905 résultats
223418S.l. [Paris], 1816 27 pièces in-folio, en feuilles.
44576Imprimerie Royale.Janvier 1848.In-4 relié.333 p.Tableau dépliant. Très belle reliure en maroquin rouge avec large frise dorée sur les cotés encadrant des motifs estampés à froid avec important fleuron au centre.Dos orné avec caractères dorés.Tranches dorées.Infimes rousseurs.
190154688Dublin: May and June 1901. 2 volumes folio containing the original manuscripts of 16 articles and 2 editorial notes 63 and 45 pages respectively on laid paper of different manufacturers one being Ravensbourne Superfine. The editorial notice in the first volume announces the debut: "It is with great pleasure that we present this little volume to an expectant world. Although appearing under a new name it is really the offspring of that brilliant journal the Netting Room Debating Societys' Chronicle is unhappily now defunct. It was felt that with the suspension of the magazine a nameless void existed in Branch 10 it was felt that latent talent was rusting that brilliant thoughts were hidden deep in individual minds instead of being openly expressed for the enlightenment of the civilized world." Oddly I can find no record of Branch 10 Branch 10 Budget or the Netting Room Debating Society. Or even Branch Io. Among the articles are: "Hamstead Heath: The Retreat for the Jaded Londoner" by H. B. Holloway; "Sports in Australia" by S. C. Stephens; "The Irish Language Movement" by F. J. Donnellan; "International Mortality" by E. S. Keik; "A Game Played Over" a short story by C. Annead; "My Walks Abroad - I. The Strand" by W. A. Dye; "A Trip Down the Solent" by Percy J. Boxall; "Professionalism in Games" by A. B. Holloway; "The Bleeding of Ireland" by Frederick J. Donnellan; "The Social and Economic Effects of War" by E. S. Kiek; and "The Passing of Robert Louis Stevenson" by P. I. of which the editor writes in his Editorial Note: "P. I. is a known admirer of the gentle R.L.S. and his article would be called by some gushing. It will however be read with interest by those who account themselves also Stevenson's friends. May and June unknown
190154688Dublin: May and June 1901. 2 volumes folio containing the original manuscripts of 16 articles and 2 editorial notes 63 and 45 pages respectively on laid paper of different manufacturers one being Ravensbourne Superfine. The editorial notice in the first volume announces the debut: "It is with great pleasure that we present this little volume to an expectant world. Although appearing under a new name it is really the offspring of that brilliant journal the Netting Room Debating Societys' Chronicle is unhappily now defunct. It was felt that with the suspension of the magazine a nameless void existed in Branch 10 it was felt that latent talent was rusting that brilliant thoughts were hidden deep in individual minds instead of being openly expressed for the enlightenment of the civilized world." Oddly I can find no record of Branch 10 Branch 10 Budget or the Netting Room Debating Society. Or even Branch Io. Among the articles are: "Hamstead Heath: The Retreat for the Jaded Londoner" by H. B. Holloway; "Sports in Australia" by S. C. Stephens; "The Irish Language Movement" by F. J. Donnellan; "International Mortality" by E. S. Keik; "A Game Played Over" a short story by C. Annead; "My Walks Abroad - I. The Strand" by W. A. Dye; "A Trip Down the Solent" by Percy J. Boxall; "Professionalism in Games" by A. B. Holloway; "The Bleeding of Ireland" by Frederick J. Donnellan; "The Social and Economic Effects of War" by E. S. Kiek; and "The Passing of Robert Louis Stevenson" by P. I. of which the editor writes in his Editorial Note: "P. I. is a known admirer of the gentle R.L.S. and his article would be called by some gushing. It will however be read with interest by those who account themselves also Stevenson's friends." <br/><br/> May and June unknown books
189085Paris, Baudouin, 1790 in-8, 39 pp., broché.
13822Undated five of the illustrations appearing in the Pall Mall Budget London in May and June 1894. The six illustrations and seven pages of text totalling 13pp. 4to 22.5 x 18cm on seven leaves of laid paper removed from an album. On aged brittle paper with chipping and slight loss to the edges. The illustrations are simple sketches indicating the layout of the page with titles and occasional words of text by Sullivan. Five of the six designs are for the Pall Mall Budget: 'The Thumbmark by H. G. Wells' 28 June 1894 thumbmarks around title and a newspaper seller with headline reading 'Anarchist Outrage'; 'The Stolen Bacillus by H. G. Wells' 21 June 1894 lady pursues thief running towards coach above sketch of gentleman in top hat and cloak sweeping his left hand; 'The Quest of the White Cat' 11 June 1894 by 'Miss <Orteroyd> page filled with designs showing three images of a fashionable lady in a cape; 'Love & Chronology' 1 May 1894 apparently including Pan with his pipes; 'To the Modern Heroine' 16 May 1894 a fashionable young lady leans over above the head of the title reading a book. The sixth illustration titled '<Ville Ciature>' and with the phrase 'I half-forgot how much you bore me' is untraced. It carries the most finished image showing a fashionable lady staring at a mirror on an elegant table in a wood-panelled room. The pages of text are heavily-corrected in Sullivan's tiny and elegant hand. They include a page headed 'The Author's Apology by way of preface.' Following the preface is the beginning of the first chapter: 'At last Lord Asterisk awoke. He was a man who seldom spoke of himself so he must be described.' Other character include 'Rose LeClerc' and 'Dr. May Bevan the clinical lecturer' and the other pages include text from chapters II and IV. The text is intriguing showing the influence of French symbolism and written in a style that would have been at home in 'The Yellow Book' which was beginning publication around the same time as Sullivan's designs appeared. The beginning of Chapter II gives a good indication of the style: 'He rang the bell & the servant came in. Have my robes come said he. Yes sir. I will try them on - said Lord Asterisk. They were brought - in the meantime his lordship had taken his tub; he dressed himself entirely in his robes of state. - with silk ermine coronet and all & went down stairs to dinner. We live half our live by not following out our impulses. I am going out said his lordship. What clothes shall I put you out your lordship How so Am I not fittingly dressed as becomes a lord Certainly sir - I am going out said his lordship - & I would have you fetch me a donkey in ten minutes while I smoke my cigarette Rudge was hard put to it - but he rang up 25 messengers & in ten minutes two donkeys had arrived simultaneously. Since there are two we will make four. .' Undated [five of the illustrations appearing in the Pall Mall Budget, London, in May and June 1894.] hardcover
238994Paris et Lons-le-Saunier, [1804] - 1831 4 titres en un vol. in-8, demi-toile gaufrée noire, dos lisse, pièce de titre cerise, tranches marbrées (reliure du milieu du XIXe). Abondantes rousseurs.
8vo., First Edition; handsomely bound in blue full morocco, back with raised bands lettered and tooled in gilt, uncut, a most attractive copy ideal as gift or for presentation. With 24pp publisher's catalogue bound in at rear. Lovely copy of this uncommon collection of essays by the eminent mathematician.
165893Paris, Imprimerie Impériale, 1813 in-4, [2]-82 pp., basane brune mouchetée, dos lisse orné d'un N couronné, roulette dorée en encadrement sur les plats, tranches dorées (reliure de l'époque).
182613160Paris, Moutardier, 1826-1827 ; 3 tomes in-8 ; demi-basane marbrée, pièce ocre et vert, tranches jaunes jaspées (reliure de l'époque) ; portrait lithographié, 2 fac-similés ; XV, 339 ; 368 ; 412 pp.
186983844Castro y compañia 1869. hardcover. Bueno. Madrid 1869- 70. J.Castro y compañía editores.Cartoné lomo piel con dorados. Ilustrado con láminas fuera de texto. 880916934 pp. 22x15. Tomo 3 cubierta anterior algo rozada. Castro y compañia hardcover
238462Paris, Corréard [Imprimerie de Madame Jeunehomme-Crémière] ; et Mongioe [Imprimerie de Plassan], 1820 in-8, 32 pp., titre, 61 pp., dérelié.
173592Paris, Imprimerie Nationale exécutive du Louvre, 1793 grand tableau in-plano (110 x 84 cm), en feuille. Traces d'usure au niveau des pliures.
56 pages. Features: Colour Imperial (Oil) ad inside front cover features old-style gas pumps and bottled oil; Editorial topics include Preserving Balance, The Limit of Freedom, The Limit of Socialism, The Impasse, Adult Education, and Strong Medicine; Nice one-page ad for Waterman's pens features photo of artist Howard Chandler Christy; Travel for the Average Man - article which touches on the tough economic times of the day; Rain Before Seven (short story); Echo of Erin (short story); Modernizing the Land of the Master - great photo-illustrated article on Palestine; The Man Who Lived in Twilight (short story); The Native Returns - photo-illustrated article on Robert Watson's return to the place of his rural Scotland boyhood; One-page Pond's ad features photo of Mrs. Henry Field of Chicago; The Birth of a Novel (fiction); Nice one-page illustrated Ford car ad shows stylish coupe and traffic cop; Movie News includes photos of Margaret Sullavan, Douglas Montgomery, Rosemary Ames, W.C. Fields, Bing Crosby, Miriam Hopkins, Lionel Barrymore, Otto Kruger, Una Merkek, Harold Lloyd, Hugh Williams, Helen Twelvetrees, and more; Interesting one-page Lux ad features photo of gagged man; Palmolive ad includes photo of Gladys Swarthout; One-page ad features several Heinz food products; Two-page General Motors of canada ad says "Progress out of the Common Sense of Canadian Motorists"; Legal article; Investment news; Half-page Canadian National photo-ad features budget vacations in Eastern Canada; Cooking article; World Sayings; Chipso ad inside back cover includes colour photo of Mrs. R.L. Pine and her family, plus her black dishwasher Birdie (Bertha); and more. Above-average wear and soiling. Covers detached but present. A worthy copy of this great vintage issue. Book
Over one inch thick. Some of the many topics include: the powers that be decide Canadians can handle high mortgage rates; Haig and Gromyko agree to arms talks; Carole Laure; Applied Research is threatening free discovery; Fiction's Triumph; Bora Laskin story and cover illustration; Trudeau pushes Candus in South Korea; Solidarity re-elects Lech Welesa in Poland; Shannon Tweed; Glorious Crete; David Steinberg; Murder of Anwar Sadat; Appalachia struggles through coal's booms and busts; Gouzenko's case revisited; Jeff Conaway; The Montreal Expos were one game from the World Series; Birth of a new social order in Spain; Europe's New Left; New Leader in Poland; Jean Wadds; Peter Hodgson; Joanne Curran; Cancun Summit falls short of success; Via Rail; Poland's ruler tightens his grip; St. Jean Baptiste Day parade is back; Canada's national soccer team; Scott Hylands; Cutbacks loom for Canada's universities; Federal agreement - less Quebec; Evelyn Hart; the threatened caribou; Saudi peace plan makes headway; Dome Petroleum; Conchata Ferrell; Budget '81 - the gathering storm; Space Shuttle Columbia's safe return; Rene Levesque talks tough, but so does Trudeau; Martha and the Muffins; Sylvia Tyson; Robert Bateman; Howard Pawley's upset victory in Manitoba; Ulster's days of rage; Angie Dickinson; Canada's soccer team falls short to Cuba; Women and native groups fight for inclusion in the charter of rights; Edith Butler; Victoria Snow; Arab Summit Fez fell apart; Allan Gotlieb becomes ambassador to U.S.; Levesque plays for time; Special report on the Constitution; Barbara Amiel; Urban problem in Connecticut; Peter Munk; Poland's hour of agony; Deborah Harry; Trevor Berbick; Images of 1981; Grab for the Golan; Last stand at Szczecin; MacEachen gives in to screams about the budget; and many more. Light wear. Firmly bound. Former library copy with few associated markings. Book
Features: Haiti - land of the 'Big Tontons'; Vietcong's 'Shadow Government' in the South; Lie Detectors Don't Lie... But...; When will it be safe to balance the (federal) budget? - this question shows how things have changed since the days we thought it unsafe not to; What Russian Girls are Like; A double standard for murder? - never in Mississippi's history has a white man been found guilty of first-degree murder when the slain person was black. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy. Book
80 pages. Features: Lovely color fashion ads; United States Lines ad features photos of tennis player Bobby Riggs and his wife, Adrian Conan Doyle, Princess Olga Koudacheff, Lord Ismay and Ed and Pegeen Fitzgerald; Lavrenti Beria, master of Russia's secret police, poses again as the people's champion against his rivals; Cover photo of Ike in huddle at White House; Asia's Wars (two pages of photos); Where to Cut the Federal Budget?; John Peter Zenger and his role in establishing America's Freedom of the Press; Shakespeare's Hold on People; Benny Goodman - Apostle of Swing; Senator William Langer of North Dakota is Judiciary's "Wild Bill"; What happens when a City Yokel (Columbia Professor) Buys a Farm in Maine; Photos of how Presidents Get Away From it All; Edna Wallace Hopper (Miss Floradora) - Then and Now; Lovely photos of Contemporary Victorian Fashions; Photos of Modern Houses of Varied Design by Grover Chapman, Frank Lloyd Wright, Harry E. Ormston and Charles M. Goodman; Helen Keller is featured in an ad for CYMA Swiss watches; Lovely Lucky Strike ad features lady in floral motif; How Should Peerless Americans address British Peers?; Drive to raise $10 million for new aquarium in Coney Island; and more. Pages brittle and chipped at edges. Unmarked. A worthy vintage copy. Book
44 pages. Features: Nice cover illustration of Quebec winter dance party; Nice half-page colour-photo ad for Sovereign Potters features their Pagoda design; 3/4-page RCAF recruits radio, radar and electronics trainees; 1/4-page ad for Canadian Pacific's White Empress; Canada Must Arm for Peace - Hanson W. Baldwin suggests Canada's role in the prevention of WW III - major photo-illustrated article; Fighter's Wife (boxing short story); George Drew and Louis St. Laurent Step into the political arena - photo-illustrated article; A Family for Pam (short story); If you want to be a Barbara Ann Scott (figures skater) - the rules that have helped her win five international titles, with photo of her trainer, Sheldon W. Galbraith; Outline of Good Intentions (short story); Schoolhouse in the Snow (short story); J.Arthur Rank ad features photo of actor John Mills; Bermuda on a Budget - photo-illustrated travel article on how Irene Marx and Maida Skene did it; Photo of soloist Frosia Gregory in ad for Campana's Italian Balm; Photo-illustrated interior design article; Classy one-page colour Heinz ad features painting by R. York Wilson of tomatoes being harvested by hand into bushel baskets for transit to Leamington for processing; Party recipes; Nice half-page colour Quick Quaker Oats ad features little boy dreaming of being a hockey player; World Sayings; O'Keefe's colour ad on back cover features painting by Rex Wood of old seaman telling tales to young boys; and more. Several middle leaves loose but present. Average wear. Unmarked. A quality copy of this wonderful vintage issue. Book
1912014603Lecoq, Mathorel et Ch. Bernard Paris 1912 fort in-8 Cartonnage éditeur
1997x-0415142350Routledge 1997. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 269 pages. 9.50x6.50x1.00 inches. Routledge hardcover
32 pages. Features: The Killers' Struggle to Exist - all animals wage unending war for mere right to live; Legislating in Secret Session - Budget Officer Rules United States and is not Answerable to the People - New Method of Neutralizing Congressional Government; Why (Woodrow) Wilson Disliked Reporters (part 2) - distaste for publicity developed into aversion for newspapermen through their boorish blunders; The Fallacies of Philanthropy - There are some glaring inconsistencies in organized charity - Is there a remedy?; Galli-Curci Swayed by Swedish Music - Prima Donna gives a wonderful interpretation of the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg; Mr. (Henry) Ford's Page; Editorial criticizes lax enforcement of prohibition law and includes list of names of people recently indicted, including Benjamin Gleeman, Harry Gelman, Morris Roisner, Nathan Bader, Samuel, Harris, Abe Ginsberg, Benjamin Weiss, Leon Gleckman, Harry Bernstein, Benjamin Gersonstein, Albert Haimowitz, James Silberstein, and more; Rev. John Roach Straton is heckled during his sermon criticizing actresses; Satirical piece entitled "No - Don't Let Them See It (the Bible)"; M. Pietri of the Finance Commission of the French Chamber claims Great Britain is in debt to France after WWI; Criticism of Mussolini who has confiscated the home of a journalist critical of him - in New York; Will Palestine Ever Pay Its Board? - fascinating photo-illustrated article on this land which 'For thirty years before the War, Baron Rothschild had diligently sought to encourage Jewish immigration'; Washington Irving's London Has Gone - the glamour of his descriptions persist, though the landmarks have vanished; The Voyage of the Victoria - Light on the Dark Ages (first of a series); Where the Buffalo Survives - Ravalli, Montana; The Gorilla at Home - This Anthropoid, usually very peaceable, is much maligned; Uncle Sam Smashes Dishes to Study Them - testing proves American dishes and glassware to be the best; Hong Kong brings in very stiff penalties for importing firearms; Dinshah P. Ghadiali appeals his conviction related to his scheme for curing all ills through 'attuned color waves'; Manipulating the King's English - brevity and lucidity are our best word-soldiers when there is a dress parade; Kodiak legend of Shliam Shoa; Piano Sheet music and dance information for song "The Ripple". Average wear. Center page loose but present. Unmarked. A worthy vintage copy. Book
1830488146Göttingen, Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht, 1830. XII, 685 S. Mit 1 gefalteten Tabelle. Pappband d. Zeit (berieben und bestoßen). [2 Warenabbildungen]
238407[Paris], Hacquart, s.d. (1820-1824) 15 pièces en un vol. in-8, dérelié. Une déchirure au f. 5-6 de la pièce IV, sans atteinte, rousseurs.
44 pages. Contents: Direction of New Deal's Course Remains President's Secret: Question of Trust Busting Versus Regulation Unanswered as Oratory Continues; The Supreme Court: Justice (George) Sutherland Quits and West Offers Candidates; Congress Toil: Filibuster, Budget, War, Taxes, Economy; Relief: (James F.) Byrnes Committee Sentiment Leans Toward Dole; (Martin L.) Davey and Politics: Hatchet Men Again Swing on the Governor; White and Taxes: Mississippi's Home Owners Offered a Glimpse of Paradise; (Sol) Bloom's Boomerang: New York Congressman Gets Some Unwelcome Publicity; 'North Pole Weather': Russians Stay on Drifting Ice Despite Danger Signs; Rumania: 'It is My Government,' Says Royal Dictator (King Carol II); For Sale: 874 Sketches of American Birds (by Rex Brasher), $250,000 and Will Not Divide; Easier British Divorce: People Rejoice in the Luxury of Simplified Home-Breaking; (John) Donna the Fox: Veteran of Bobsledding Runs Leaves for New World Test; Economists See Wishful Thinking in 1939 Budget - They Claim President Bases Figures on Higher Revenue and Quick Recovery; The Recession: Who or What Is to Blame?; '112': Hudson (Motor Car Co.) Builds a Car 'to Lead Way Out of the Slump'; Erie (Railroad) Bonds: Chairman of RFC (Reconstruction Finance Corp.) Criticizes C. & O.'s (Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.) Attitude; and White House Finally Solves the Riddle of Federal Air-Line Control - Maybe. Binding intact. Small mailing label bottom front cover. Contents clean and unmarked. Average wear. A sound vintage copy. Book
96 pages. Cover: Katy Rodolph Contents: Squabbling Taft and Ike Chiefs Elate Democrats, Dark Horses; Murder Will Out - Harold Glen Chase; Plane Output Slowdown: Is It Necessary or Politics?; The New Budget (by Gen. Carl Spaatz); Diplomacy: (Winston) Churchill to Congress; Appointments: Volume vs. Vatican - Protesting Harry S. Truman's Appointment of Gen. Mark W. Clark as Ambassador to Vatican City; The Budget: Biggest Billions; Notes on the New Budget; The Korean War: What U.N. (United Nations) Allies Plan to Do If Reds Try a Double-Cross; West Discovers a New Unity in Tribute to a Fallen Hero (Jean Joseph Marie Gabriel de Lattre de Tassigny); France: The Youngest Premier (Edgar Faure); Suez: No Yanks in Canal Zone; Japan: (Shigeru) Yoshida's China Policy; Malaya: Knight (Sir Gerald W.R.) Templer; Commonwealth: Sterling-Area Crisis; Diplomacy: The (Winston) Churchill Charm; European Aid: Soldiers or Technicians?; Medicine: For Fewer Indians - Control of Human Fertility in India; Biggest U.S. Year in Skiing; Fun but Few Olympic Hopes; The Nation's Latest Scandal: 'Case of the Missing Grain' - Commodity Credit Corp (CCC); Railroads: Freezing Out Losses; Lost Leaders - Walter Briggs; The Press: Indiana Warfare - Eugene C. Pulliam (The Indianapolis Star) and Frank McHale; and Perspective: Political Coueism. Full page colour vintage print advertising including Super "88" Oldsmobile, Early Times Kentucky Bourbon, and Hudson Hornet. Back cover colour ad with Maureen O'Hara promoting Camel Cigarettes. Binding intact. Small mailing label bottom right front cover. Minimal soiling to contents. Piece missing from lower corner of back cover, otherwise average wear. A quality copy. Book