2 849 résultats
1355639395.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
496020. Hardcover. Very Good-. Slight shelf wear to the spine and corners.; Temple Lot; 521 pages . hardcover
1949446<p><strong>No Dust Jacket</strong><br /><strong><br /></strong><strong>Book Flaws:</strong><br /><strong><br /></strong>LIght to moderate uniform page toning on pages and edges Some shelf wear on both panels. photo<br /><strong><br /></strong><strong>Book: </strong>All pages are present with no marks entries or stains. Note pages are blank. The spiral binding is still sturdy and firm buyer can use the cookbook with the confidence of it not being a fragile cookbook. The original owner either took special care of the book or seldom used it.<br /><br />Stated First Edition <strong>rare </strong>on the copyright page photo. Intriguing 3-page tip-in typed on New York Herald Tribune Letterhead photo. Titled "Foreign Food Shops" and dated April 10 1946 VG Condition and included with purchase<strong>. </strong>Free shipping to any domestic address in a sturdy cardboard book box.<strong><br /></strong><br /><strong><br /></strong><strong><br /></strong></p> The American Publishing Company paperback
1980377325US: Campus Crusade 1980. Campus Crusade 1980 Very Good/ Light wear to brown cover. Tight bright pages. 2.9 ounces. Size: 5 1/4 x 3 1/2 x 3/8 inches. Paperback. Very Good. Campus Crusade Paperback
180263602Kjøbenhavn. 1802. 8vo. Samtidig skinnryggbind med tittelfelt i brunt skinn. Marmorerte dekler. 28 396 s. Med to foldede tabeller. Forlagt af Arntzen & Hartier Dansk. <br/><br/><em>Bindet noe skrapet. </em> unknown
1679D11030Lyon: Chez Pierre Guillimin 1679. Hardcover. Very Good. Lyon: Chez Pierre Guillimin M.DC.LXXIX 1679. 8vo 150 x 80mm. 428pp. 43. Full page engraved frontispiece depicting a worshipper at the foot of the cross laden with Passion instruments crown of thorns sponge on reed withes ladder spear pillar with caption Les souffrances & la mort Dun DIEV pour nous Nôtre Continuelle. Meditation. The suffering and death of God for us is our continual meditation. Woodcut device of heraldic shield and cardinals hat with tassels on title. Woodcut chapter head vignettes and tailpieces one repeating of Evangelist John on isle of Patmos and another of Veronicas veil and woodcut historiated initials mostly birds throughout. Dedicated to LÂme Chrétienne. The Christian Soul. Italic and Roman type. Contemporary speckled calf spine gilt in compartments; joints splitting light edgewear; margins trimmed close affecting few engravings. Front pastedown with book label of Justin Godart 1871-1956 a French politician and bibliophile of Lyon. Godarts personal library stamp is also on title with the Lyonnais lion. Internet records show that the library of Justin Godart was sold at auction in Paris by Hôtel Drouot in 1957. Importantly this book remained part of the local fabric of the French city from its publication to over 275 years. Stated seventh edition of this devotional text on the Passion of Christ printed by a public brotherhood of Catholics although no other editions located. It is a highly uncommon pocket prayer book with little traceable history save the fact that this same 1679 edition appeared in an auction by Techener in 1861. Another Meditations publication by the same society appears 39 years later as the Nouvelle édition Chez Barthelemy Martin 1718 now held in the Public Library of Lyon. This elusive and largely anonymous French Catholic confraternity probably a local chapter of Lyon likely had various periods of flourishing and disbands or did not make large print-runs of their books possibly explaining the scarcity. <br/><br/>The aim of this brotherhoods untitled publication was to disseminate widely the prayers and reflections to be offered daily first day of the month second day etc. for the suffering of Christ. By publishing a text like this the brothers would in effect be gathering lower orders to participate in penitential exercises which is in itself an act of devotion and which would win them indulgences. In total there are 41 copperplate engravings attributed to François Houat who came from a family of printers and engravers in Northern France. These engravings are exceptional for their dramatic shadows and perspectives. As well the Guillimin publishers were known for their Catholic devotional imprints. For 31 days a full-page copperplate engraved scene of Christs Passion with captions precedes each daily reflection. The daily meditations build up chronologically ending with Christs death on the cross. Full-page engravings are also for Litany of the Passion Litany to the Infant Christ Nativity Lent repeating frontispiece Resurrection Ascension Pentecost the Blessed Sacrament and the emblemata of the brotherhood skull instruments of Passion candle and hourglass. French penitent confraternities survived during the early modern centuries as they underwent several transformations which made them more reflective of French as opposed to Italian devotional sensibilities. They enjoyed prestige and spiritual currency in Catholic society right up the Revolution. Chez Pierre Guillimin hardcover
1996x-0749417285Kogan Page Ltd 1996. Paperback. New. 176 pages. 9.25x6.50x0.25 inches. Kogan Page Ltd paperback
ria9781023588195_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; Discover the culinary heritage of the American Midwest with the "Flint Hills Cook Book" a fascinating glimpse into Iowa's regional cooking. Compiled by the Women of Christ Church Parish this collection offers a unique window into the hardcover
19578Christ Church Oxford. The eight documents dating from between 1879 and 1883. Six of the eight items in good condition lightly aged and worn; the other two showing heavier signs of age and wear. The six sets of accounts from the 'Steward's Office' - for various terms between Christmas 1879 and Christmas 1882 - are each described by Harington on the reverse as 'Battels'. All six are printed forms over a single 8vo page headed 'Christ Church' and laid out in the same style and completed in manuscript with the details of the expenditure of 'Mr Richard Harington' the last being the greatest at £49 12s 7d. They give itemised sums for 'University Dues' 'Establishment' 'Fixed charge' and 'Varying' 'Tuition' 'Room Rent' 'Battels as per Weekly Account' 'Glazier' 'Rates &c.' and 'Damage Account'. Four carry receipts signed over a stamp two by Ackland and two by another party. Also present are two receipts made out and signed by Acland on printed grey-paper slips headed 'Christ Church Oxford' one from October 1881 and the other from January 1883. Christ Church, Oxford. The eight documents dating from between 1879 and 1883. unknown
193157622Berkeley: Stohl Printing Company 1931. Original printing. Paperback. Very good. 13pp. Octavo 23 cm Salmon printed wrappers with minor soiling to the front wrap. This work contains a history of Mormons in California with an emphasis on the San Francisco Stake and the surrounding Bay Area stakes. Local advertising scattered throughout. Stohl Printing Company paperback
66314Pen and watercolor drawing 9" x 12 1/4". Ezra Taft Benson 1899-1994 was the thirteenth President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Born in Whitney Idaho Benson learned what is meant by the term "hard work" on the family farm. After receiving his education in agriculture at Brigham Young University and Iowa State College now Iowa State University he went on to serve in various positions in the industry. He was secretary of agriculture under President Eisenhower from 1953 to 1961. While serving in this position he cleared purged and reorganized the Department including reorganizing its twenty agencies into four divisions. Benson served the full eight years in the Administration one of only two cabinet members to do so and was viewed as one of the Administration's most active and controversial figures. unknown
19265788Lexington Kentucky: The Church; Printed by Press of James M. Byrnes Co 1926. Octavo 21 x 14.75 cm. 122 pages. Advertisements. “Index†is actually a table of contents. ~ Stated “second and improved edition.†A church cookbook from the heart of the Bluegrass interior with three hundred fifty recipes a few of them attributed. Among those of more than passing interest: Kentucky Spoon Bread Currant Loaf Gritts Muffins Buckwheat Cakes Black Bean Soup Mushroom Soup Dutch Chicken Pie Succotash Boiled Okra Grapefruit and Alligator Pear i.e. Avocado Salad Transparent Gooseberry Pie Jerusalem Pudding Hickory Nut Pudding English Trifle Chocolate Roulade Frozen Apricots Sabyon Zabaione Pudding Pecan Cake Dried Apple Cake Cantaloupe Pickle Onion Pickle Peach Marmalade Gingered Pears Black Walnut Brittle. ~ The first members of Kentucky’s oldest Episcopal congregation met initially in 1796 in a small frame house at the corner of Market and Church Streets the site commanded by the renowned cathedral today. Little is known as yet about the dimensions of the brick church that followed but it set the stage in 1808 for the formal constitution of a parish. Vestry records reviewed in the commemorative Historical Sketch of Christ Church Cathedral Lexington: Transylvania Printing 1898 pages 16; 20 refer to the purchase of a bell an organ and a salaried organist and room for a choir in the gallery – early evidence is any is needed that Episcopalian ambitions had been fully awakened. Ground was broken for the spacious current church in 1847; the Gothic Revival design with a square tower and pinnacles was contributed by a locally famous architect Thomas Lewinski d. 1882 several of whose buildings in the Bluegrass Region still survive. ~ In 1895 the Diocese of Kentucky was divided and Christ Church Episcopal became the seat of the Diocese of Lexington with jurisdiction over the eastern half of the state installing a Bishop there in 1897. A Book of Recipes thus identifies the church as a cathedral and appeared as the twentieth anniversary of its elevation approached; it would also have been the twentieth anniversary of the formation of the Womans' Guild idem page 98. ~ Edges lightly soiled. Better than very good in publisher’s light grey oilcloth lettered and decorated in lavender; with a few abrasions. OCLC locates eight copies of this 1926 edition and three of the 1920 first edition; Cook page 92 referring to the 1906 edition; in neither Brown nor Cagle. [The Church; Printed by] Press of James M. Byrnes Co hardcover
19266072Lexington Kentucky: The Church; Printed by Press of James M. Byrnes Co 1926. Octavo 21 x 14.75 cm. 122 pages. Advertisements. “Index†is actually a table of contents. ~ Stated “second and improved edition.†A church cookbook from the heart of the Bluegrass interior with three hundred fifty recipes a few of them attributed. Among those of more than passing interest: Kentucky Spoon Bread Currant Loaf Gritts Muffins Buckwheat Cakes Black Bean Soup Mushroom Soup Dutch Chicken Pie Succotash Boiled Okra Grapefruit and Alligator Pear i.e. Avocado Salad Transparent Gooseberry Pie Jerusalem Pudding Hickory Nut Pudding English Trifle Chocolate Roulade Frozen Apricots Sabyon Zabaione Pudding Pecan Cake Dried Apple Cake Cantaloupe Pickle Onion Pickle Peach Marmalade Gingered Pears Black Walnut Brittle. Light soiling throughout; hinges solid but flaking. In heavily soiled and worn publisher’s light grey oilcloth lettered and decorated in lavender. Good only. Five pencil recipes to blank pages at rear. OCLC locates eight copies of this 1926 edition and three of the 1920 first edition; Cook page 92 referring to the 1906 edition; in neither Brown nor Cagle. [The Church; Printed by] Press of James M. Byrnes Co hardcover
18729241Hartford Conn: Worthington Dustin & Co. 1872. Octavo 23.5 x 16 cm. 66 6 blank pages. FIRST EDITION. The first community cookbook published in Connecticut and one of the earliest of community cookbooks from any state. A second edition was published the following year slightly expanded to 68 pages and now with the proceeds "for benefit of a Girls' School at Walla Walla Washington". With recipes in narrative form and only a few attributed. Some light soiling throughout but sound; newspaper clipping pasted down to free front endpaper. Good or better. Ink notes to rear endpaper and pencil annotations to a number of recipes. Early ownership inscription to front paste down "Sargeant Worcester 1875". OCLC locates seventeen copies; Cook page 40; Brown 255; Bitting page 529 citing the 1873 2nd edition. Worthington, Dustin & Co.] unknown
2006050540USA: Intellectual Reserve Inc. Complete five volume set as stated in VG plus or near fine condition with no markings and slightest of wear. This price includes extra shipping cost via USPS media mail in USA. March 2006 edition. Size: 4to's . VG Plus to Fine. 3-ring Cloth Binders as Issued. 2006. Intellectual Reserve, Inc hardcover
185547751Great Salt Lake City Utah Territory: Deseret News 1855. Very Good. Great Salt Lake City Utah Territory: Deseret News 1855. First Edition. Volume V Number 26 this issue only. Oversized tabloid 39x26cm; self wrappers; 201-208pp. Light wrinkling and chipping along edges; a couple inoffensive stains; tide marks to margins; Very Good. <br /> <br /> A relatively early appearance of this LDS publication dating from the paper's fifth year of existence and one year after the first type was cast in Utah and the LDS community began making its own paper from a beet grinder and other refitted sugar machinery. Contents include a report from Chauncey W. West on the mission he led to India Ceylon and Arabia. His report of their arrival at Galle Sri Lanka notes a local newspaper report had been published declaring "that we were polygamists that they must beware us and not receive us for if they did they would be partakers of our evil deeds." Early issues uncommon in retail. <br /> <br /> Further reading: Wendell J. Ashton Voice in the West: Biography of a Pioneer Newspaper. New York: Duell Sloan and Pearce 1950; pp. 54-58. Deseret News unknown
194419968Christian Board of Publication. 1944. Hardcover. Very Good in Fair dust jacket. Blue cloth cover is rubbed at corners and caps and slightly toned but clean and in very good condition. Boards and spine are straight. Binding is tight. Pages are clean and very good. Dust jacket soiled tattered and chipped. Publisher's price of $1.00 on DJ flap. DJ protected by a brand new clear acid-free mylar cover. We add mylar covers to all books with DJs to preserve the DJs and add luster to magnify their beauty. If pictured shown without the mylar cover for an accurate representation of dust jacket. ; 0 pages . Christian Board of Publication hardcover
185532841Port Bryon & Dansbury: Printed at the "Gazette" Office by A. White & Co. AND Printed at the "Times" Office 1855. First Edition. Wraps. Good. Wraps. 2 titles bound together: 8 pages; 1; 16 pages. Wraps are bound and stitched in stiff "Gaylord" protective covers. Inserted between the reports is a single sheet disbound from an American Bible Union tract with page 51 on one side and a list of 12 Tracts published by the American Bible Union on the other side. Light toning to the wraps. Contents of the second title include the formation of a new Society called the "New York State Missionary Society of the Disciples of Christ." Scarce. Apparently no copies found of the first tract concerning the 1853 Disciples report. One copy Western Reserve Historical Society located in OCLC for the 1855 convention as of 7/2018. The Brewerton Christian Church Brewerton New York also known at the Stone Church was built with river rocks hence the nickname of "Stone Church". The First Church of Disciples of Brewerton was organized in 1853. The original structure was destroyed by fire in 1920 and the present building was then completed in 1923. Source: Waymarking dot com. Printed at the "Gazette" Office by A. White & Co. [AND] Printed at the "Times" Office unknown
177437356Boston: Printed and Sold by Mills and Hicks 1774. 23. 1 blank pp. Bound in later half morocco and marbled paper over boards gilt rules with gilt-stamped spine title. Text with some dusting Good.<br /> <br /> This pamphlet demonstrates the democratic self-governing principles of American congregations unlike the hierarchical organization of their British antecedents. It tells the story of the decline and fall of Reverend Jonathan Bowman the minister of this Unitarian Universalist Church from 1729 until 1773 when he "came somewhat violently into collision with his parish" web site of Dorchester Historical Society. The Congregation objected to Bowman's "absolute and unlimited power in the Church of Christ in this place contrary to constitution of Church government." <br /> The crisis was initiated by Reverend Bowman's chickens who trespassed into the neighboring yard of Paul Hall his parishioner who punished the offending creatures by executing them. In a display of chutzpah Hall then brought his baby to the Church for baptism. Bowman refused to perform the ceremony. The bitter dispute ended with Bowman's ouster after more than four decades of service. Bowman was pilloried for refusing the baptism; and his sermons were deemed excessively short and old-fashioned. Moreover "There has been a neglect in our Rev. Pastor in not insisting more fully upon the doctrines of original sin regeneration and self-denial."<br /> Evans 13254. ESTC W24648. Printed and Sold by Mills and Hicks unknown
66896Ephemera. Four pages of genealogy on two loose leaves 6 1/2 x 10 1/4" which appear to have come from a family Bible. The pages are divided into columns with the following headings: Births; Deaths; Marriages. One page lists the births of Joseph A. Young's parents Brigham Young and Mary Ann Angell. On the reverse the marriages of Joseph A. Young and his family members are listed. The second page lists the children of Joseph A. Young and Mary Ann Ayres in the "Births" column. The days of the week along with "G S L City" are listed next to their names and the dates of their births often with the exact time listed as well. On the verso of this page the "Deaths" of their children are listed Mary Thornton Young Elsie Vilate Josephine Young Alice Young and others. Joseph Angell Young 1834-1875 was Brigham Young's eldest son. He was born October 14 1834 in Kirtland Ohio. He came to Utah in an early day and actively participated in the affairs of the new settlement as a frontiersman. He also played an important role in emigration affairs and he is known for enduring bitter storms and biting frosts during one of the harshest winters in order to successfully rescue the belated hand-cart companies of that season. In addition he built and was the first superintendent of the Ogden-Salt Lake line the old Utah Central and was among the promoters of the Utah Southern. In 1872 Young was appointed to preside over the Sevier district of the Church spanning from Gunnison to Kanab. Two years later the settlements on the Sevier were organized as the Sevier Stake of Zion and Elder Young was appointed to preside over this Stake. He held this position until his death taking a significantly active part that tended to build up and strengthen the new settlements as well as introducing the United Order to the Saints on the Sevier. In Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia Volume I Andrew Jenson cites a passage published by Deseret News following Young's death: "Elder Young was esteemed for his many estimable qualities of heart as well as head. He was a man of naturally keen intelligence his mental qualities even reaching what might be termed brilliancy in some directions while his generosity was proverbial especially among the working classes all who were ever in his employ holding him in esteem for his universally kind and fair treatment." Andrew Jenson also points out that "On account of the persecutions of the 'Mormon' people he Joseph A. Young was deprived of the advantage of an early education but was a discriminating and passionate reader and at the time of his death had perhaps the finest private library in the Territory."<br /> <br /> Two leaves from a Family Record which contain the genealogy of an important family descending from Brigham Young and significant to the history of Utah and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. - Information obtained from "Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia Volume I" by Andrew Jenson. unknown
191270760Chicago Independence Denver New York.: Published by the Missions of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints 1912. Early edition. Leather bound. Good . Duodecimo. Limp leather wraps with a Tabernacle vignette within an oval stamped in gilt on the front cover. Red text block edges. Green and brown decorative endpapers. Previous owner's name in gilt on the front cover. Text block cracked several times. Barely perceptible periodic dampstains to the top margins of the pages. Minor creasing to the bottom fore-edge corners of a handful of pages. Pages browned. 269 hymns with index. Dated from preface: Chicago 1912. Copyright 1908 German E. Ellsworth Chicago. Flake/Draper 1800a. Published by the Missions of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints unknown
1843AQ25880London: James Burns 1843. 4 49pp 1. With 13 hand-coloured engraved plates. Original publisher’s printed buff paper boards later rebacked. Boards rubbed and marked. Upper board and initial gathering held by single cord only. Presentation copy inked inscription to recto of FFEP: ‘From the Author’. The first edition of a handsomely illustrated anonymous verse account of the life of Christ from the nativity to the ascension composed in simple rhyming couplets for the benefit of a young readership. The only clue as to the identity of the author is provided by the dedication: 'To my little nephew Claude this poem is dedicated by his affectionate aunt G'. The British Critic and Theological Review Vol. XXIV 1843 was effusive in its praise; 'a great experiment and really to the best of our judgement a successful one. The difficulty of the task appears from the attempt not having been made before. The verses are very easy and though rather ballad in style are devoid of any palpable irrelevance. The plates are after the works of masters and in the style both of their drawing and of colouring remind one of the severe and simple effect of old painted windows'. OCLC records copies at locations BL Cambridge Louisiana and Toronto; COPAC adds no further. . First edition. 8vo. James Burns hardcover
2497New-York: D. Appleton & Co. 1849. . 12mo dark brown cloth spine abraded at top and foot and lacking 1/8 inch at top of spine. New-York: D. Appleton & Co., 1849. hardcover
1876168774Chicago: Phoenix Publishing 1876. First Edition. First Edition presumed. An anonymously written likely specious exposé of the lives of Mormons focused on the practice of polygamy. <br /> <br /> Very Good or better front hinge starting with moderate foxing on the text block and fray at the corners. Phoenix Publishing unknown
194049621Independence: Herald Publishing House 1940. 1940. 7 1/2" x 5 1/4" in pictorial wrappers with illustrations of an Indian's profile and the title printed in red and black. 13 pp. Illustrations. "God the Great Spirit is the maker and keeper of all nations. He has revealed himself to all peoples and has left his witness among them. The Indians have a history that tells how God first brought their fathers to America and how his Son visited them and taught them the true religion and this story was written on plates of gold and preserved for the Indians of today. The Book of Mormon is that history." "The Indians are of the Chosen Seed of Israel. The promises of God are rich in their behalf and he has not left them without a witness of his love nor without a record of their past. His watchcare has been over them since time began and he purposes yet to do a mighty work among them." Light soiling and with light wear to the extremities. Very good. Herald Publishing House, 1940. unknown