162 résultats
Num?ro complet.
tela non edit. con titoli oro al dorso, piccola rottura a pag. 17, firma d'appartenenza
8vo., First Edition; blue cloth, gilt back, a near fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper, the latter lightly browned on (predominantly white) rear panel.
in 16°, rilegato in tela con titoli oro al dorso, conservata cop. originale anteriore
Paris Horizons de France 1958, In-8 relié toile grise éditeur sous rhodoïd, 188 pages + 48 planches de photos et une carte. Trés bon état.
Cartonn?. 120 pages. 24x30 cm. Jaquette.
Broch?. 277 pages. Manque au 2e plat.
bross. edit. ill. con bandelle
Cartonnage de l'?diteur. 120 pages. 23x28 cm.
Broch?. 198 pages. Manque ? la jaquette.
Broch?. 252 pages. Rousseurs.
Broch?. 348 pages. Couverture l?g?rement d?fra?chie.
Broch?. 379 pages. D?fra?chi. Rousseurs. Manque ? la couverture.
Broch?. 253 pages.
Bernard Grasset 1938, In-8 broché, 285 pages, avec illustrations, croquis et cartes et 16 pages hors texte en héliogravure. Bon état
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: Great photo of cable-pulling gang; The progress of the phone in greater Vancouver; New record set by Vancouver installers; Cartridge fuses defend against foreign currents; Providing phone facilities is a co-operative task; New Kerrisdale exchange being equipped; How a switchboard lamp is made; William Buckle and Splicing; Construction/splicing in Vancouver; A Switchboard Plug and Cord Explains its troubles; Where the cables end when they crawl out of the sea; Chilliwack's first telephone agent, John McCutcheon, passes away; Nice photo of Granville and Hastings; Nice photo of Richmond Road and area near Victoria; Operator training - 8 pages with nice photos; Peter Grant helped equip Canada's first common battery office; Nanaimo and New West. offices to be expanded; Preparing the pay cheques; George P. Kelly - installed 80' poles; More trunks in Vancouver; Lightning damage on mainland; Repeaters aid voice currents on long journeys; automatic typewriters - chief repeaterman William Faulkes; New Kerrisdale office; Bar Graph of growth of the B.C. system; Statement of Development: # of phones in operation in towns across the province; Victoria and Vancouver to be united by new route; how the phone bill was paid 20 years ago; Kootenays get service; The service application; High tension hazards; draughting the system; Mr. C.E.S. Fisher; Operator Grant gets a phone in her home; Arithmetic is paramount in traffic man's life; Phone shattered by lightning strike; Kamloops now connected to coast; Despatching yellow cabs from 'seymour 4000'; New Carlton office; plant garage serves many cars; new Langley office; Long Kamloops feature with many photos; Grouse Mountain yields to phone's advance - long article with many photos; and more. Half-leather binding. Average wear overall with the exception of backstrip which shows significant wear and is loose along back edge. Ink stamp of company executive E.P. LaBelle upon top edge of text else unmarked. Binding intact. Book
64 pages. Features: 1628 - Buckingham at La Rochelle; The Russian Empire Strikes Back; 1944 - Poles Apart - Sosabowski's airborne regiment jumps into the thick of it; 1779 - The Loyalists; and more. Clean and unmarked with light wear. A quality copy. Book
119 pages. Features: Studying British Columbia - A Recent Burgeoning; The Indians of the Northwest Coast; Discovering Totem Poles; Cook at Nootka - The Engraved Record; Preserving a Precious Heritage - The Totem Pole; An Interview with Bill Reid; Fort St. James; The Royal Engineers in British Columbia; The Restoration of Historic Barkerville; The Architecture of Samuel Maclure and Francis Mawson Rattenbury; The Restoration of British Columbia's Parliament Buildings; British Columbia Painters; A Chinese Herbalist in British Columbia; Artifacts of British Columbia Technology; Domestic Interiors; Two B.C. Samplers - Susan Irving and Mary Irving; Early Banks, Coins and Stamps of British Columbia; Restoring Victoria; Conserving Vancouver; Heraldic Stained Glass in Vancouver; Mission Churches; Maritime Legacy; The Crystal Glass Company - British Columbia's First Glass Factory; Chinese Decorative Art in British Columbia; and more. Moderate wear. Prior owner's name atop front cover. Sound copy. Magazine
bross. edit. ill. con bandelle - trad. di Renato Prinzhofer e Mario Tradico - cartine in b.n. nel testo, tavole fotografiche in b.n. fuori testo
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. 192 pages. Previous owner's label and inscription. 10 1/8"w x 9 1/4"h. Foreword by Bill Reid. "Hilary Stewart explains, through her vivid descriptions and detailed drawings, the tools and techniques used, as well as the superbly crafted objects nd their uses--all in the context of daily and ceremonial life." 550 drawings and 50 photographs.
Paris la Bonne Presse 1940, In-12 broché, 180 pages + photos. Bon état.