239 résultats
197844664London: The Collector Ltd 1978. Green wrappers. Slightly rubbed at the backstrip and edges; VG. 153-303 304 pp. Numerous trade advertisements &c. &c. 8-3/4" x 5-1/2" <br/><br/> The Collector Ltd unknown books
197544666London: The Collector Ltd 1975. Green wrappers. Slightly rubbed/sun-toned at backstrip; VG. 345-503 504 pp. with order form for a subscription slipped in. Numerous trade advertisements &c. &c. 8-3/4" x 5-1/2" <br/><br/> The Collector Ltd unknown books
197444661London: The Collector Ltd 1974. Orange wrappers. Slightly rubbed at the backstrip; VG. 313-471 472 pp. with annoucement from The Elmete Press slipped in. Numerous trade advertisements &c. &c. 8-3/4" x 5-1/2" <br/><br/> The Collector Ltd unknown books
198838673NY: PBC International 1988. First Edition. 4to pp. 253 plus index. Illustrated with over 800 photographs most in color. Very slightly scuffed at corners and ends of spine o/w a nice copy in little chipped and scuffed dj. Heavy. PBC International unknown books
1804247484Hudson N.Y. 1804. 8 pp. printed in three columns. 4to. Old fold lines. Minor soiling and toning. Very good. In a tan half morocco and cloth folder spine gilt. 8 pp. printed in three columns. 4to. A single issue of this Upstate New York weekly newspaper which began publication in 1801. This issue contains the text of President Jefferson's Message to Congress of Nov. 8th. In his speech Jefferson discusses relations with foreign powers including the Delaware and other Indian tribes the Louisiana Purchase; the United States Navy; and the federal budget. Critical of Jefferson Croswell would later be tried for libel and defended before the Supreme Court by Alexander Hamilton. The publication of this weekly newspaper would continue through 1807. unknown books
1943189504Rand McNally 1943 1943-01-01. Hardcover. Good. Clean has a good binding no marks or notations. Mild cover wear. tnos Rand McNally, 1943 hardcover books
184711601London 1847. Contemporary half-calf with marbled boards. VG some rubbing to leather/pc msg from spine label/bit of foxing throughout/bpt. 171 pp. Illustrated with plates including 2 fold-out color. 8vo. <br/><br/>A journal devoted to 'Researches into the Arts and Monuments of the Early and Middle Ages.' Misbound issue with Ppg 1- 84 coming after 85 - 171. hardcover books
1737WRCAM55322Philadelphia: Andrew Bradford 1737. 4pp. illustrated with two woodcuts in the masthead and four maritime woodcuts in the text. Folio printed on a single folded sheet. Minor foxing and edge wear marginal stabholes along central vertical fold two short repaired horizontal tears. Very good. A rare issue of the first newspaper printed in Philadelphia and in fact the first American newspaper to appear outside Boston. THE AMERICAN WEEKLY MERCURY was founded by the pioneering Philadelphia printer Andrew Bradford in 1719. As would be expected this issue contains news from both Great Britain and the colonies. The first page contains a Parliamentary dispatch regarding the production of iron in the American colonies "where it is capable of being produced in every respect equal in Goodness to the best Iron from Sweden." and a report of a shipwreck off the coast of Bristol. Also included is shipping news from Boston and Philadelphia along with almost twenty advertisements containing information on ships for hire runaway servants trade services debt notices real estate offerings and more. <br> <br> Most notable among the advertisements are three relating to slaves. The first advertises for sale "A Likely young Negro Man about Seventeen that has been in the Country some Years and had the Small Pox." The second seeks return of a runaway "Servant Man named Patrick Burk a Saddler by Trade.of small stature brown Complexion short black Hair mark'd with the Small Pox." The last advertisement in the paper touts for sale "Very good Houshold sic Goods of all sorts: Also divers young Negro Boys and Girls all Born here." <br> <br> Andrew Bradford was the fourth printer in Philadelphia and the son of William Bradford the first printer there and in New York. The younger Bradford became Philadelphia's sole printer when he returned there in 1713 and remained so until Samuel Keimer arrived in 1723. He immediately obtained the lucrative contract to print the colony's laws and produced the first collected volume in 1714. He also published works on his own account including almanacs religious works broadsides the second edition of CONDUCTOR GENERALIS and the present newspaper. Bradford published the MERCURY from December 1719 until his death in 1742 though it was continued by others until 1749. <br> <br> Issues of THE AMERICAN WEEKLY MERCURY or any early 18th-century American newspaper rarely appear at auction or in the market. Andrew Bradford unknown books
1876402106Philadelphia: Henry C. Lea 1876. First edition. Spine reinforced with tape library label and stamp on title/From the Collection of Allan B. Kirsner M.D. 8vo. 607 pp. Original flexible cloth. Includes: MORTON Thomas George 1835-1903. "A peculiar and painful affection of the fourth metatarso-phalangeal articulation". Pp. 37-45. First complete description of anterior metatarsalgia "Morton's disease". Garrison-Morton-Norman 4341. See Cordasco 70-2526. WARREN Jonathan Mason 1811-1867. "Operations for fissure of the hard and soft palate palatoplastie". Pp. 538-47. Warren devised the first operation for closure of complete clefts of the palate. Garrison-Morton-Norman 5745. <br/><br/> Henry C. Lea hardcover books
1886402112Philadelphia: Lea Brothers 1886. First edition. Spine reinforced with tape library label and stamps on endleaves/From the Collection of Allan B. Kirsner M.D. 8vo. Contemporary half leather. Contains: Charles FINLAY. "Yellow fever: its transmission by means of the Culex mosquito." Pp. 395-409. <br/><br/> Lea Brothers hardcover books
1868008888Boston: J.E. Tilton and Company 1868. Book. Good condition. Hardcover. First Edition. Octavo 8vo. viii 384 pages of text. Hardcover binding; leather spine and corners with marbled paper-covered boards. Front board is detached and leather is moderately rubbed at the extremities. First and final several pages of text have a large stain on them but the vast majority of the text remains clean. Illustrated with numerous woodcuts. Previous owner's name "E. N. Badger" on front endpaper. Previous owner's bookplate affixed neatly to front endpaper. J.E. Tilton and Company Hardcover books
186295814Tallahassee: Printed by Dyke & Carlisle 1862. Rare first edition documenting the acts and resolutions passed by the General Assembly of Florida in the first year of the American Civil War. Octavo disbound. In very good condition. Scarce and desirable. Among the 34 United States of America in February 1861 seven Southern slave states individually declared their secession from the country to form the Confederate States of America causing the outbreak of the most studied and written about episode in United States History: the American Civil War. The Confederacy grew to include eleven states all of them slave-holding. After the secession of South Carolina on December 20 1860 the "cotton states" of Mississippi Florida Alabama Georgia Louisiana and Texas followed suit seceding in January and February 1861 Printed by Dyke & Carlisle unknown books
177065841Boston: Printed by Edes & Gill 1770. Broadsheet supplement to the Boston-Gazette 15 x 9 5/8 inches printed both sides in three columns imprint at bottom of the final column of text the verse filling the first column and almost all of the second the balance of the supplement taken up with interesting ads. Prints an anonymous elegy of 138 lines to the Rev. George Whitfield who had died on September 30 in Newburyport Massachusetts where he was buried; the verses were first published in New York in Hugh Gaine's New York Gazette on Oct. 19 and are preceded by a long paragraph of text describing Whitefield's accomplishments and character sent to Gaine by the author of the verses asking that they be published. First lines: "When in this country's cause a warrior bleeds / The grateful muse records his mighty deeds." Final lines: "No single death in Britain's spacious realm / With equal grief could Zion overwhelm." Whitefield 1714-1770 made seven trips to America 1738-1770 usually spending two or three years there preaching in the colonies; said to be the first to preach to slaves he was memorialized in a famous poem by Phillis Wheatley. Moderately browned folded tape repaired at head of vertical fold some rubbing to several lines of text. <br/><br/> Printed by Edes & Gill unknown books
1819SS321-001Various: Various 1918-1955. Hardcover. Very Good. For an itemized list of the items in this lot please inquire. Condition Very Good to Good. The Courier-Journal newspaper began publication in Louisville Kentucky in 1868 - the last run of the Courier-Journal newspaper was Sunday February 28 2021; the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company printing facilities closed for good on March 4th 2021. The material offered here is dated 1918 through circa 1955 and includes technical material used by apprentices and compositors working in the composition and press rooms of the Courier-Journal Job Printing Co. Included are 6 volumes of the Typographic Technical Series For Apprentices Part VI Nos. 32-40 out of series Chicago IL: Published by the Committee on Education United Typothetae of America 1918. All copies with the bookplate "Property of Courier-Journal Job Printing Co. For EMPLOYES' sic Use Only Return to Superintendent's Office" in a handsome Art Nouveau design on the front paste-down. This educational material demonstrates that the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company was unionized at least from the beginning of the twentieth-century and highlights the power and influence of typographers who were among the most educated economically mobile wage laborers in the United States and who were represented in every major urban center in the newspaper industry; the typographic unions won a 48-hour work week in 1897 and a standard wage scale throughout the newspaper industry; as an example of the power of the typographers unions in the 1930s the International Typographical Union introduced the 40-hour work week across the industry which spread to other unions and has sinse been codified across the labor sector by federal legislation; the typographers occupied an important if ambiguous place in the development of American labor history in as much as American labor was never successful in uniting all laborers together in one force but tended organize within industries. This grouping tends to focus on the tools of the trade including type specimens and catalogs of process inks issued in the 1920s and 1930s; Courier-Journal typographers left notes to themselves in these catalogs indicating material they felt needed representation in the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company's shops. Something of an outlier in this grouping is an accordion-fold volume of photographs of printing equipment available for use in the 1950s by the competing print shop The Standard Printing Company Incorporated of Louisville Kentucky. Most likely a salesman's dummy to show potential clients that The Standard Printing Company had the latest printing equipment and the most prestigious customers this undated circa 1955 without imprint accordion-fold photo-archive of printing equipment shows the most modern print shop of the 1950s. The earliest book printed by the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company was issued in 1884. An interesting article by Chris Kenning in the Louisville Courier Journal March 11 2021 gave some valuable insights into the history of the newspaper the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company and the challenges to the newspaper business and printing in general in the United States with the advent of desktop computers and the rise of the internet. While the Kenning article did not touch much on the time period 1918-1955 there are still interesting stories to tell about the printing industry in America the place of printing in the American labor movement and printing technology in the first half of the twentieth century that can be told using the materials offered here as visual aids. With the sale of the Courier-Journal to the Gannett Co. Inc in 1986 the road to the shut down of the Courier-Journal Job Printing Company was opened. Now the Courier-Journal newspaper will be printed in Indianapolis IN. The current print circulation of the paper is now under 60000 while the Courier Journal's digital journalism garners 4.5 million monthly visitors to their website. Media consolidation has been made possible with the internet's ability to distribute news on a minute-by-minute basis making regional newspapers printed on paper a redundancy. The Cincinnati Enquirer the Lexington Herald-Leader the Bowling Green Daily News are all regional newspapers that will no longer be produced locally after having been produced in Louisville by the presses of the Courier-Journal. This consolidation of the newspaper industry means the loss of 102 Louisville jobs including printing press operators mailroom and transportation jobs that have been lost to the relocation of the press work to Indianapolis. Various hardcover books
196583073N. pl: the Association 1965. 6-panel program brochure with some photographs of featured speakers. the Association unknown books
1888330521888. FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPER. SEA GIRT 1888: NATIONAL GUARD ENCAMPMENT. A 15.5-inch by 10.5-inch page from the newspaper the September 1 1888 issue featuring an engraving of the encampment of the Second Brigade State National Guard at Sea Girt. The image occupies the 9-inch by 11-inch lower half of the page and depicts a review of troops by Major-General Plume on August 23 1888. There is also a smaller 4-inch by 4.5-inch insert depicting a rifle competition for the Governor's Prize. The upper portion of the page shows several politicians. $75.00. <br/><br/> unknown books
196731484Toronto: Satyrday 1967. First edition. Paperback. Very Good. Stapled newsprint. Volume 2 Number 3 of this underground newspaper / magazine documenting the hippie scene in the Yorkville area of Toronto in the late 60's. 30 pp including covers. Great Human Be-In advertisement on the rear panel. Article on Gathering of the Tribes and formation of the Yorkville Diggers included in this issue. Printed on inexpensive newspaper stock. Paper is a bit toned with age as might be expected otherwise in unmarked very good condition. Uncommon as are all the issues of this magazine. Satyrday paperback books
1877344441877. SANDY HOOK. FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPER. SANDY HOOK: U.S. LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. A half-page hand-colored illustrated print from the June 2 1877 issue of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper captioned: "New Jersey- Testing Life-saving And War Rockets In The Presence Of The United Stated Ordnance Board At Sandy Hook May 12th." The scene depicts many men under a porch watching rockets exploding over the ocean off Sandy Hook. Uncommon! $50.00. <br/><br/> unknown books
200735775Buenos Aires: Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes 2007. Paperback. Very good. Light rubbing else very good in publisher's French fold wraps. Text in English and Spanish. <br/><br/>exc m Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes paperback books
2001255138Racine. : The Journal Times. 2001. Glossy pictorial boards. A very good copy with no dust jacket. 19.5x26 cm. weight: 1.4 lb. Numerous historic photo illustrations. The Journal Times. hardcover books
19596055591959. not signed on a 3/4 length candid shot of Shelley Winters greeting 20th Century-Fox executive Buddy Adler between scenes of the 1959 film "The Diary of Anne Frank" . Photograph is on heavy weight stock; matte finish; 10" x 8". Very good fresh 1959. No Binding. Very Good. unknown books
14682Very Rare early lithographic printed Qajar Newspaper Urduye Humayun Number 6 issued on 23 Ramazan AH 1300 1882. The newspaper is regarding the Qajar ruler Naser Al-Din Shah's trips in the country. 4 complete pages approximately 13"x 8.6" in size. <br/><br/>The first newspaper ever printed in Tehran was published in 1837 with only three issues printed from May-August 1837. The first lithographic book to be published in Tehran was in 1838. However as one observer to Tehran reported in 1843 the lithographic press in Tehran "remained mainly idle". Berezin p. 248. In the latter part of the 1840s the State Printing House began its work; and was operative until the end of the first decade of the 20th century. As of February 1851 the first Persian regular official newspaper was printed there. Early into the 20th century the lithographic press was being forced out by typeset printings and from 1911-on the official newspapers in Iran was printed typographically. Encycolpaedia Iranica online ed Our Qajar newspaper from 1882 is a rare example of the very early lithographic printing to take place in Iran before the switch to typographical printing. Small paper loss to top right corner of margin does not affect the text. Overall in very good condition. unknown books
1980286458Cambridge: MIT Press 1980. paperback. very good. Illustrated. 142 pages 30 plates. 4to. thick embossed gray paper boards slightly sunned and showing a 1" split near spine. Cambridge: MIT Press 1980. A very good copy internally clean.<br/><br/> MIT Press unknown books
1856334Lancaster PA 1856. Folio broadside. 495 x 330 mm. 19 1/2 x 13 inches. Text printed in five columns. Matted. Several tiny holes affecting a few words. Substantial reportage with text printed in six point type of an anti-Fremont pro-Buchanan rally held at the home of James Buchanan. This was billed as the "Greatest Political Meeting Ever Held in Pennsylvania" with 50000 people in attendance. The sons of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster were present and spoke on behalf of the Democratic State Ticket. The speeches dealt chiefly with the results of the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the resistance of the Abolitionists to it noting that Connecticut was the first ahead of the Keystone State to vote to arrest the tide of disunionism fomented by the abolitionists. Democratic speakers favored the preservation of the Union an end to sectionalism and the protection of the constitution. Not cited in OCLC or at AAS Library Company American Philosophical Society or NYPL. unknown books
188135601881. FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPER. PRESIDENT GARFIELD ASSASSINATION PRINT 1881 CLEVELAND OHIO FUNERAL. An original front-page print from the October 15 1881 issue of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. The caption reads: "Funeral Of The Martyr President At Cleveland O.- Mrs. Eliza Garfield Praying Over The Coffin Of Her Murdered Son." $50.00. <br/><br/> unknown books