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1963201613Venezia: Neri Poza Editore. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1963. Hardcover. Owner name and date on title-page. DJ in mylar protector. ; Italian edition. . Neri Poza Editore hardcover
In 8 (20,5x14) Due volumi, brossura illustrata; pp. 286-XLIV; Ottimo
In 8 (19x13) Brossura; pp. 401; buono
16131This English nobleman 12th Baronet of Stratton Hall emigrated to America and became a bartender and played cowboy among other things before becoming a minister; he authored the 1928 memoir "From Cowboy to Pulpit." ALS 1p 8½" X 11" ornate Salvation Army Industrial Home letterhead Chester PA 1912 July 4. Addressed to Roddick W. Marten. Good plus . Age toning from long-ago newspaper clipping to large upper right area. On pictorial Salvation Army letterhead the Baronet boldly pens that he has never met a mannamed "Hal Marten" that Marten is seeking and suggests "You might write to the Cattle Raisers Association. it is very hard to trace a man in the West." Comes with newspaper clipping "Girl Won Titled Cowboy Over to Salvation Army" darkened but not brittle. Most unusual and uncommon. unknown
1770003619Original autograph note. GRANGER Reverend James 1723-1776. Autograph note addressed to James Brindley concerning William Meredith. Circa 1770. Single leaf written on one side in ink. Later mounted at the lower edge by a nineteenth-century collector with contemporary bibliographical slips relating to Granger's works affixed below. Light overall toning edge wear and a small area of staining; legible. About good. James Granger was Vicar of Shiplake and the compiler of A Biographical History of England 1769 the landmark work that gave rise to the practice of "Grangerizing" or extra-illustrating books through the insertion of portraits and documentary material. This brief autograph note is addressed to James Brindley the noted bibliophile and Commissioner of the Stamp Office and refers to William Meredith situating it firmly within the circle of eighteenth-century collectors and antiquarian scholarship. Granger's autograph material is uncommon. A small piece of English bibliographical history linking the originator of Grangerizing with one of the foremost collectors of the period. . Good. Soft cover. 1st Edition. 1st Printing. 1770. Original autograph note paperback
185037267New York April 30th 1850. 1850. Good. - Over 80 words penned on 6-1/4 inch high by 7-3/4 inch wide buff paper. Under the heading of "A card - To the Public" Rev. William K. Hoyt addresses his letter to the editor of the Police Gazette. Complaining of an article which appeared in the Police Gazette the previous week entitled "A gross case of Swindling" which implicates Hoyt. The Reverend claims that it is "calculated to do me great injury while the facts of the case have not yet transpired by an investigation." He goes on to request that "the community may suspend their opinion." until he's had opportunity to defend himself in court from "the base charges thus made against me". Signed "Wllm K. Hoyt". Folded for mailing the letter is creased and soiled with some tiny specks of ink touching the word "Gazette" at the top. <p>An anti-Catholic Protestant minister in New York the Reverend William K. Hoyt published sensationalistic claims made by Maria Monk in a nativist periodical the "American Protestant Vindicator". Several of the stories were probably fabricated by Hoyt. They were subsequently published in a book entitled "Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk" a work supposedly written by her. A young prostitute Maria Monk had been confined in the Charitable Institution for Female Penitents by her mother. Her behavior having led to her expulsion Maria ran off to the United States with the Reverend Hoyt. The book supposedly narrated by Maria Monk to the Reverend John Jay Slocum claimed she'd been a nun at the Hotel-Dieu convent in Montreal. According to the book and stories Maria supposedly claimed that nuns were forced to have intercourse with priests and she had witnessed a nun being killed for resisting a priest's advances and that babies born to the nuns were strangled and buried in the convent's basement. Pregnant when she arrived in New York which was not a surprising condition for a prostitute in the 19th Century the book claimed that the father was the Abbe Patrick Phelan. The stories played into the anti-Catholic nativist's convictions of the period. The appearance of another supposed nun who was said to have also fled from the convent drew even more attention. The tales of secret passages scandalous behavior and crimes at the Hotel-Dieu convent came under investigation by journalists including the American journalist William Leete Stone who very quickly recognized the lie after gaining access to the convent. Stone wrote that "After 10 minutes the imposture had become as plain as day. I now declare more openly than ever that neither Maria Monk nor Francis Partridge have ever set foot in the convent of Hotel Dieu". Meanwhile the Reverend Hoyt and his cohorts had pocketed most of the profits from the best seller and additional sensational books which supposedly related Maria's experiences as a nun were published. Interest in the Monk affair finally declined after a Protestant organization was given permission to visit the Hotel-Dieu and Iles des Soeurs. In 1849 Maria Monk was arrested in a "house of ill repute" for stealing from her "client" and incarcerated in a New York prison. She died there that Summer.<p>A rare letter from one of the 19th century's most notorious charlatans. New York, April 30th, 1850. unknown
295 pages. "Cell-Matter is the only Cure-Matter - Mind is not Cell-Matter, therefore, Mind does not cure Matter. As Time and Space are mere conveniences of Cosmic Matter, so Mind and Thought are mere incidences of Cell-Matter." - from forward to first edition in 1903. The author was unseccessful in convincing his 'rutty' medical colleagues to accept his theory so took it directly to the public in this book. Tissue-protected sepia-tone frontispiece portrait of author. Suede exterior adorned with gilt. Unmarked. Average external wear with a half-inch of loss to bottom of backstrip. Binding intact. A sound vintage copy of this interesting alternative medical theory. Book
1910RL005<p>Nova Edição. Livraria Internacional de Ernesto Chardron. Porto. 1888.</p>_x000d_<p>De 195x125 cm. Com 99 págs. Brochado.</p>_x000d_<p>Exemplar com falta da lombada manchas de humidade e danos nas capas de brochura cadernos soltos e assinatura de posse na folha de rosto.</p>_x000d_<p>Precisa de ser encadernado. </p>_x000d_<p> </p> I-214-E-71 unknown
200813573, La fondation les orphelins apprentis d auteuil, 1986 ; in-4, 95 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur.
217221 volume in-4° relié plein cartonnage pelliculé illustré, 96 p. + illustrations. Trsè bon état.
1942106295Couverture souple. Broché. 224 pages. Deuxième plat factice.
20071725445983917GLN-972, Obra de Cooperación Parroquial de Cristo Rey, Pozuelo de Alarcón 2007
200612398, Edition du signe, s.d. ; in-12, 105 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. Illustration a veaux.
199413866544101PM-DX2-C645, Editions du Signe 1994
RO50016449Au ménestrel. XIXème. In-8. En feuillets. Bon état, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 3 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 780.26-Partitions
194184171941 broché (paperback) in-octavo, dos et couverture crèmes imprimés (white spine and cover printed), tranches non rognées (edges no smooth), illustrations photographiques, 312 pages, 1941 à Rennes Imprimerie du Nouvelliste,
193625035Rennes mprimerie du Nouvelliste 1936 -in-8 broché un volume, broché (paperback) crème in-octavo Editeur, dos et couverture crèmes imprimés en marron foncé et noir (white spine and cover printed), 1ère de couverture illustrée d'un bois en vert et marron-foncé par R. HINGANT, tranches non rognées (edges no smooth),orné de trés nombreuses illustrations photographiques in et hors-texte en noir, 292 pages, 1936 à Rennes Imprimerie du Nouvelliste de Bretagne Editeur,
193826449Rennes imprimerie du Nouvelliste 1938 -in-8 broché un volume, broché (paperback) crème in-octavo Editeur, dos et couverture crèmes imprimés en marron foncé et vert (white spine and cover printed), 1ère de couverture illustrée d'un bois en vert et marron-foncé par R. HINGANT, tranches non rognées (edges no smooth), Signature Autographe manuscrite à l'encre noire du révérend Père YVON en bas de son portrait photographié donné en frontispice, orné de trés nombreuses illustrations photographiques in et hors-texte en noir, 310 pages, 1938 à Rennes Imprimerie du Nouvelliste de Bretagne Editeur, + le bandeau de librairie saumon imprimé en noir joint
181792278Paris, chez Vve Huzard et chez l'auteur, 1817, in-8, 76 p. 2 fig, Broché, sous couverture d'attente brune, "Avec la méthode abrégée pour extraire parfaitement la fécule et la farine de la pomme de terre en petit et en grand." Ouvrage rédigé par le curé de Bezons, les deux figures gravées sur bois (dont une à pleine page) montrent le moulin utilisé pour fabriquer la fécule du curé. Rare exemplaire tel que paru à grandes marges et en bel état. Couverture rigide
1975mon0000082602F.lli Fabbri Ed. 1975-01-15. Hardcover. Very Good. in x in x in. first edition on blue cloth F.lli Fabbri Ed. hardcover
0365035599.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0365035300.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
283BIZOT G.-FONTAINEBLEAU s.d. IN8 br.ill.in et ht de R.RODRIGUE,couv.ill.;num/vergé,n.c.224p.
19342301934 broché grand in-octavo avec couverture rempliée illustrée sur le recto, illustrations de Robert Rodrigue in et hors-texte, exemplaire numéro 659 sur Vergé Ivoire, 227 pages, 1934 Fontainebleau Chez Michel Chabosy,
In-8° gr. pp. Xv-562, bross. edit. con tracce d'uso.