Rev. Francis X. Sallaway, ‘The music of Ireland / radio commentaries upon thirty-four representative Irish songs’ (St. Paul, Minneapolis: Fathers Rumble and Carty, Radio replies press, [c.1945]).
A copy of National monuments / a concise guide to ancient Irish structures / for the use of all interested in the preservation and recording of the remains of the past in Ireland / issued by the Office of Public Works’ (Dublin: Stationery Office, [c.1946]).
A copy of ‘Militärgeographische Angaben über Irland / West - und Nordküste (von Mizen Head bis Malin Head) / Text- und Bildheft mit Kartenanlagen’ (Berlin: Generalstab des Heeres, 1941).
A bound volume of mostly Irish pamphlets. The spine has a gilt title which reads ‘Pamphlets / B 60’.
A copy of ‘The Stratford Book / The Typographical Howitzer’ (Cincinnati, Ohio: The Stratford Press, 1947). The cover reads ‘The Stratford Book Devoted to Reprints of Short Familiar Classics and Some Not so Familiar … number 3 of a series’. The pamphlet is a short story by Sam Davis about Mark Twain and Dan de Quille fighting off a band of Native Americans with a howitzer armed only with paper.
A copy of a pamphlet titled ‘The speeches of Denis Caulfeild Heron, Q.C. / in the cases of the Queen v. Captain M’Clure and others / the Queen v. J.F.X. O'Brien / the Queen v. Captain Patrick Joseph Condon and Dominic O’Mahony’ (London: Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1867).
Arthur Brownfield, ‘A concise lesson in Irish history contained in a letter to Mr. H.T. Davenport’ (Hanley: J. Bebbington, 1886).
Sir John Thomas Banks, ‘The writ “de lunatico inquirendo” / in the case of Jonathan Swift, D.D. / Dean of St. Patrick’s / with observations’ (Dublin: reprinted from the ‘The Dublin Quarterly Journal of Medical Science’, vol. xxxi, no. 61, 1863).
Rev. Henry Henderson, ‘The true heir of Ballymore / passages from the history of a Belfast Ribbon Lodge / The dark monk of Feola: adventures of a Ribbon pedlar’ ([Belfast: News-Letter Office, c.1859]).
Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, ‘How Ireland ought to receive the Land Act / A letter to the Very Rev. Canon Doyle, P.P.’. (Dublin: James Duffy & Sons, 15 Wellington Quay, 1881).