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192358474Newton IA: The Maytag Company 1923. 4to. 16 pp unpaginated. title in purple & black colour frontisp. purple decorated borders & decorated initials pen & ink illustrations & plates. Embossed gray softcovers yapp edges blind-stamped embossed company logo & purple decorative border steel engraved Maytag Guarantee Bond mounted on inner rear cover minor dustsoiling edgewear still VG copy w/ former ownership marking at lower fore-edge. First edition of this very scarce 1920’s promotional brochure extolling the advantages of the newly developed Maytag Gyrafoam Washer which had been designed and introduced by Howard Snyder the inventive genius at the head of Maytag’s Research & Development Department. The revolutionary new design cut down on wear and tear of clothing in mechanical washing machines by forcing water through a vaned agitator mounted on the bottom of the tub rather than drag clothes through the water with a lid dolly. Introduced in 1922 this washing machine proved to be a game changer in home appliances and a key labor saving device. Worldcat locates 1 copy Winterthur; See; Owens A Brief History of Maytag Gas Engine Magazine Feb. 1 1990. The Maytag Company, paperback
1870106353<p>This broadside is 16½x10¼" and is tipped into an archival rag mat. Very slight aging though delicate this ad is in wonderful condition; near fine to fine. The Aiken Knitting Machine Co was located in New York City with their factory in Franklin N.H. The printed images show their various types of knitting machines and winder for spooling yarn with the direction to "Please Put Up In Your Office". The Aiken family moved to New Hampshire in 1938 and were fairly well known industrialists and inventors. In May 1855 Jonas B. Aiken secured a patent Patent 12933 for a knitting machine. Their machines appeared to get a lot of good press in the 1860s and they seemed to have established a very respectable business. </p> Baptist & Taylor,
17872Privately printed. Philadelphia 1947. 16pp. 4to. Stapled into light brown wraps with 'GOUDY' nicely printed in dark brown decorative letters on front cover. In fair condition lightly aged and creased. Inscribed in a small calligraphic hand at foot of front cover to 'DE fr. WGT W G Thomson xi.48'. A well-printed item with two pages carrying photographs of Goudy a six-page 'Appreciation' two pages of 'Goudy Monotype Faces' and the final page carrying an 'appreciation' of Goudy by Bruce Rogers ending 'He worked to the last and he died at the zenith of his powers. No man can meet a happier fate.' Loosely inserted is a 4to leaf of paper with one side carrying an advertisement for Bay Path Cover paper printed in light blue and black with a manuscript note stating that it is printed in 'The authentic Goudy face'. See Image. Privately printed. Philadelphia, 1947. paperback
19742090502113715857Not Available 1974. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19682110502150412973Fujin Picture Company 1968. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Fujin Picture Company paperback
186359088Paris Mallet-Bachelier 1863. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences" Tome 56 No 8. Pp. 317- 364. Entire issue offered. The paper: pp. 330-339. <br/><br/><em>First apperance of this detailled report and examination by the French mathematiciens Mathieu Chasles and Delaunay of the calculating machine invented by Martin Wiberg as an improvement on the Scheutz machine. The machine could produce tables of logarithms. </em> unknown
186348991Paris Mallet-Bachelier 1863. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences" Tome 56 No 8. Pp. 317- 364. Entire issue offered. The paper: pp. 330-339. <br/><br/><em>First apperance of this detailled report and examination by the French mathematiciens Mathieu Chasles and Delaunay of the calculating machine invented by Martin Wiberg as an improvement on the Scheutz machine. The machine could produce tables of logarithms."Wiberg modified the Scheutz difference engine making it smaller and lighter and used it to calculate a series of interest tables published in 1860. Efter improving the print mechanism of his machine Wiberg presented it to the Academy of Sciences in Paris which voted in 1863 to "accorder son approbation à cette belle et ingénieuse machine" the paper offered. Wiberg later used the machine to produce a set of tables of seven-place logarithms of the numbers from 1 to 1000000 together with logarithms of trigonometric functions published in 1876 under the title 'Tables de logarithmes calculées et imprimées au moyen de la machine à calculer sw M. Wiberg'. Hook & Norman "Origins of Cyberspace" No. 82. </em> unknown
a44316Washington 1957 Bureau of Ships. Navships 250-790-6. 4to. 49pp. mimeo stiff wraps metal clasp binding. VG. . paperback