534 résultats
Editions Ufap 1959, trés fort In-4 broché de 854 pages. Parfait état.
Ensemble de deux buvards de 20 x13,5 cm et 12,( x 20,5 cm; impression en bleu. Légères piqûres; bon état. Voir photo.
np. Profusely illustrated with numerous photographs. Includes Millersburg Sesquicentennial program. Photo end papers. Small Quarto. Original full pictorial cloth binding, soiled. Hardbound. Very good copy. PA 24
in-8, 274 pages, illustrations, broché, couverture illustrée. Bel exemplaire. [CL-7]
Broché. 89 pages. 9x14cm.
London, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2010. Numerosas ilustraciones en color. 82p. 4º mayor. Rústica editorial ilustrada con solapas. Muy buen ejemplar.
Datée du 1° mai 1846 , imprimée par Goupil et Vibert , cette aquatinte est coloriée à la main , sur le thème de la chasse , du cheval et voiture . Légers défauts .
Licet 1988, In-4 broché, 183 pages. Cachet de bibliothéque. Bon état.
Encadrée à Londres , cette aquarelle fait partie d'un ensemble de quatre peintures sur le même sujet , représentant le village de pêcheurs de Sant Angelo avec les filets séchant sur la jetée . Une seule est signée de Sydney L. MOSS , mais les quatre sont du même artiste . Il s'agit probablement du fondateur de la célèbre galerie d'art chinois et japonais de Londres . Le prix indiqué comprend les quatre tableaux , qui ne peuvent être vendus séparément . Toutes encadrées . ( cf. description et photos des trois autres )
Encadrée à Londres , cette aquarelle fait partie d'un ensemble de quatre peintures sur le même sujet , représentant : L'île volcanique d'Ischia , vue de la mer avec un voilier qui passe devant le fort . Une seule est signée de Sydney L. MOSS , mais les quatre sont du même artiste . Il s'agit probablement du fondateur de la célèbre galerie d'art chinois et japonais de Londres . Le prix indiqué comprend les quatre tableaux , qui ne peuvent être vendus séparément . Toutes encadrées . ( cf. description et photos des trois autres )
Encadrée à Londres , cette aquarelle fait partie d'un ensemble de quatre peintures sur le même sujet , représentant : Deux pêcheurs à la ligne sur des roches avançant dans la mer , en contre bas du fort Castello sur l'île d'Ischia . Une seule est signée de Sydney L. MOSS , mais les quatre sont du même artiste . Il s'agit probablement du fondateur de la célèbre galerie d'art chinois et japonais de Londres . Le prix indiqué comprend les quatre tableaux , qui ne peuvent être vendus séparément . Toutes encadrées . ( cf. description et photos des trois autres )
Encadrée à Londres , cette aquarelle fait partie d'un ensemble de quatre peintures sur le même sujet , représentant : Les ruines d'un temple grec , sur l'île d'Ischia . Une seule est signée de Sydney L. MOSS , mais les quatre sont du même artiste . Il s'agit probablement du fondateur de la célèbre galerie d'art chinois et japonais de Londres . Le prix indiqué comprend les quatre tableaux , qui ne peuvent être vendus séparément . Toutes encadrées . ( cf. description et photos des trois autres )
25x16,5 cm; 176 pp. e una c. di tav. fuori testo con ritratto dell'autore. Brossura editoriale rossa con titolo e immagini di chiavi con il motto “Les Clefs du Succes” impresse in nero al piatto anteriore, alone d'umidità che scolorisce circa metà del piatto anteriore e per il resto in ottime condizioni di conservazione, a fogli ancora chiusi. Rarissima prima edizione di questa celeberrima opera di uno dei pionieri della pubblicità. Numerosissime immagini pubblicitarie nel testo. Opera tirata in soli 2000 esemplari numerati, il nostro è il numero 1711. Original Brochure. FIRST EDITION. RARE, UNCAT. NON ROGNE.
19,5x14. 186p. Marca anterior poseedor.
40 pages. Above-average but not excessive wear. Unmarked. Covers taped together. Includes colour full-page 'Jamavana' cigar advertisement. Features include: Craftsmanship in Mahogany; Silver Tea-Pots and Coffee-Pots; English Gate-Leg Tables; New Light on Old Pewter; Georgian Portrait Painters; Bow Porcelain 1745-75. Book
Half-leather binding. Telephone Talk was the glossy bimonthly publication of the British Columbia Telephone Company. It was written by employees for employees to present information of interest to those engaged in the plant, traffic, commercial, operating, accounting and other departments of the service. Each issue is replete with black and white photos and information on topics such as: company, industry and technological news, traffic levels, expansion plans, personnel announcements, publicity and social events, deaths, weddings, lists of exchanges, and more. As such, these issues serve as a vital preserve of rare and fascinating British Columbia history. This volume covers topics including: awarding of Distinguished Flying Cross to Flt.-Lieut. Gordon Smith; Excellent photo of Vancouver radiotelephone operators at work; Long Distance Load in '44 set new record - statistics; Radiotelephone saves 3 lives when tug sinks; Annie Gillman - never late for work in 38 years as operator; Telephone Trouble - by Francis Aldham of the Vancouver Daily Province; Forty Miles of Telephone Bills - reprinted from the December 1944 issue of Western Business and Industry; Harold Morse retires; A few lines from the front lines - portions of letters from telphone employees on active service; Large black and white reproduction of B.C. Tel. Victory Bond advertisement featuring Winston Churchill; Expansion Programme will fall short of needs - with drawing of new central office building at Tenth Ave. and Yew St.; Digits control names of new Central Offices; Report shows phone situation still serious - no prospect of relief in near future; Al Miller retires after 36 years of service; Popular chief operator, Edna Green, resigns; Farewell to Don (Mac) McAuley; Photo of the "Kamloops Kid" - Dave Wilkie; Photos of Sports Starlets; A Telephone Man in the Navy - a lengthy letter to the editor from Elect. Lieut. N.J. Dunlop, R.C.N.V.R.; Article - Two Million Wait for Phones in North America, and relevant B.C. Tel advertisement; Cover photo of U.S. Army Bronze Star recipient Staff Sgt. Robert Creech; Photos of the three Stephan sisters who are operators; Photo of war shortage billboard; Voices with smiles - article from the Vancouver Daily Province by Gordon McCallum; Article - $64 question in the telephone business; Plagued by Shortages - article from the National War Finance Committee; article and photo - Pup Flies Atlantic with Flt. Lt. Gordon Heselton; Article on Robert Garnett Tatlow, Vancouver Pioneer; B.C.'s First Emergency Phone Call - Pants torn by Dog; Construction photos of 'Cedar'; War's End Brings Record Long Distance Load; Heading Back to Normal - but still a long way to go; Death removes Ernest F. Helliwell; Radiotelephone service to the rescue; Photo of phone installer Charlie McAndrew, and the billboard which used the photo; Photos of North Vancouver staff and facilities; Secret of wartime 'what-is-it' building on Seymour finally revealed - photos and two-page article; 5 excellent pages of photos and article on the building of the Pacific Communications System, 'One of our Biggest War Jobs'; Daisy Bonde retires; Excellent photo of B.C. Telephone's 'Sky Riders', dangling 350 feet in the air over Rock Creek Canyon; 3 more billboard photos; We are establishing an F.M. Radio Network; We subscribed nearly $2,000,000 to the war effort; Farewell to Miss Mary Lloyd, Ernest Cole and William Silver; Many photos of employees knitting; Trail operators at work; Eighteen Thousand Calls a day - article; New record for telephone calls in 1945; Difficulties of supply situation again stressed in telephone company's annual report; Charlie McAndrew has installed 40,000 photos; Cupid is main cause of our traffic problems - article; Only photo available of Vancouver's first telephone exchange, established in 1885 in Tilley's book store, on the east side of Carrall St.; PNE float; Alma open house; Hastings Hay Ride; Better phone service to central B.C. points Book
Telephone Talk was the glossy bimonthly publication of the British Columbia Telephone Company. It was written by employees for employees to present information of interest to those engaged in the plant, traffic, commercial, operating, accounting and other departments of the service. Each issue is replete with black and white photos and information on topics such as: company, industry and technological news, traffic levels, expansion plans, personnel announcements, publicity and social events, deaths, weddings, lists of exchanges, and more. As such, these issues serve as a vital preserve of rare and fascinating British Columbia history. This volume covers topics including: Hundred Thousandth phone installed - lengthy article; Essentials of good maintenance; Statement of Development - number of phones per exchange in the province; B.C. Telephone Company takes over East Kootenay System; Prompt service aids with Sidney fire; The office boys dream; Telephone assists in Vancouver Stock Exchange (VSE) Rush - great photo; Automatic phone system installed at Hammond; Keeping the electrons on the proper path; Photo of J.P.D. Malkin takes part in first Vancouver-London phone call; Shell Oil operator; Health Tips; Greater Vancouver can now talk to the European continent; Cable damaged by anchor; Radio interference putting music on phone lines; Production of phone directories - 4 pages with photos; Laying cable through Stanley Park; Direct Route to West Vancouver completed - 5 pages of interesting text and photos; Langley Prairie phone service restored during the fire - article with photos; Phone given as wedding gift in Vancouver; F.C. Paterson; Vancouver Power House Fire; Mr. George H. Halse becomes Chairman of the Board; Close-up photos of splicing job; Transatlantic phone service still expanding; photo of horse-drawn 'drop wagon'; Photo on Cordova St. after fire 42 years ago; There's more to installation work than just placing a telephone - 4 pages with photos and text; Good-bye to operating when Dan Cupid comes along; Sending news stories to Vancouver from California over phone wires; We are linked with 80% of the world's phones; photo of conduit laying on forty-first ave; The Monophone - advertisement; B.C. Tel. acquires government lines in the Interior; New trans-atlantic long distance mark; Photo montage of vehicles used by the Plant Department; B.C. Box Factory Fire; Baby causes problem by teething on phone cord; Chilliwack phone system now affiliated with us; Regular fire drills; Photo of Premier Tolmie participating in first call from Vancouver to Calgary - with detailed related story; The longest circuit in the system of the B.C. Telephone Company; A new radiotelephone company will be organized; New Fraser River Cable serves South Westminster Subscribers; Eleven european countries with telephone reach of Vancouver; Now installing a new type of telephone typewriter; New faster system for handling telegrams; Benefits of new telephone ownership are evident in 500-mile circle; and more. Half-leather binding. Average wear. Ink stamp of company executive E.P. LaBelle upon top edge of text else unmarked. Binding intact. Significant wear to backstrip with some chips missing. Book
Features: The War Department's Tragic Failure - the looting of taxpayers by some of World War One's dollar a year men - great photo; Sales article by Arthur H. Little; and more. Colour Grape-Nuts advertisement upon back cover. Above-average wear but still intact. A worthy reference copy. Book
Features: Krugerrand advertisement; Belgium - a flourishing hub of illicit trade in endangered species; Q and A with Alvin Toffler; Arafat leaves Beirut for Greece, ending 12 years of PLO activity in Lebanon; Marc Lalonde's federal budget - big for business; Is Canada's Tax System Fair? - by Linda McQuaig; Questions about Bryce Mackasey's Finances; Peter Blaikie leaves the federal PC leadership contest; Politics and property rights in Canada; Central American dilemmas; Bombing at U.S. embassy in Beirut - with photo; Vintage colour ad for Radio Shack TRS-80 computer family; Poland - heading back to the brink?; Ontario's great Trust Affair - Leonard Rosenberg; Brazil's struggle with debt; Peter C. Newman on Walter Gordon; Carling Bassett scores a big breakthrough; Canada's field hockey future; The new bad nuclear news - with photo of a B-52 on the 'Trestle' - shielding electronic circuitry from the EMP threat; Acid Rain controversy; Allan King's controversial documentary on the effects of unemployment; Great vintage colour ad for the Apple personal computer; the University of Waterloo has quietly become one of North America's leading training grounds for computer scientists; Canal to connect the Danube with the Rhine; Fine tuning for Canadian pay TV. Average wear. Book