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1943442j1479New York: Poland Fights - Polish Labor Group. Fair with no dust jacket. 1943. First Edition. Paperback. "As German boots marched and German tanks rumbled through the mined streets of Warsaw the workers buried their remaining arms drew closer to one another and silently disappeared to continue the fight with means other than rifles and bullets. Underground Poland was born! And this is its story." - page 2. Topics include: How a Pole Must Behave Toward Germans; List of 15 Strictly Forbidden Activities; Underground Poetry; Invisible Sabotage; Roads To Death; 1.5 Million Slave Laborers; Boycott; Recalcitrant Peasants; Avengers and Guerrillas; The Ghetto Strikes Back; Collective Responsibility of Monuments; Wawer Massacre; Hide It From The Germans!; Our Future. Stapled booklet with 44 glossy unnumbered pages in illustrated covers. Text in English. Profusely illustrated with black and white reproductions of photos document facsimiles illustrations and a map. No indication of any prior printings. Former library copy with related markings to front and back of front cover. Bound by a single staple which is pulling from the tender illustrated covers. One-inch opening at bottom of coverfold. A worthy example of this highly informative WWII-era artifact. Wiener Library Catalogue Series 7 1004. 8.5" x 5.5"; Front Cover; 8vo . Poland Fights - Polish Labor Group paperback
1951157437Washington DC: The United States Department of Justice Bureau of Prisons 1951. First Edition. First Edition. Complete in ten volumes.<br /> <br /> A correspondence course for jail personnel with each volume detailing different aspects of the job-including food sanitation and safety reception of new prisoners medical and health services supervision prison labor and "unusual prisoners in the jail" a broad category that discusses treatment of juvenile and women prisoners prisoners with mental illness prisoners with addictions to drugs and alcohol and lesbian gay and intersex prisoners. Although each volume contains a short quiz at the end the course seems to have been designed for people already employed in the carceral system. <br /> <br /> Very Good with saddle stapled wrappers. Quizzes at end of each volume have occasional pencil and ink annotations from a previous owner. The United States Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons unknown
19822533Winnipeg Manitoba: Province of Manitoba Department of Education 1982. First Edition First Printing. Softcover. pp. vii 287. 4to. Light blue stiff card covers. Light rubbing to covers contents bright clean and unmarked; very good. <br/><br/> Province of Manitoba, Department of Education paperback
1642101095<p>London: Allen in Popes head Alley October 6 1642. 1642. Fair. - Octavo 8-3/8 inches high by 6 inches wide. Softcover printed self-wrappers removed from a larger collection of pamphlets in the distant past with stab holes along the left edge. Pages 1-25 24-31 34-35 34-35 and 38-60. The pamphlet is disbound and the pages are detached but present. There is underlining throughout. There is some occasional damp staining. Some of the corners and edges of the pages are chipped. The pamphlet is complete and collates with Wing P3893.</p><p>RARE. First edition. "The Aphorismes of the Kingdom" Thomason E.24026 and "The Commission of Array" Thomason E.24027.</p><p>The Thomason catalog is a collection of approximately 22000 books and pamphlets made by the London bookseller George Thomason between 1661 and 1662 documenting the political struggles between Parliament and the Crown during the Civil Wars Revolution and Restoration. An annotation on the Thomason copy reads "Printed 6 October 1642 at London by Allen in Popes head alley". The Allen referred to is undoubtedly the London bookseller & printer Benjamin Allen who was active from 1631 until his death in 1646. Located in Popes head Alley he published much of the political and theological literature of the period.</p><p>In the lead up to the first English Civil War Charles I and the parliament clashed over control of the armed forces. The King revived the medieval "Commission of Array" forcing local lords to raise troops for the Royal cause. This pamphlet is often attributed to Willam Prynne 1600-1669 who had been freed from prison in 1640. His persecution by the government of King Charles I and the Church of England escalated the antagonisms between the King and Parliament in the years preceding the English Civil Wars.</p><p>This anti-Royalist pamphlet is also anti-Church. The concluding pages 55-60 titled "Englands Tragedie" compare the antagonism between Parliament and the King to the "War in Heaven" as described in Revelation 12.</p> [London: Allen in Popes head Alley, October 6], [1642.] paperback
183488467Boston: Carter Hendee and Co 1834-37. First Edition. Five octavo volumes. Uniform plum cloth; printed paper spine labels; 317;275;291;184;262pp. Bindings spine-sunned and slightly worn; volume for 1833 more so with some external damp rippling not affecting text and a small gouge at front joint. Internally very fresh with most pages unopened. Good and sound. <br /> <br /> The 3rd through 7th volumes of the Institute's proceedings each including transcriptions of lectures on public education by such writers as Joseph Story A.A. Gould C.T. Jackson Beriah Green Warren Burton Walter Channing William A. Alcott Samuel Howe and others. The Institute was founded in 1830 and was a direct progenitor of the National Education Association. Though the vast majority of the Institute's members were from New England it was the first meaningful interstate body of public school instructors and administrators and set standards for public education into the first decades of the 20th century when it was subsumed by the NEA; writing in 1847 the Institute's President Horace Mann wrote: "The Institute may justly be considered as the source of all the improvements in education which have since 1830 been made in New England and other Northern States and its influence is slowly diffusing itself through the uncongenial regions of the South." The lectures are a particular point of interest in this series as they cover a wide variety of topics of interest to historians of education ranging from "The Importance of a Knowledge of the Principles of Physiology to Parents and Teachers" Edward Reynolds 1833 to "The Comparative Merits of Private and Public Schools" Theodore Edson 1837. A key source for early pedagogical theory in America rarely seen in commerce. Carter, Hendee, and Co unknown
184235598Edinburgh: William and Robert Chambers 1842. New and Improved edition. Hardcover. Fair. Quartos. Two volumes. Volume I: viii 800 pages. Volume II: 800 pages. Illustrated. Blueish marbled paper covered boards. Leather corners and spine. Raised bands gilt decorations and titles on the spines. Title pages are foxed. Light occasional foxing to the contents. Front board detached on volume 2. Fair condition. William and Robert Chambers hardcover
2080202102302206Tankyu-do N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. Page number: 997 Size: 22cm Tankyu-do paperback
186733586New York: Agathynian Press 1867. First Edition. Wraps. Good. Stiff wraps. Approx. 9" x 6". 54 pages 5 1 page blank. Blue cloth covers with gilt lettered title stamped on front. Yellow end sheets. Ex-institutional copy with label removed from the front paste down and a small library stamp above a torn corner section of the right front flyleaf. Light edge wear to the cloth. Illustrated with a plan of the new property in back. Contents include proceedings narrative list of officers and a plan for the building. Rutgers Female College was started in the late 1830's. The college had planned to move to a new location in New York around the time this was published but the plans fell through. The college closed in the 1890's. Agathynian Press unknown
193658805Chicago: Chicago Apparatus Co. 1735-1743 No. Ashland Ave. 1936. 4to. pp. 435-832 pp. With 100’s of text illustrations photos diagrams. Green decorated publisher’s cloth red & white Art Deco lettering & decoration front cover spine minor rubbing edgewear former ownership stamps on covers & fore-edges still VG- bright copy. First edition thus of this well-illustrated catalogue offering aquariums terrariums specimen jars microscopes anatomy charts microscope slides and anatomical models and skeletons for sale. The company also targeted museums with specially preserved specimens for display including those mounted as samples on framed shadowboxes in glass display jars and many taxidermy options. Also offered were projection equipment for science teachers including Balopticons the ever present overhead projector film projectors and the Micro-Opticon. Worldcat locates 2 copies Cornell Linda Hall. Chicago Apparatus Co., 1735-1743 No. Ashland Ave., hardcover
1903List2990Dover and Chatham Ontario; Edinburgh and Blairgowrie Scotland 1903. Seventy-eight pieces: seven 2.5 x 4†photographs mounted on heavy cardstock; with seventeen letters from Alexander to James Macfarlane fifty-two from James to Alexander Macfarlane and two from others to Alexander Macfarlane. Fourteen from 1853–1882; eleven from 1883–1885; thirteen from 1886; twelve from 1887; thirteen from 1888; eight from 1889–1903. Sorted chronologically. Envelopes good to very good; letters generally near fine. Alexander Macfarlane 1851–1913 was a Scottish physicist mathematician and logician. He earned a D.Sc. from the University of Edinburgh in 1878; following this he would teach at the University of St. Andrews the University of Edinburgh the University of Texas at Austin and Lehigh University. Macfarlane earned a number of accolades including elections to many scientific and mathematical societies and an honorary doctorate from the University of Michigan. After his retirement in 1894 Alexander Macfarlane moved to a farm in Ontario left to him by his uncle James who is his correspondent herein. Much less is known about James Macfarlane; born in Scotland in 1806 he immigrated to North America by way of New York in 1835. He purchased land in Dover Township now Chatham Ontario in 1853 and was elected the town’s reeve in 1879. At the time of this correspondence he was a farmer by occupation. The photographs in the collection—portraits of unknown individuals—are likely his as they are from photography studios in the Brantford and Toronto area and seem to date from before Alexander Macfarlane’s arrival in the colony.<br /> <br /> James Macfarlane’s letters to his nephew mainly written between 1886 and 1889 give detailed descriptions of farm life and logistics in 19th-century Ontario. He grew corn wheat beans clover and hay raised pigs and cows and kept a number of workhorses alongside a few seasonal employees. The elder Macfarlane describes the state of his crops the health of his animals and especially his finances taxes and employees’ wages; he writes of “a constant fear of running aground†March 17 1887. However he also occasionally discusses academic or political affairs – it is unclear what education Macfarlane had or what political experience besides his reeveship but from his writing it seems not insignificant. One prohibition-related incident in 1887 especially stands out:<br /> <br /> “During the night between last Saturday & Sunday there was a dynamite explosion in front of the handsome residence of H. Cummings Esq. of Chatham – damage but no one hurt. It is believed it was the doing of the Chatham grogocracy – Mr. C. favours prohibition – Tories do notâ€. August 10 1887<br /> <br /> This letter dates the incident to late on the 6th or early on the 7th of August 1887; we do not find the explosion mentioned in local newspapers from the time.<br /> <br /> Alexander Macfarlane’s letters which comprise most of the earlier letters in the group focus on his burgeoning academic career. In 1882 when the majority of his letters were written he had applied and was waiting to hear about a position as Chair of Mathematics at University College Dundee now the University of Dundee which was then just being formed. Besides occasional discussions of work in which he is currently engaged Macfarlane writes about his tactics for bettering his chances at the Chair; for example:<br /> <br /> “I have just received some information which indicates that I shall have an excellent chance of being successful. Rev. Mr. Tait who was our minister before he left Blairgowrie for Newport opposite Dundee happens to be a very intimate friend of the founder of the College Miss Baxter of Balgavies. I saw from the first that it would be important to secure his cooperation; he has been very active in his support. Recently he was staying at Balgavies and when the College was discussed he spoke highly in my favour. He has persuaded Miss Baxter to take some active steps in my favour. Copies of all the applications etc. are sent to her which seems to indicate that a proposed appointment is submitted to her for approval.†September 19 1882<br /> <br /> The wait is difficult for Macfarlane and he frequently comments with displeasure on related workplace politics. For instance he is upset by the choice of William Peterson—whom he describes as “a fop†October 3 1882—for Principal of the new university:<br /> <br /> “Peterson had this advantage that many of the electors had a bias in favour of a Classical man for the office of Principal. He got only a second class at Oxford. I say nothing on the subject but I have heard others express an opinion that a mistake has been made.†August 13 1882<br /> <br /> And later:<br /> <br /> “Most people express themselves as greatly surprised at the choice the Dundee Council made of a Principal. My theory of the matter is that Professor Donaldson with the view of furthering his own candidature wished to ingratiate himself with Professor Sellars after he saw that Mr Porter would not be accepted by the Council. I feel that the Council may do anything as they seem nearly incapable of forming an independent opinion.†September 27 1882<br /> <br /> When he does not receive the Chair Macfarlane shares his thoughts with his uncle about the state of Scottish Universities especially that they “have no reputation for scholarship†and that the Scottish people “need not expect learning to flourish at their Universities†November 23 1882.<br /> <br /> Of course Macfarlane’s career turned out fine despite this setback; in 1895 he tells James not unfairly that “I am considered one of the foremost thinkers of the day in the field of exact science†March 21.<br /> <br /> Overall a look at the lives and activities of an uncle and nephew with extremely different careers; of interest both to scholars of Ontario history and farming and to historians of science and higher education. unknown
19209417Chicago: Reilly and Britton 1920. 8vo. Unpaginated. Boards missing first section loose some toning and edgewear top edge gilt good only. <br /> <br /> High school yearbook and scrapbook compiled by Anna Elizabeth Zillig MacMillan a 1922 graduate of North Avenue Presbyterian School in Atlanta Georgia. She filled the pages with photographs newspaper clippings invitations programs her own handwritten reflections as well as notes from friends and family. Also of note several beautiful sketches by her sister Sophie Marie Zillig Smith Davis and ink drawings by Charles "Chas" Willet Davis Lily Frieda Grobli Lewis and John Henry Grobli. A charming representative of 1920s society in Atlanta and a glimpse into women's education at the time. Reilly and Britton unknown
19157727Seattle: Lincoln High School 1915. First edition. Stiff printed wrappers. Very Good. Narrow 4to. Pp. 46 followed by six pages of ads. Bound in stiff printed wraps saddle-stapled. Faint small stains to cover; lower corner of cover and first few leaves bumped. Withal a well-preserved copy. Not to be confused with a class yearbook or annual this is Lincoln High School's literary journal. Although titled the "Football Number" usual subjects are covered: dramatics literary productions fiction and poetry alumni "Scientific Adventures" etc. Lincoln High School unknown
191157310Plano IL: National Manual Training Corporation 1911. 4to. 8.5 x 11 in. 36 leaves unnumbered. With photo illustrations diagrams muslin cloth sample laid-in. Printed softcover on front stapled at spine to thick back board some soiling & tidemark to lower right corners edgewear couple minor tears still G reference copy w/ former ownership marking of Minnie Berg 6th Grade Portland OR on front cover. First edition of this uncommon sewing textbook for home economics and manual trades students taking their first instruction courses in 6th and 7th grade for sewing. The lessons were intended to instruct students in how to assemble a sewing basket including a photo of a J.P. Coats sewing sample display as well as instructions on how to straighten cloth sew basting back stitching overcasting and running stitches details about the cotton plant and much more. The National Manual Training Corp. was a short-lived vocational training education service which merged with Marion Norman Collection Indiana Manual Training Co. and the Muncie Conservatory of Music to become Muncie Normal Institute in Muncie IN< which was foreclosed in 1917. Purchased by the Ball Brothers the Institute was given to the State and eventually became Ball State. No copies in Worldcat. National Manual Training Corporation, paperback
1988217269Shanghai.: 上海教育出版社. Shanghai Education Publishing House. 1988. Complete set of 18 coloured posters to accompany Volume 7 of the Chinese language course textbook for Year 6 students. Mostly 52.5 x 76.5cm some 38 x 52.5cm. All stamped with the name of a school "Jiading Town Second Central Primary School Materials Room" on reverse. Occasional foxing to reverse pin-tack holes and slight staining to some edges. Upper corners of Number 17 is chipped with some loss and previous cello-tape repairs. Colours in images of all posters are clear and bright and overall in good condition. Brief captions in simplified Chinese characters. The set of posters includes a wide variety of images from Lenin with soldiers to illustrations of animals and from illustrations of stories from the past to one of a modern high rise building. Of particular interest is picture 18 with a three-generation one-child family happily taking delivery of a new fridge in a high rise apartment with children's toys fresh flowers and a large TV all part of the scene. The father is wearing jeans. Overall they provide a picture of modern happy people living in a modern economy with plenty of consumer goods. . 上海教育出版社. [Shanghai Education Publishing House]. unknown
151998456Paris: Revue universelle January 15 1939. January 15 1939. Very good. - Octavo 10 inches high by 6-1/2 inches wide. Softcover bound in printed gray wrappers titled in black on the front cover and the spine. The edges of the covers are lightly creased. Volume LXXVI No. 20 January 15 1939 pages 129-256. The overlapping edges of a few of the deckle-edged pages are lightly creased & chipped. Very good. <p>Alexandre Choulguine 1889-1960 was an important Ukrainian statesman who spent much of his life in exile in Paris. During World War 2 he acted as the head of the Ukrainian government in exile. Paris: Revue universelle, January 15, 1939. paperback
19972092902137601606Sonobe Town Board of Education 1997. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 73p version 61p Size: 30cm Number of books: 1 Sonobe Town Board of Education paperback
188733222Philadelphia: Press of Wm. F. Fell & Co 1887. Wraps. Fair. Wraps 8.25" x 5.5". 27 pages 9 pages of advertisements. Gray wraps with borders and title on the front cover. A list of Dr. L. Sauveur's Educational Works printed on the rear wrap. Light chips to the covers. The rear wrap is detached. Vertical crease to the contents. Illustrated with two maps: a 12" x 12" folding railroad map of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad and Connections; and a 12" x 12" folding map of Rome Watertown and Ogdensburg Railroad and Connections. Both maps are in very good condition. The second map is attached to the rear wrap which is detached. Contents include faculty school goals testimonials school information including courses etc. From Amherst College Archives:<br /> <br /> Dr. Sauveur started the Normal School of Languages at Amherst College in 1875. In 1878 the School was first held at Amherst College. Its objective was "to familiarize instructors with the 'Natural Method' of teaching ancient and modern languages." By 1894 the Sauveur College of Languages also known as Sauveur Summer School or Normal School of Languages joined with the Amherst Summer School. The Summer School offered in addition to language courses courses in "library economy" geology physical education and other subjects. A 1901 brochure describes the Summer School of Library Economy also known as Fletcher Library School as a distinct program developed by William I. Fletcher. By 1906 the program was defunct. Press of Wm. F. Fell & Co unknown
188633221Philadelphia: Press of Wm. F. Fell & Co 1886. First Edition. Wraps. Good. Wraps 8.25" x 5.5". 32 pages. Brown wraps with borders and title on the front cover. A list of Dr. L. Sauveur's Educational Works printed on the rear cover. Vertical crease to the contents. Light edge wear to some of the text. Illustrated with two maps: 9" x 7.5" folding railroad map of the New York Ontario & Western Ry; and a 12" x 12" folding map of Rome Watertown and Ogdensburg Railroad and Connections. Both maps are in good condition. Contents include faculty school goals testimonials school information including courses etc. From Amherst College Archives:<br /> <br /> Dr. Sauveur started the Normal School of Languages at Amherst College in 1875. In 1878 the School was first held at Amherst College. Its objective was "to familiarize instructors with the 'Natural Method' of teaching ancient and modern languages." By 1894 the Sauveur College of Languages also known as Sauveur Summer School or Normal School of Languages joined with the Amherst Summer School. The Summer School offered in addition to language courses courses in "library economy" geology physical education and other subjects. A 1901 brochure describes the Summer School of Library Economy also known as Fletcher Library School as a distinct program developed by William I. Fletcher. By 1906 the program was defunct. Press of Wm. F. Fell & Co unknown
193519132Nashville: State Department of Education Walter D. Cocking Commissioner. Very Good. 1935. Revised Edition. Softcover. Narrow printed stapled gray wraps. Revised November 1935. In the Foreword it states "Teachers in the Colored Schools of Tennessee have felt a need for a list of books by and about the Negro which are especially adapted to the comprehension of the pupil." Includes a list of bibliographies an alphabetical list by author and subject Directory of Publishers and an Author and Title Index. Some of the authors represented include C. W. Chesnutt mispelled Chestnutt throughout this book J. C. Harris W. E. B. DuBois Paul L. Dunbar Langston Hughes J. W. Johnson Alain Locke and Wheatley. In excellent condition with only some light creasing to the upper corners. Other extremely minor wear. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 22 pages . State Department of Education, Walter D. Cocking, Commissioner paperback
1832AQ17030Berne: s.n. 1832. Single leaf broadside. Numerous old horizontal and vertical folds. Apparently unrecorded. Bound with: Loi sur les écoles primaires publiques. Berne. C. Fisher et Comp. 1835. 2 46pp. OCLC records a single copy Fribourg. And: Règlement concernant les leçons d'ouvrages dans les écoles primaires des filles. Berne. s.n. 1840. 8pp. OCLC records copies at just two locations Cantonal Library of Jura and ZFH. And: Loi sur l'instruction publique. Lausanne. Pache-Simmen 1846. 87pp 1. And: Règlement pour les écoles publiques primaires du canton de vaud. Lausanne. Imprimerie de Corbaz et Robellaz 1847. 54 1 vi pp. OCLC records copies at a single locations Royal Danish Library. And: Drop-head title: Loi du 1er juin 1849 sur l'organisation de l'école normale. s.i. s.n. 1849. 15pp 1. And: Règlement pour les écoles normales du canton de vaud. Du 11 Septembre 1849. Lausanne. S. Genton 1849. 49pp 1. And: Programme des objets d'étude enseignés dans les écoles normales du canton de vaud. Lausanne. Pache 1850. 47pp 1. And: Règlement pour l'académie du 29 septembre 1849. Lausanne. Imprimerie de Corbaz et Robellaz 1849. 67pp 1. And: Réglement pour le collége cantonal. Lausanne. Pache-Simmen 1847. 58pp. And: Règlement pour l'institution henchoz a chateau-d'œx. Lausanne. Pache 1850. 29pp 1. And: Règlement pour l'école préparatoire au collége cantonal. Lausanne. Corbaz et Robellaz 1849. 13pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Règlement pour l'école d'escrime. Le conseil d'etat. s.i. s.n. 1847. 3pp 1. And: Règlement pour les exercises militaires du collége cantonal. Lausanne. Pache-Simmen 1841. 11pp 1. And: Loi sur l'instruction publique. Fribourg. L.-J. Schmid 1848. 72pp. And: Règlement organique de l'école secondaire des filles. Fribourg. Joseph-Louis Piller 1849. 15pp 1. And: Drop-head title: La direction de l'instruction publique du canton de fribourg. s.i. s.n. 1850. 4pp. And: Drop-head title: Règlement organique pour le rétablissement de l'asile en faveur des jeunes filles pauvres sondé par Mme Lapoype a la neuveville a fribourg. Fribourg. s.n. 1850. 8pp. OCLC records copies at just two locations Fribourg and Lausanne. And: Drop-head title: Loi fédérale sur la création d'une Ecole polytechnique suisse. Du 7 Février 1854. s.i. s.n. 1854. 12pp. And: Drop-head title: Caisse de l'association des instituteurs du canton de fribourg fondée en 1835. Fribourg s.n. 1851. 16pp. And: Règlement de la bibliothèque cantonale. Fribourg. Joseph-Louis Piller 1852. 2 8pp. OCL records a single copy Lausanne. And: Cover-title: Réglement organique pour les établissements d'instruction publique de la commune de vevy adopté en conseil communal le 17 mai 1847. Vevwy. Loertscher et Fils 1848. 28pp. Original publisher's printed yellow upper wrapper bound in. And: Réglement organique pour l'école supérieure des jeunes filles adopté par le conseil; communal le 16 juillet 1847. Vevey. Loertscher et Fils 1848. 8pp. Original publisher's printed blue upper wrapper bound in. And: Organisation des evangelischen Kirchen- und Erziehungswesens vom Kanton St. Gallen Vom 6. Bebruar 1834. s.i. s.n. 1834. 28pp. And: Verordnung über das Recht der evangelischen Kirchen- und Schulgenossenschaften Pfarrer u. öffentl. angestellten Primarlehrer zu entlassen. Vom 11. Februar 1834. s.i. s.n. 1834. 6pp. And: Verordnung des evangelischen Grossrathskollegiums betreffend die Errichtung von Mädchenarbeitsschulen vom 17. November 1846. s.i. s.n. 1847. 2 4pp. And: Drop-head title: Verordnung des evangelischen Grossrathskollegiums des Kantons St. Gallen betreffend die Lehrergehaltserhöhung. Vom 11. November 1852. s.i. s.n. 1852. And: Gesetz über die Gesundarschulen. s.i. s.n. 1839. 12pp. Apparently unrecorded. And: Bericht über die Leistungen der Realschule der Stadt Bern. Bern. Carl Rätzer 1851. 73pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Erziehungsgeser. In Kraft getreten von 26. Wintermonat 1848. s.i. s.n. 1848. 22pp. And: Drop-head title: Vollziehungsverordnung zum Erziehungsgeser vom 26. Wintermonat 1848. s.i. s.n. 1851. 9pp 1. And: Vollziehungsverordnung zum Erziehungsgeser vom 26. Wintermonat 1848.vom 17 April 1850 revidirt den 22. März 1851. s.i. s.n. 1850. 35pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Vollziehungsverordnung zum Erziehungsgeser vom 26. Wintermonat 1848 das Gemeinde- und Vezirtsschlwesen vetreffend. Vom 16. Hornung 1851. s.i. s.n. 1851. 68pp. And: Drop-head title: Reglement der Hausordnung für das Lehrerseminar in Ratshausen. s.i. s.n. 1849. 7pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Reglement für die Prüfungen der Volksschullehrer des Kantons Luzern. s.i. s.n. s.d. c. 1850. 7pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Reglement über die Kantonsbibliothek. s.i. s.n. 1853. 7pp 1. And: Beschluss über Ubanderung der ss. 43 44 125 126 127 128 129 und 161 der Vollziehungsverordnung zum Erziehungsgeser vom. 21 Christonat 1853. s.i. s.n. 1853. 6pp. And: Statuten des Schullehrer- Wittwen- und Waisen- Unterstůkungs- bereins für den Kanton Luzern. Luzern i.e. Lucerne. Gebrüdern Råber 1840. 11pp 1. And: Lehrplan für die Realschule. s.i. s.n. 1853. 11pp 1. And: Lehrplan für die Gemeindeschulen. s.i. s.n. 1852. 14pp. And: Drop-head title: Beleuchtung des Lehrplanes für die Gemeindeschulen. s.i. s.n. s.d. c. 1850. 78pp. And: Schulorganisation für den Kanton Schwyz. Einsiedeln. Nicolaus Benziger 1848. 15pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Instruktion für den Kantonalschulinspeftor. s.i. s.n. 1849. 5pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Instruktion für den Gemeindeschulräthe. s.i. s.n. 1849. 9pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Instruktion für den Bezirksschulräthe. s.i. s.n. 1849. 4pp. And: Drop-head title: Instruktion für die Prüfungskommission der Primarlehrer. s.i. s.n. 1849. 3pp 1. And: Drop-head title: Instruktion für die Lehrerkonferenzen. s.i. s.n. 1849. 2pp. And: Drop-head title: Abänderung des 23. der Schulorganisation vom 9/12 August 1848. s.i. s.n. 1851. 2pp. 8vo. Modern half-calf green cloth boards. Extremities worn without upper board library shelf label to lower board naively rebacked. Occasional blind-stamps shelf-labels and inscriptions of the South Kensington Museum Educational Library scattered spotting. An extensive sammelband of forty-eight mid-nineteenth-century pamphlets and a broadside- all either remarkably scarce or entirely unrecorded - predominantly concerning the administration of civil and military education in the Canton of Vaud Switzerland. . Dimensions 390 x 460 mm. [s.n.] hardcover
194784145n.p.: Headquarters U.S. Forces European Theater 1947. Oblong octavo 16cm; brown cloth covered boards with titling stamped in light brown on front cover; map illustrated rear endpaper; 186pp; photographic frontispiece with black and white photographic halftones and additional illustrations throughout. Modest rubbing to spine ends and edges with two small indentations to upper board edges; Good. <br /> <br /> Unofficial publication intended as a souvenir for families in Germany following its Jan. 1947 preparation prior to its release in May 1947 without reflection of events between the dates. Includes explantory inclosure errata sheet and photographic plates of individuals and locations throughout. Its original intent was for individuals moving to Germany during the occupation following WWII with sections including "Germany: Something about the country and its people" "Schools and Churches: Education for children worship for all" "Military Communities: Details on the 50-odd home areas" and many more. 84145. Headquarters, U.S. Forces European Theater unknown
189830077Washington DC: Government Printing Office 1898. Wraps. Good. Gray printed wraps. Aprox. 9" x 6". Pages 1379-1474. Light soil markings and an edge chip to the front cover. Interior contents clean. Government Printing Office unknown
186595059New Orleans: Duncan & Co. Stationer's and Booksellers 124 Camp Street 1865. Very Good. Partly printed receipt dated November 7 1865. Approximately 20 x 13 cm. Property owned by individual listed on back side. Taxing white property owners in Louisiana to support education of African Americans was probably the primary method of funding education for African Americans in Union-controlled Louisiana since African Americans were too poor for their taxes to support such schools. This receipt is signed by a Captain Sheridan on behalf of the Provost Marshall. After the end of the Civil War the newly created Freedmen's Bureau would replace this Board of Education for Freedmen in the Army's Department of the Gulf. Efforts to seize and redistribute property from defeated Confederates to those formerly enslaved were thwarted by President Andrew Johnson. We doubt that the Freedmen's Bureau had authority to continue this property tax. Duncan & Co., Stationer's and Booksellers, 124 Camp Street unknown
185233592Raleigh: Printed at the Office of the Weekly Post 1852. First Edition. Wraps. Good. Wraps. Approx. 9" x 6". 62 pages. Original stitched printed wrappers with title on the front cover. Paper spine mostly perished. Light toning and foxing to contents. From wikipedia:<br /> <br /> Founded in 1795 the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Inc. commonly known as DiPhi or The Societies are the original collegiate debating societies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and together comprise the oldest student organization at the University as well as the oldest public student organization in the United States. During the academic year the Societies hold regular meetings at 7:30 PM on Mondays in the Dialectic Chamber at the top of the New West Building. The Societies also hold occasional social events in the Philanthropic Chamber at the top of New East Building. Printed at the Office of the Weekly Post unknown
2000EEG1379Mansfield CT:: Martino c. 2000. 2000. 4to. xiv 1315 1 pp. Index. Gray gilt-stamped cloth publisher's shrink wrap. As new. EXTRA POSTAGE WILL APPLY. Martino, [c. 2000]. hardcover