Anbieter: Anybook.com, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 2,98
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: Good. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has soft covers. Clean from markings In good all round condition. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,1750grams, ISBN:0470018666.
EUR 11,73
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Good+. Reprint. 8vo Large. A good copy with minor wear to cover corners and spine top & tail. Immediate despatch from the UK. Book.
Verlag: John Wiley and Sons, 2007
Anbieter: Anybook.com, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 4,12
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: Good. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has soft covers. In good all round condition. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,1750grams, ISBN:
Verlag: John Wiley and Sons, 2009
Anbieter: Anybook.com, Lincoln, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 4,50
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: Good. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has soft covers. In good all round condition. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,1750grams, ISBN:
Erscheinungsdatum: 1946
Anbieter: Xerxes Fine and Rare Books and Documents, Glen Head, NY, USA
Zustand: VG. NY 1946 2nd Wiley. 8vo., 150pp., photos, index, hardcover. Owner name on front end page. VG, no DJ.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: John Lane and Copeland & Day, London & New York, 1895
Anbieter: Clayton Fine Books, Shepherdstown, WV, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. E.A. Walton, R. Anning Bell, Alfred Thornton, P. Wilson Steer, Walter Sickert, et al (illustrator). 1st Edition. Very good in yellow cloth-covered, illustrated boards with minor soiling to boards, darkening to spine and mild wear to extremities. Some light-colored foxing to pastedowns, fly pages, and some other pages. The Yellow Book series changed the course of the history of art/literary publications with its emphasis on excellence in literature and cutting-edge, fin-de-siecle art. Leading writers and artists contributed to this volume. Rare.
Verlag: John Wiley New York 1946, 1946
Anbieter: Andrew Barnes Books / Military Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australien
2nd printing orig. cloth Near Fine lge. octavo vi + 150pp., b/w pls., diags., appendix, index, Covers all aspects including site selection, planning, surveying, grading, drainage, both rigid & flexible pavements. Nice institutional prize bookplate.
Verlag: The New York Woman, Inc., New York, 1936
Magazin / Zeitschrift Erstausgabe
Paperback. Zustand: Good. Mills, John Jr.; Keppler, Victor; Turner, Jane (illustrator). First Edition. 48 pages. This glamorous publication brought New York women important information including: news of the choicest fashion, entertainment, current happenings, where to go, what to see, and how much to pay. Features: Color cover photo features lady applying lipstick amongst a throng of well-dressed football fans; Nice Franklin Simon's one-page ad featuring Persian (wool) Prestige; Super half-page photo ad for Best & Co. features 'Sequins for Glamour'; Nice Macy's full-page ad features photo of four fashionable kids disembarking the 'Normandie'; Full-page ad for Macy's Little Shop features elegant lady in evening gown; The tragic case of Elizabeth Smith, convicted of second degree manslaughter in the death of her newborn; Great one-page Singer sewing machine ad encourages readers to make the $4 dress illustrated; Several photos commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty; Photos and brief article on new diaper service (which some readers thought was a fiction!); Flaming Youth - Sixteen Years Older - "The Younger Generation" that made the 1920's such hectic years grows old and conservative, and its bearded prophets tell how they grew up - article with before and after photos of H.L. Mencken and F. Scott Fitzgerald; "Dear Martha Deane" - brief article with nine photos of radio broadcaster Mary Margaret McBride; 'Mama Martinelli and her Soup of Vengeance'; Photo-illustrated three-page article on Gloria Vanderbilt; Article on John Perona's 'fashionable hellhole' El Morocco - including photo of Jack Dempsey and Perona; The Fashion Ediitor's Diary; Two nice full-page color fashion photos; Review of some New York hair salons; Color-illustrated centerfold features Football Fashions; So Much To Buy - So Much to Spend; Evening accessories; Skin products; There's a difference in light bulbs - photo-illustrated article compares American with foreign bulbs; Color photos of fine china and sparkling crystal tableware; We Shop the Town; Hearty Dinners for Cold Days; Photos and article on the movie "Libeled Lady" which starred Jean Harlow and Spencer Tracy; Schaefer beer one-page ad mentions Empire City horse racing, Oct. 19-31; Maisonette Russe is opend with the blessing of Archimandrite Inna - brief article with photos; Manhattan Date Book; Nice color-illustrated Kotex ad inside back cover features fashionable ladies; and more. Unmarked with modest wear. A quality copy of this great vintage depression-era item.
Verlag: California, Oregon, Iowa, and New York, 1889
Anbieter: Auger Down Books, ABAA/ILAB, Marlboro, VT, USA
Manuskript / Papierantiquität
Zustand: Overall excellent. William H. Sharp (1863deceased) was born in Washington and lived in The Dalles, Oregon. He attended the California Military Academy in Oakland from 1880 to 1883 and then returned to The Dalles. There, he worked as a commission merchant and ran for county clerk. Offered here is a collection of letters mainly to, with some from, William Sharp. The letters are from friends and familySharp had many cousins with whom he corresponded regularlyand cover his time at the California Military Academy (CMA) and back in The Dalles. The CMA was founded in 1865 by Rev. David McClure, and combined college preparatory education with military drills, including firearm training, with the aim to "give the youth of the remote West an opportunity to acquire an education such as could not otherwise be obtained."[1] His attendance put a financial strain on the family; his mother, Mary Sharp, reminds him that "we have to scrach hard to keep you at school" as she scolds him for his poor performance (April 8, 1882). Mary Sharp also worried about conditions at the Academy: "Willie I hope you will be kind to all new comers & comfort them all you can I read of two boys being killed by ill treatment at boarding schools, one they took out of a warm bed & pumped cold water on him in a cold night untill he died the other they tied a [?] & triped him so he fell [?] hurt his head & killed him I hope the boys do not play such tricks at your school". (November 12, 1880) The CMA promised not to admit any boys who were "morally bad, as the institution is not designed to reform vicious boys".[1] However, a letter from C.W. Chapman, Sharp's friend and former roommate, suggests that the school's rigorous drilling was not necessarily successful. Chapman writes from Nevada City, a mining town in central California: "I'm working hard as usual; but I expect you don't care anything about that. I'm having lots of fun too, if that interests you. You don't know one half as many girls as I go to see every evening. And they are the kind of girls that you can have fun with too. [.] I am making up for lost time. [.] I haven't had my fingers in anybody else's pie yet, and maybe I haven't had them in anybody's anything else either. But that's some more trash. [.] How do you fellows treat the little dears now? I hope you don't deal with them as harshly as you did when I was down there." (January 10, 1883) Later letters are mainly between Sharp and his wife-to-be, Jennie Booth. He mentions attending a temperance meeting, updates her on business, which is "not overly brisk" but "good enough" (October 6, 1888), and describes hiring a "mongolian" cook who is "a very fair specimen of the celestial race" (October 5, 1887). Booth describes Oregon City on a visit there as "very picturesque" but primitive: "it has only one street that is passable the rest are so rocky that you can't get over them with a conveyance." (August 17, 1888). Around this time, Sharp runs for county clerk as a Republican; a W.T. McPhire writes from Mosier: "I am glad to know you are in the field for the clerkship, which as you state is a very desirable office. Now I can and will say this much, (although opposing you in politics) that if you receive the nomination for this office against any one in my party that is not an honest sober and industrious man, I will willingly do all in my power to help elect you to the office." (March 12, 1888) Despite this bipartisan support, Sharp lost to a man named Thompson. Sharp and Booth married and lived together in The Dalles, and Sharp remained in his career as a farmer and merchant. Of interest to scholars of Oregon history and of 19th-century military education. [1] "California Military Academy," Mariposa Gazette, June 30, 1887, 4. Sixty-five items: sixty-two letters, mainly dating from 1887 (eleven letters), 1888 (nineteen letters), and 1889 (fourteen letters); and three playbills from the CMA Dramatic Club.