102 résultats
1899577171899. A Rival of the Yale Shingle Yale Law School. Stanley W.K. Editor. The Yale Law School Mirror. New Haven: Yale University Law School 1899. vii 97 xxxvi pp. Includes thirty-six pages of advertisements additional ads to endleaves. Photographs. Plates. Oblong octavo 8" x 7". Original blue cloth gilt title cartouche to front board. Some rubbing to extremities owner bookplate of Harry Crosby Camp to front pastedown internally clean. $125. Published from 1898 to 1900 this yearbook competed against the more successful Yale Shingle. Unlike its rival the Mirror appeared to be a quasi-official publication that concentrated on factual information about the school rather than colorful anecdotes about the students. It is thus a useful trove of information about Yale Law School at the turn of the twentieth century. Camp owner of our copy was a member of class of 1900. unknown books
1896505201896. 1895 Yale Law School Yearbook Yale Law School. Brown Frank J. Editor. Donnelly Frank E. Editor. The Yale Shingle 1895. New Haven: Yale Law School April 1895. 120 62 pp. Portrait frontispiece of law school faculty with tissue overlay. 62 pages of advertisements. Octavo 9" x 6". Morocco-stamped paper boards gilt title to spine. Moderate edgewear most of backstrip lacking spine crudely repaired with clear tape hinges cracked. Owner inscription of William Perry Hopkins to front endleaf internally clean. $65. The Yale Shingle a yearbook published from 1893 to 1912 offers a great deal of fascinating information about the students at Yale Law School. The biographical essays that accompany the portrait photographs photo record the family ethnic and education backgrounds of the students. Descriptive chapters derived from surveys record their attitudes toward aspects of student life Yale and personal social and political issues. unknown books
187588991Mystic River Groton Ct 1875. Modest-sized newspaper 33cm. Four pages. Later horizontal fold. This school was established in 1869 by Jonathan Whipple and claimed to have good success utilizing their method of "oralism" which utilized "Whipple's Natural Alphabet as part of a system of "articulation and lip-reading" while rejecting the use of sign language. We don't know how many issues of this promotional newspaper were published. OCLC lists one holding -- Galludet University which has 3 issues: Vol. 1 Nos. 6 & 7 March & April 1874 and Vol. 2 No. 1 April 1876. The residential school was reorganized in 1896 as Mystic Oral School for the Deaf with heavy reliance on state aid; operation of the school was taken over by the State of Connecticut in 1921. The school continued to operate until 1980. <br/><br/> unknown books
187938680Mount Vernon: Printing office of the Wartburg Orphans' Farm School 1879. First edition. Stitched paper wrappers. Overall very good copies with some chips to wrappers. Tenth report has tear along spine. 8vo. Tenth Report includes a "Compliments of G.C. Holls" card as well as a typed letter laid in loose. Thirteenth Report contains a typed letter laid in loose from the same. Holls was the Director of the Institution and on the Board of Managers. Reports cover from May 1 1875 to May 1 of each of the following years through 1879. The Wartburg Orphans' Farm School was founded in 1866 serving children who had lost parents during the Civil War. Over time the facility shifted to serving the elderly and is currently known as the Wartburg Adult Care Community. OCLC shows four locations: Huntington Trinity Yale NYHS. Printing office of the Wartburg Orphans' Farm School unknown books
1851709691851. Cincinnati: A.H. Pugh 1878. Cincinnati: A.H. Pugh 1878. The First Law School West of the Alleghenies University of Cincinnati College of Law. Catalogue of the Officers and Students of the Law School of the Cincinnati College. Cincinnati: A.H. Pugh 1878. 55 1 pp. Octavo 9" x 6". Stab-stitched pamphlet in printed wrappers. Faint vertical crease through center moderate soiling and a few small stains a few chips to edges and corners spine abraded wrappers partially detached part-erased inscription in pencil to verso of title page. Light browning to text occasional faint dampstaining to head of text block. $150. Founded in 1833 by graduates of Harvard Law School and Litchfield Law School the University of Cincinnati College of Law was the first law school established west of the Allegheny Mountains. This 1878 catalogue was published for prospective and incoming students. It contains general information about the school regulations course outlines and lists of required texts. Lists of students and alumni are included as well. unknown books
1865800079mSalem Mass.: Printed at the Salem Gazette Office 1865. Octavo self-wrappers 8 pp. Short tears along upper edge of front cover not effecting text. Printed at the Salem Gazette Office, 1865. unknown books
1844286027Philadelphia: American Sunday-School Union 1844. Hard Cover. Fair binding. The American Sunday-School Union's edition of The People of China; Or A Summary of Chinese History. With in-text illustrations. Scattered marginal notations in pencil; faint foxing to the preliminaries; vertical crease to two leaves; writing and namestamp to the pastedowns; lacking endpapers; rippling and general wear to the boards; shelf number painted on the spine. Embossed cloth. Fair. Fair binding. American Sunday-School Union unknown books
1856791091856. SUNDAY SCHOOL ADVOCATE VOLUME XIII NUMBER 14 WHOLE NO. 292 APRIL 8 1854 - VOLUME XV NUMBER 12 WHOLE NUMBER 339 MARCH 22 1856 PP. 105-200 1-192 & 1-96 complete. 4to 3/4 leather with marbled paper covered boards. Spine joints cracked one inch chip to heel tiny chips to crown. Corners scraped boards rubbed. Interior near fine with occasional small closed tear to edges of pages. Light foxing throughout. Illustrated in b/w in text. Uncommon early volumes. unknown books
184057668Stockport: printed by James Lomax & Sons Underbank 1840. 16mo pp. 12; removed from binding wrappers wanting; else very good. Long account of Joseph Myer Esq. treasurer of the Stockport Sunday School and his 50-year tenure. Stockport is a market and industrial town just southeast of Manchester. University of Manchester only in OCLC. <br/><br/> printed by James Lomax & Sons, Underbank unknown books
18703023Boston: Wright & Potter State Printer 1870. Together with the Annual Reports of the Resident Officers; Public Document # 20 report for October 1869; reviews the state of the institution financial reports etc. number of people at the school and their original home towns; 26 pages original pink paper wraps; some spine ends edge tips wear to binding; a very good copy. First Edition. Soft Cover. Very Good. Wright & Potter, State Printer Paperback books
181439223Londini: Ex officinâ Johannis Nichols et Sociorum 1814. Small 8vo 18.5cm 7.25". Frontis. port. 1 f. 62 pp. <br><br>John Colet 14671519 Dean of St. Paul's seems in 1508 to have begun to think about "applying his patrimony to education by the reconstitution of St Paul's Cathedral school in new premises reflecting a preoccupation with education as prerequisite for spiritual regeneration" DNB online. He "opened the doors to St Pauls School in 1509 to educate boys 'from all nacions and countres indifferently' St. Paul's School website.<br>Â Â Â Â Elegantly bound and handsomely printed this is the first edition of this collection for use of the boys of the school and is comprised of "Preces quotidianae ut celebrantur in scholâ Paulina" and "Catechismus cum ordine Confirmationis." The prayers were first published in 1642 and are in Latin while the catechism is in Greek on versos of leaves and Latin opposite on rectos. The engraved frontispiece portrait of Colet is by John Taylor Wedgwood 17831856 a cousin of Josiah Wedgwood.<br>Â Â Â Â Provenance: Late 19th-century bookplate of the Rev. George H. Culshaw; most recently in the library of American collector Albert A. Howard small booklabel "AHA" at rear.<br>Â Â Â Â Binding: Contemporary green straight-grain goat spine gilt extra; both boards with a gilt double-rule outer border and an inner center frame of single gilt rule with large gilt corner devices. Board edges with a gilt roll; narrow turn-ins with a different gilt roll. All edges gilt.<br>Â Â Â Â Searches of WorldCat locate only six U.S. libraries IU NjNbT PPiT IEN NNC NNG reporting ownership. Binding as above; spine sunned to olive front cover with scuff sometime well disguised boards showing signs of having been bent some time ago. Bookplate and label as above. A very few light spots of foxing pages overall clean and crisp. Very good condition. => A very attractive book. Ex officinâ Johannis Nichols et Sociorum hardcover books
183557666Walworth: printed by J. Packer Albion Place 1835. 16mo pp. 22 2; removed from binding wrappers wanting; else very good. Includes a list of subscribers and donors. Not in OCLC. <br/><br/> printed by J. Packer, Albion Place unknown books
183957665London: printed for the Society by Mead & Powell 93 Whitechapel 1839. 16mo pp. 37 1; removed from binding wrappers wanting; else very good. Founded in 1800 the Methodist Sion Chapel was in the notoriously squalid Whitechapel section of London. Not in OCLC. <br/><br/> printed for the Society by Mead & Powell, 93, Whitechapel unknown books
18398953Edinburgh: Whyte & Co. 1839. 8vo. 11 1 blank 8 pp. <br><br><br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Apparently not in NSTC CD version. Removed from a nonce volume. Lightly age-toned. Inked numeral on title-page. Whyte & Co. unknown books
18242952Genoa 1824. <p>Manuscript on laid paper 4to 236 x 176 mm. 126 leaves foliated 3 1-3 1 4-42 1 43-51 1 52-61 1 62-103 1 104-118 complete. The numbered leaves containing one hundred and eighteen emblematic drawings all full-page explanations written on versos the unnumbered leaves containing the title 3 and 1/2-page introduction and section titles; most of the illustrations in landscape format. Calligraphic title text in brown ink in a neat cursive hand; the drawings in graphite pen-and-ink and gray wash a few with details in brown ink each within rule border with numbering at top gutter edge. Corner repairs to ff. 1-10 tears into ff. 9 and 104 a few other short marginal tears or fraying to edges ff. 100 and 101 with gutters reinforced on versos occasional minor offsetting or soiling. Late 19th-century half parchment and brown glazed paper manuscript title label on spine. <br /><br />An illustrated manuscript course of religious instruction for Deaf children by a pioneer of Deaf education in Italy using an original emblematic visual "language." <br /><br />By the early nineteenth century pre-modern misconceptions concerning the learning abilities of Deaf children had been largely exposed as false by such eighteenth-century pedagogues as the abbé Sicard and Charles-Michel de l'Epée in France each of whom founded schools for the Deaf and contributed to the development of a standardized sign language or Samuel Heinicke in Germany who implemented a different method of communication for the Deaf centered on oral speech. In Italy the most influential figure in the education of Deaf children was Ottavio Assarotti. As a young man Assarotti entered the order of the Piarists the Scuole pie. Founded in 1617 the Piarists' principal mission was and remains the provision of free education to poor and especially disabled children. After several years teaching theology and philosophy Assarotti set those disciplines aside to devote himself full-time to the development of an instructional program for Deaf children. Assarotti's method consisted in teaching the children not only reading writing and sign language but also a full range of humanist disciplines including science the arts and foreign languages. In 1805 he obtained financial support from Napoleon to found a school which after some delays was finally opened in 1811 in the former Bridgettine convent. After Napoleon's defeat the growing school received renewed support from King Vittorio Emmanuele I and its fame spread throughout Europe. <br /><br />"Assarotti made great use of sign language in his teaching . Directors of nearly all Italian institutes for deaf students flocked to learn from him and carried his method back with them. Pope Gregory XVI sent the new directors of the Rome Institute Padri Ralli and Gioazzini to study in Genoa with Assarotti. Upon their return to Rome they too used his techniques. How is it possible that a man so renowned and successful in his own time did not earn so much as one line of recognition in the historical accounts of other countries Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that Assarotti left no traces in written form of his philosophy and method. Had he done so not only would he have gained respect and notoriety outside Italy but perhaps the critical events soon to follow the subsequent dominance of "oralism" over sign language in Italy would have taken a different course ." Radutsky p. 245.<br /><br />In fact Assarotti wrote and may have published several texts for his pupils listed in DBI but not found in OCLC or ICCU. The present unpublished work was probably prepared for the use of instructors in the school. It contains a pictorial religious course of instruction using a complex but precise symbolic system to explain Christian doctrine and liturgy including the most abstract theological concepts. All the elements in the drawings are identified in captions of varying lengths and in various layouts. Names or words are often incorporated as visual elements of the emblems. While somewhat primitive the drawings' unique iconography is evocative and some have a powerful dreamlike quality.<br /><br />In the Middle Ages the Deaf were barred from the sacraments - and hence from marriage and any kind of normal life - because of the belief that they could not understand the word of God. While these strictures were loosened in 1571 thanks to Luther's influence prejudice against Deaf persons' abilities to achieve salvation subsisted partly because it was thought that they could not perform Confession. Hence the importance to early educators of the hearing-disabled of providing their pupils with comprehensive religious instruction as an essential foundation of their integration into society.<br /><br />The unnamed author of the introduction writing in the third person describes Assarotti's school and praises his religious zeal humanity and his understanding that Deaf people who had been previously "abandoned by society" are fully competent and indeed capable of the highest intellectual and spiritual attainment. The emblems the author explains will present to the Deaf student an easy transition from familiar material objects to those objects which are less material and from there to the most immaterial concepts of all. In doing so he or she will eventually absorb the entire Christian doctrine. The figures are described as Assarotti's own egli . ha inventato le figure che formano questo Libro . but whether the actual drawings are in his hand is uncertain. The introduction concludes with an explanation of the most frequently recurring emblematic figures. God is represented by a circle containing three rectangles which touch the circle and each other representing the Divine Trinity: flames emanate from the God the Father and Jesus rectangles toward the one representing the Holy Spirit a concept which is explained in the text as the reciprocal love between the two other Divine Persons. Jesus the man as opposed to his divine nature is shown by another circle helpfully inscribed "Uomo / Jesu' Cristo" and humans or human souls are represented by hearts although the meaning of the heart emblem varies throughout the manuscript. Further symbols introduced later are explained on the versos of the drawings.<br /><br />Contrasting with the approbation granted his pedagogical achievements Assarotti's religious views linked to the most mystical wing of the Ligurian Jansenists met with resistance from the church hierarchy and some of his theological writings were not approved for publication. The drawings of this manuscript provide a glimpse of an abstract mysticism which would certainly have been at odds with Catholic orthodoxy.<br /><br />The work is in five parts titled: Faith Fede ff. 4-42; Laws Legge 43-51; Prayer Preghiera 52-61; Sanctification Sanctificazione 62-103 and Virtue Vertù 104-118. The first part is a visual exposition of the Credo starting with God's attributes: his ubiquity is represented by the God and Jesus circles overlapping above a symbol of the world earth and heavens with the word DIO written repeatedly across the page; his omniscience by the God symbol at top sending down rays of light at center a man sitting under a tree and below that a well captioned "Abyss." Creation is a delightful drawing of fish in the seas flanking a mound representing the earth on top of which cavort animals under trees and within which are three large hearts linked to a central pole at the top and illustrating the three reasons that God created man: so that they might know love and enjoy him. The Church of Jesus Christ is an architectural drawing of a fortress. Heaven is a light emanating rays while Hell is a large vat whose opening is locked and barred. Virtuous souls are flaming hearts each with an open eye since they see God; sinful souls are spotted hearts with wilted stems instead of flames. These blemished hearts recur throughout the book for example behind bars in the vat of Hell; enchained by a similarly spotted Devil; in a genealogical tree descended from Adam and Eve; or clustered above Hell on Judgment Day opposite a crowd of pure haloed hearts trumpets sounding above and lightning striking the damned while divine light bathes the saved.<br /><br />The section on Laws contains various allegorical representations of the Ten Commandments. While some drawings amount to schematic tables demonstrating the relationships between theological concepts others are more pictorial. Reflecting no doubt Assarotti's personal mysticism all aspects of the divinity are abstract: there are no angels Madonnas or images of Christ. Crosses are shown but there are no Crucifixions and Christ's Passion appears as a circle containing the Arma Christi. The church hierarchy is represented by a papal tiara mitres and stoles. Human figures appear predominantly in the drawings of the sacraments and in representations of sin. In contrast with the invisibility of the divine Satin is personified as a grimacing devil and the seven deadly sins appear as animals and monsters poised above poisonous emissions from Hell's chimneys. <br /><br />That Assarotti's school used such manuscripts for teaching is supported by the existence of another manuscript very similar in content but lacking the title and two leaves offered by the Austrian antiquarian book firm Inlibris. Cf. Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani art. Antonella Dolci 4:433-4; E. Radutsky "The Education of Deaf People in Italy and the Use of Italian Sign Language" in Van Cleve ed. Deaf History Unveiled 1993 237-5; Rauthgundis Kurrer Gehörlose im Wandel der Zeit doctoral dissertation University of Munich 2013 available as a pdf online pp. 30-33.</p> unknown books
1834547Millgrove Buschkill Taunship Northampton County Pennsylvania: Gedruckt von Samuel and Solomon Siegfried's 1834. 12mo. 189 x 105 mm. 7 x 4 ¼ inches. 360 pp. . Illustrated with woodcut title-page vignette and a woodcut image of a thermometer. Contemporary leather backed marbled paper boards; scuffed and rubbed at joints; paper toned with age and some foxing; good copy. First edition text entirely in German. Scarce Millgrove imprint written by Samuel Siegfried and printed by his brother Solomon both of Northampton County. The content of the geography text is well conceived beginning with a section of geographical terms followed by a grammar of place names and vital statistics for every state territory and country in North and South America Europe Africa the Near East and the Far East. This is followed by a more detailed study of each of the place names and includes information on population manufacturing farm production major cities literary and cultural centers and religious denominations. The book is fully indexed. "Samuel Siegfried 1797-1879 started his career as a printer after his move from Easton to Millgrove in 1834. In this he published at least two books Deutsche Georgraphie and Bewährter Ratgeber and his first broadside baptismal certificate together with his brother Solomon. At the end of this year and during 1835 Samuel Siegfried printed and published three further baptismal certificates under his own name." Solomon Siegfried is best known for the printing and decorating of birth and baptismal certificates which he produced for German speaking families in Northampton County. Shoemaker Checklist of American Imprints 26774. Stopp The Printed BBC's III p. 176. Earnest Flying Leaves and One-Sheets pp. 41-42 264. Gedruckt von Samuel and Solomon Siegfried's unknown books
18568123Boston: Dutton & Wentworth / Ticknor & Fields 1856. 1st book edition. Original dark brown cloth with covers stamped in blind & gilt spine lettering. VG sp dull/minor extremity wear/tide line at top of text block in Vol II/owner sig on tps. 2 volumes. Engraved frontis & title page in Vol I. 8vo. <br/><br/>Collected commentary by Sargent a noted Antiquary & Temperance advocate on Boston society among other things as was initially published in a series of Boston Evening Transcript articles. Per the DAB "though he showed enthusiasm for the past his efforts were generally directed towards blasting something offensive to him out of existence". OCLC records just 4 copies of this work in institutional hands. Dutton & Wentworth / Ticknor & Fields hardcover books
18785956New York: Royal Baking Powder Co 1878. Stapled octavo-sized booklet 23.5 x 15cm. 32 pages. Illustrated. FIRST EDITION. Front wrapper verso with product reviews dated 1878. Includes a wood engraving showing twenty figures of diverse pans used in baking. "The recipes in this book are new and formulated by one of the most experienced Professors in the art of scientific and practical cookery especially adapted for the use of "Royal" Baking Powder and "Royal" flavoring Extracts. These preparations are incomparable in strength and purity. Substituting other articles will only end in disappointment." front wrapper blurb. Included are three hundred seventy seven recipes ranging from Bread & Rolls to Pies to Puddings to Fritters & Pancakes to Meat Pies to Icings. "The Royal Baking Powder Company was one of the largest producers of baking powder in the US. It was started by both Joseph Christoffel Hoagland & William Ziegler in 1866." Wiki. General wear & soiling to wrappers; foxing throughout; a bit musty. Good or a bit better in printed gray-green wrappers. OCLC locates four copies; Axford page 352; Bitting page 410 both for the 1882 and later editions; not in Cagle. Royal Baking Powder Co unknown books
18875920New York: Royal Baking Powder Company; lithography by Schumacher & Ettlinger 1887. Stapled booklet 21 x 13 cm. 43 1 pages. Illustrated. Later printing. Front wrapper verso with facsimile of a letter from Marion Harland dated 1887. Publication date from copyright statement on front wrapper panel. Includes a wood engraving showing twenty figures of diverse pans used in baking. "The recipes in this book are new and formulated by one of the most experienced Professors in the art of scientific and practical cookery especially adapted for the use of "Royal" Baking Powder and "Royal" flavoring Extracts. These preparations are incomparable in strength and purity. Substituting other articles will only end in disappointment." front wrapper blurb. Included are three hundred seventy seven recipes ranging from Bread & Rolls to Pies to Puddings to Fritters & Pancakes to Meat Pies to Icings. "The Royal Baking Powder Company was one of the largest producers of baking powder in the US. It was started by both Joseph Christoffel Hoagland & William Ziegler in 1866." Wiki. Light spotting to a few pages; and soiling and some small edge chips to wrappers. Over the course of its publication this booklet was issued in a wide variety of wrapper designs; this one a chromolithograph with an image of a young woman holding a large tray of handsome baked goods is one of our favorites. Near very good. Scarce. OCLC locates four copies; Axford page 352; Bitting page 410 both for the 1882 and later editions; not in Cagle. Royal Baking Powder Company; [lithography by] Schumacher & Ettlinger unknown books
188434816Montevideo: TipografÃa de la Escuela de Artes y Oficios 1884. First edition. Blind stamped maroon cloth. Spine and boards worn scuffed some recoloring owner's name on title contents clean a good copy. 60 pp. 16mo. Thirteen essays by various writers at the School of Arts and Crafts for the birthday of Máximo Benito Santos Barbosa 1847-1889 President of Uruguay from 1882 until 1886 in an administration marked by many problems notably corruption lawlessness and heavy debts all of which forced into exile. Not located in NUC OCLC Copac or any European or South American Library catalogues. Provenance: signature of Eloisa Vaeza. Not in Palau. TipografÃa de la Escuela de Artes y Oficios hardcover books
183228324Providence RI: H.H. Brown Printer 1832. First edition. Removed. Scattered foxing some browning and offsetting lacking wrappers otherwise good or better solid copies. 24 pp.; 17 pp.; 36 pp. 8vo. Sunday schools were popular with workers and the rural poor books were free and one did not need to belong to a particular denomination. The Rhode-Island Sunday School Union expanded as the other educational organization the Providence Female Tract and School Society lost funding. By 1830 it had an enrollment of over 4000 in 32 affiliates. Two years latter it had 109 affiliates running 118 schools approximately 10000 students and 1200 teachers and included an African School begun in 1831 and discussed in the seventh report along with an attempt to teach "colored" adults. Scarce. OCLC shows copies at LOC and Brown AAS 5th Huntington 7th; also at the RI Hist.Soc. See Sabin 70740 for 15th Report. H.H. Brown, Printer unknown books
184610270New York: Egbert Hovey & King printers 1846. 8vo. 32 pp. <br><br>Removed from a nonce volume; stitched. Light browning and a little light foxing. Light pencilled notations on title-page and small rubber-stamp on p. 2. Egbert, Hovey, & King, printers unknown books
188240901New York: Published by the Royal Baking Powder Co 1882. 1st printing thus Axford p. 352; Bitting p. 410; Brown 2431. Not in Cagle though see 1011n nor Wheaton & Kelly. OCLC records 5 holding institutions. Chromolithographed paper wrappers sewn. String hook loop in upper left of booklet. General wear & soiling. Foxing to paper. An About VG copy. 4 41 3 pp. 3 page Index at front. Page 4 a wood engraving showing 20 figures of divers pans used in baking. 8vo. 8-1/4" x 5-1/4" <br/><br/> Published by the Royal Baking Powder Co unknown books
187740900.1New York: Published by the Royal Baking Powder Co 1877. 1st printing thus ca 1878. Cf. Axford p. 352 & Bitting p. 410 for the 1882 and later editions. Not in Cagle though see 1011n nor Wheaton & Kelly. OCLC records 4 holding institutions. Printed pale green printed wrappers sewn. Front & rear wrapper with 1878 product reviews. General wear soiling & age-toning to wrappers with chip to top left of top wrapper. Foxing to paper. A VG copy. 2 32 2 adverts pp. 2 page Table of Contents at front preceding the recipes. Page 1 a wood engraving showing 20 figures of divers pans used in the baking recipes herein. 8vo. 9-1/4" x 6" <br/><br/>The recipes in this book are new and formulated by one of the most experienced Professors in the art of scientific and practical cookery especially adapted for the use of "Royal" Baking Powder and "Royal" flavoring Extracts. These preparations are incomparable in strength and purity. Substituting other articles will only end in disappointment." front wrapper blurb. "The Royal Baking Powder Company was one of the largest producers of baking powder in the US. It was started by both Joseph Christoffel Hoagland & William Ziegler in 1866." Wiki Evidence points to this being the first publication of this title which contains 377 recipes ranging from Bread & Rolls to Pies to Puddings to Fritters & Pancakes to Meat Pies to Icings. Rare. Published by the Royal Baking Powder Co unknown books
184010321Philadelphia: Pr. at the office of the Christian Observer 1840. 12mo. 12 pp. <br><br>Sewn. Light soiling; a little staining and shallow chipping not affecting text. Librarian's notations in ink and pencil. Pr. at the office of the Christian Observer unknown books