her as detective + Warren
William as Philo Vance!
9h003 MOVIE MIRROR magazine March 1934, wonderful art of sexy Mae West by
M.P. McNary!
9h114 TARZAN TRIUMPHS glass slide '43 art of Johnny Weismuller & sexy
Frances Gifford as Zandra!
9h069 SCREENLAND magazine October 1948, sexy Rita Hayworth close up smiling
with rose!
9h044 MOTION PICTURE magazine September 1944, Katharine Hepburn in Asian
makeup in Dragon Seed!
9h017 SCREEN LIFE magazine June 1941, wonderful cartoon art of Ginger Rogers
by McGowan Miller!
9h068 SCREENLAND magazine September 1948, Humphrey Bogart & Lauren Bacall
starring in Key Largo!
9h012 MOVIE MIRROR magazine December 1934, cool art of Shirley Temple
w/Santa hat by Alice Mozert!
9h093 LADY TAKES A CHANCE B glass slide '43 Jean Arthur moves west & falls
in love w/John Wayne!
9h079 ESCAPADE glass slide '35 cool image of William Powell, Luise Rainer &
Virginia Bruce!
9h103 SAINT IN LONDON glass slide '39 George Sanders in the title role, cool
image!
9h077 CAUGHT IN THE DRAFT glass slide '41 Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Lynne
Overman, Eddie Bracken
9h181 UNINVITED German program '50 Ray Milland, Ruth Hussey, Gail Russell,
different images!
9h078 DIXIE glass slide '43 Bing Crosby, sexy Dorothy Lamour, Marjorie
Reynolds, cast montage!
9h185 WUTHERING HEIGHTS German program '50 Laurence Olivier is torn with
desire for Merle Oberon!
9h117 TOMBSTONE THE TOWN TOO TOUGH TO DIE glass slide '42 Richard Dix, sexy
Frances Gifford!
9h100 PUBLIC MENACE glass slide '35 Jean Arthur, George Murphy, Douglass
Dumbrille
9h038 MOTION PICTURE magazine March 1944, portrait of Ginger Rogers with
hands in pockets!
9h110 SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS glass slide '41 sexiest Veronica Lake, Joel McCrea,
Preston Sturges
9h045 MOTION PICTURE magazine October 1944, Lena Horne in an intimate close
up!
9h085 GOING HOLLYWOOD glass slide '33 Marion Davies full-length & close up
with Bing Crosby!
9h031 SILVER SCREEN magazine August 1944, sexy Gene Tierney in bathing suit
in Laura!
9h207 ONLY THE LONELY presskit '91 John Candy, Ally Sheedy, Maureen O'Hara,
Anthony Quinn
9h095 LET'S FALL IN LOVE glass slide '34 romantic close up of Edmund Lowe &
Ann Sothern in heart!
9h059 SCREEN ROMANCES magazine December 1946, Van, June, Judy & Frank in
Till the Clouds Roll By!
9h075 BALL OF FIRE glass slide '41 great image of dapper Gary Cooper & sexy
Barbara Stanwyck!
9h130 CAPTAIN BLOOD German program '50 Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland,
great different images!
9h034 SILVER SCREEN magazine November 1944, c/u of pretty Deanna Durbin in
Can't Help Singing!
9h026 SILVER SCREEN magazine March 1944, close up of beautiful Rita Hayworth
from Cover Girl!
and on and on and on and on!

*NOTE THAT INCLUDED IN THESE ITEMS ARE SIX ISSUES OF A MAGAZINE CALLED
SCREEN LIFE, AND FOR THOSE SIX ISSUES IN 1941 EACH MAGAZINE INCLUDED ACTUAL
PAPER DOLLS INSIDE (each of a different star, and all were drawn in a
Kapralik-like style by McGowan Miller, who also did each cover). Included is
a Judy Garland (with one of the paper doll dresses being from Wizard of Oz,
and also Clark Gable! These magazines may well be the Holy Grail for paper
doll collectors, who may well never see them here!
*

*Where are the bulk lots this week**?*
      The short answer is that we were simply far too busy (due to the
holidays) to assemble any bulk lots, but know that next Sunday we will
resume offering bulk lots!

**    Note that some auction houses treat their buyers as if it is Halloween
all year long, except they play many "tricks" on them, and give them very
few "treats"!  They *SAY* their auctions are "$1 no reserve", but actually
they are "$15 no reserve" when take into account their minimum $14 buyers
premium.  They *SAY* many of their items are in excellent condition, but all
too often the buyer receives an item that is in far lesser condition than
they said, and they even trick you with the images, using "stock images" or
"enhanced images".  Worst of all, some use "house bidders" who seem to have
a spooky ability to bid just under the amount the real bidders were bidding!
    But in eMoviePoster.com auctions, "$1 no reserve" means just that, and
every week we sell lots and lots of items for just $1, $2, or $3!  And every
item is honestly described, with a super-sized unenhanced image of every
item.  And every item is truly sold, and to the highest bid placed by real
bidders!

    This week, we are auctioning *over 1,700 lots *in our Tuesday, Thursday,
and Sunday auctions, and it is virtually a certainty that some percentage of
them will sell for "bargain" prices, and there may be some absolute
"steals", and because we have such a *HUGE* selection, you can easily find
extra items to add to your order and not pay any extra U.S. shipping, and
that can be a huge savings! Remember that, unlike the majority of "hobbies",
where the money you spend on your hobby is gone forever, the money you spend
buying movie paper will almost certainly be recovered the day you ever sell
your collection (and many, many collectors have made lots of money on their
collection over time, because unlike stocks, vintage movie paper continually
rises over time!).

     And if you are one of the 5,800+ in our e-mail club, you get our 9
Vintage Hollywood Posters books with the purchase of any ten items from any
of our three sets of auctions, and you get all of our 19 in print books with
the purchase of any fifteen items from any of our three sets of auctions. *YOU
CAN PURCHASE OUR 9 (or 19) LEAST EXPENSIVE ITEMS AND THEN SELL THE BOOKS ON
EBAY FOR MORE THAN YOU PAID FOR EVERYTHING (as people like Michael have
proven over and over)!*

Got to *http://www.emovieposter.com/agallery/15.html* to view them, but you
only have 7 hours left to do so, because they start ending at 3 PM CST *THIS
AFTERNOON (NOT this evening!)!*
And now you can browse the items in *ALL* of galleries at one time in our *All
Auctions <http://www.emovieposter.com/agallery/all.html>* gallery at *
http://www.emovieposter.com/agallery/all.html*!

Bruce Hershenson and the other 22 members of the eMoviePoster.com team
P.O. Box 874
West Plains, MO 65775
Phone: 417-256-9616 (hours: Mon-Fri 9 to 5 except from 12 to 1 when we take
lunch)
* http://www.emovieposter.com*
our auctions: * http://www.emovieposter.com/agallery/all.html*

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