Like every far-gone test equipment addict, I collect Hewlett Packard & Tektronix catalogs. Aka CRACKalogs.
Here's my HP current set. (4 digits = have. * = in post)
HP 60 1 2 1963 4 5 6 7 8 1969
1970 x 1972 3* x 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 9
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Ag 2000 2001 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

HP catalogs from the 1960s are very rare. I've been hunting them on and off for perhaps 20 years, with not much luck. None available, or very expensive. Recently I had the good fortune to find a 1960 catalog, for just US$16. Grabbed it!

It arrived at my reshipper in a protective stiff brown cardboard mailer. Good! I didn't have the reshipper open and photograph it, as it's so precious to me that I didn't want their unbeliever fingers to ever touch this holy relic.
Once enough other items accumulated in my mailbox there, I initiated a consolidation and mailout.
Here's the reshipper's photo of all 9 packages, at the beginning of the packing. The 1960 catalog is item QF, with the red arrow I added. (They give packages two-letter codes on arrival, and label them with that code.)

And that's the last time it was ever seen.
After the consolidation, when I logged back in parcel QF was still listed in my inbox. The sole item. WTF? There should be nothing there. I thought maybe somehow it hadn't fitted in the consolidation. But why, it's small and thin!
I immediately selected and paid for it to be mailed out separately.
Next time I logged in, I got a notification saying "Mailout Cancelled ... QF has been cancelled by our admin for the following reason: consolidated into QJ"
Hmm... Doubting this, I checked all their photos associated with this mailout. As they process items they take a photo of the package code label. All the other items have photos of the label, but no QF.
Of course _they_ didn't bother to check the photos.
I still hoped that was just some data entry goof.
The package arrived. There is no QF. The 1960 catalog is not there.

Notice the big package QJ is brown cardboard, and (as usual) has been cut down to be a good fit of contents.
You see what probably happened?
The packer is so used to having bits of cut-off brown cardboard on the bench, that during the repacking of other items he started seeing the 1960 catalog mailer as a bit of scrap cardboard. Then threw it out with the rubbish.
Now, after I raised a complaint, they are trying to decide whether to compensate me for the loss. I'm sure they will at most offer to pay the $16.The seller was a general 'old books' shop, and knew it was 'vintage' but possibly didn't know how rare. I see on ebay now a 1969 for $150, and a 1963 for $37. Nothing else from the 1960s.
They threw it out with the garbage.
Bah. Where are the giant space laser targetting codes when you need them?
That thing was 61 years old. I wonder if I'll ever find another one?