93 résultats
19332110502150403138Aichi Autonomous Association 1933. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Aichi Autonomous Association paperback
1940143920Imprimerie Paul Dupont. Clichy 1940. Loose leaf. Illustrée par Lucien Boucher. <b>Vieux papier en français</b>. - Une feuille repliée. 60 x 80 cm. <i>ref. 143920</i> Imprimerie Paul Dupont. Clichy unknown
86797like new. unknown
2001SONG0471497886Wiley 12/11/2001. 1. hardcover. Used: Good. 6.81x0.78x10.02. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Wiley hardcover
18388558Paris: De L'Imprimerie Royale. 1838. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Boards lightly worn and with spine ends frayed. Former owner's note to first blank page. First and last few pages browned and brittle. Otherwise internally a firm and tight and copy ; 1/4 leather boards. A rare document from past days of french history: "Ordonnance du roi réglant le régime de la comptabilité publique d'une façon générale et destinée à maintenir un ordre sévère dans cette branche de l'administration" Wikipedia ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 351 pages . De L'Imprimerie Royale hardcover
86797-nnew. unknown
2001DADAX0471497886Wiley 2001-11-12. 1. hardcover. New. 6.81x0.78x10.02. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Wiley hardcover
0471497886.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
6375390John Wiley & Sons pp. xiv 224 . Hardback. New. John Wiley & Sons hardcover
1862927E4Paris: Imprimerie Impériale 1862. First edition. Cloth. Very Good. 10" by 7". n/a . The very scarce first edition of this ministerial French document detailing regulations on public accounting for the year 1862. The first edition of the work. Very scarce.Quarter chagrin bound. Printed by the Imperial Printing Office in Paris. This document was produced by the French Ministry of Finance in 1862 during Napoleon III's time as emperor in France and details general regulations on public accounting during a period of economic expansion within the country. In the publisher's original quarter chagrin binding with impressed bands on the spine. Externally generally smart some rubbing and bumping in particular to the head of the spine where there is slight lifting. There is edge wear with the cloth beneath the marbled paper and in some areas the boards themselves just visible. The odd mark on the boards. Prior owner's inscription on front pastedown. Slight spotting to endpapers. Internally firmly bound. Light age toning with pages generally bright and clean. Very Good Imprimerie Impériale hardcover
2002__0471497886John Wiley & Sons Inc 2002. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 238 pages. 9.50x6.50x0.50 inches. John Wiley & Sons Inc hardcover
0471497886New. Brand new and still unused unknown
182417474Washington 1824. Report 64 of the Eighteenth Congress. 123 1 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Later wrappers some fraying and chipping of edges light browning but a good copy of this interesting case. Report 64 of the Eighteenth Congress. 123 1 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. The report includes a history of the circumstances surrounding the claims of the heir of Beaumarchais for the one million livres that the United States had deducted from Beaumarchais' account during the war. During the Revolution Beaumarchais has acted as secret agent for France and also agent between America and France for a gift of monies being given by the King. The question arising was whether the million livres was part of the three million livres promised by the King of France to the United States or whether it was Beaumarchais' for services rendered. The decision was to give the money to Beaumarchais' heirs. This discussion had been in the U. S. Congress since the claims were brought up in 1805. unknown
24731One item from ‘Allen’s Indian Mail’ 28 March 1887. Three items marked as from the periodical ‘India’ 1902 1903 and 1906. Another ‘Reprinted from “INDIA†August 16 1901.’. Five galley-proofs of articles written during the high-point of the Raj by leading Victorian journalist in India W. Martin Wood editor of the Times of India founder and editor of the Bombay Review. Ephemeral items creased and worn but with text clear and entire. ONE: Headed ‘ALLEN’S INDIAN MAIL / THE LATE MR. EDWARD BROOME C.E. / Mr. M. Martin Wood writes to us as follows: -’. Sixty-two lines in small print follow beginning: ‘Some little time back your “Domestic Occurrences†contained the name of Mr. Edward Broome Civil Engineer as having died at Southport something under 60 years of age. It struck me then that a note of Mr. Broome’s quiet work in India ought to be made’. TWO: Annotated at head by Wood ‘India Sep 16th. 1902’. Sixty-eight lines of small print. Three sections concerning drought ‘in Gujerat and the Deccan’. The first begins: ‘An esteemed correspondent writes: Telegrams from India during the last few weeks have told us very little about the suspension and in certain districts what almost threatens failure of the later monsoon rains.’ The second starts: ‘But this passive creed is nto that of their masters from the West’. The third: ‘Meantime what has become of the Scott-Moncrieff comprehensive Water-Supply and Irrigation Report’ THREE: Headed ‘INDIA’S CHRONIC DEFICIT. / FROM AN ANGLO-INDIAN CORRESPONDENT. Annotated by Wood at head: ‘From India Feb. 13th. 03’. Beginning ‘Those few of our official financiers at Simla or in the palace overlooking St. James’s Park who are at all sensitive to Press criticism must have felt happy when in the last Financial Statement they recorded the line - “the entry under Exchange has become of minor importance.â€â€™ Ninety-three lines of text. FOUR: Headed ‘INDIA’S SEABORNE TRADE: / BALANCED ONLY BY DEADWEIGHTS.’ Annotated at head by Wood: ‘From India Jan 15. 06’. Begins: ‘Only within the last fortnight have come to hand detailed returns of India’s trade with the outside world during the first six months of its current financial year - April 1 to September 30.’ Eighty-one lines in small print. FIVE: Headed ‘Reprinted from “INDIA†August 16 1901. / INDIAN LOANS GUARANTEE. / AN EMERGENT ILLUSTRATION. / BY AN ANGLO-INDIAN.’ Beginning ‘The miscarriage of the proposed Indian sterling loan of £3000000 last month must have recalled attention to the often pressed always postponed demand for a British Treasury guarantee in support of the public debt of India.’ Sixty-five lines of small print. One item from ‘Allen’s Indian Mail’, [28 March 1887]. Three items marked as from the periodical ‘India’, [1902], 1903 unknown
24732One item from ‘Allen’s Indian Mail’ 28 March 1887. The other ‘Reprinted from “INDIA†August 16 1901.’. Two galley-proofs of articles by leading Victorian journalist in India W. Martin Wood editor of the Times of India founder and editor of the Bombay Review. Ephemeral items creased and worn but with text clear and entire. ONE: Headed ‘ALLEN’S INDIAN MAIL / THE LATE MR. EDWARD BROOME C.E. / Mr. M. Martin Wood writes to us as follows: -’. Sixty-two lines in small print follow beginning: ‘Some little time back your “Domestic Occurrences†contained the name of Mr. Edward Broome Civil Engineer as having died at Southport something under 60 years of age. It struck me then that a note of Mr. Broome’s quiet work in India ought to be made’. TWO: Annotated at head by Wood ‘India Sep 16th. 1902’. Sixty-eight lines of small print. Three sections concerning drought ‘in Gujerat and the Deccan’. The first begins: ‘An esteemed correspondent writes: Telegrams from India during the last few weeks have told us very little about the suspension and in certain districts what almost threatens failure of the later monsoon rains.’ The second starts: ‘But this passive creed is nto that of their masters from the West’. The third: ‘Meantime what has become of the Scott-Moncrieff comprehensive Water-Supply and Irrigation Report’ THREE: Headed ‘INDIA’S CHRONIC DEFICIT. / FROM AN ANGLO-INDIAN CORRESPONDENT. Annotated by Wood at head: ‘From India Feb. 13th. 03’. Beginning ‘Those few of our official financiers at Simla or in the palace overlooking St. James’s Park who are at all sensitive to Press criticism must have felt happy when in the last Financial Statement they recorded the line - “the entry under Exchange has become of minor importance.â€â€™ Ninety-three lines of text. FOUR: Headed ‘INDIA’S SEABORNE TRADE: / BALANCED ONLY BY DEADWEIGHTS.’ Annotated at head by Wood: ‘From India Jan 15. 06’. Begins: ‘Only within the last fortnight have come to hand detailed returns of India’s trade with the outside world during the first six months of its current financial year - April 1 to September 30.’ Eighty-one lines in small print. FIVE: Headed ‘Reprinted from “INDIA†August 16 1901. / INDIAN LOANS GUARANTEE. / AN EMERGENT ILLUSTRATION. / BY AN ANGLO-INDIAN.’ Beginning ‘The miscarriage of the proposed Indian sterling loan of £3000000 last month must have recalled attention to the often pressed always postponed demand for a British Treasury guarantee in support of the public debt of India.’ Sixty-five lines of small print. One item from ‘Allen’s Indian Mail’, [28 March 1887]. The other ‘Reprinted from “INDIA,†August 16, 1901.’ unknown
19532111902160200818Shohon 1953. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Shohon paperback
178828716Lausanne et se trouve a Paris: Chez Cuchet Gattey 1788. Second edition. 1 vols. 4to. Contemporary sprinkled calf red morocco label. Some light rubbing of extremities light marginal browning else very good. Second edition. 1 vols. 4to. In addition of Mathon de la Cour the collection contains works on public finance by Jean Etienne Bernard Baron de Clugny de Nuits Etienne de Silhouette Joseph Marie Terray and Anne-Robert Jacques Turgot Baron de l'Aulne. Kress B1446; Goldsmith's Kress Library of Economic Literature no.13646 Chez Cuchet, Gattey unknown
18292506Monterey: Imprenta de Gobierno a Cargo del Ciudadano Sixto Gonzalez 1829. Very good plus. 9pp. plus nineteen tables some folding and completed in manuscript. Small folio. 20-century full calf tooled in blind and gilt dyed title panel on front board. Very minor wear and scuffing. Contemporary manuscript rubrics. Light tanning. The constitution of Nuevo Léon required its Secretary of State to provide an annual account of income and expenses for the state's operation. The present work contains a seven-page narrative report on various government operations public health jails roads education industry agriculture the church and the military. Following this account are nineteen tables with statistical data for these subject areas each signed in print and with the manuscript rubric of the state secretary Pedro del Valle. Interestingly two of the tables that record census data for the population of Nuevo Léon and the sum of livestock and cattle in the state are both completed in manuscript. Scarce and an interesting record of operations and accounting for this future border state during the first decade of Mexican independence; we locate only one other copy at the British Library. Imprenta de Gobierno a Cargo del Ciudadano Sixto Gonzalez unknown