Seller: BooXX in Stock, Dekalb, IL, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: New. 2nd Edition. pre owned, with store sticker; 238pp and all clean; sealed CD + book; I ship daily at 0900 CT IL USA; I ship anywhere you like;
Published by Diamond Match Co. (items 1 and 2), 1943
Seller: Eureka Books, Eureka, CA, U.S.A.
Trade Paperback. Items 1 and 2 are paper match book covers with printed admonitions. Item 3 is a printed hand-addressed envelope with slogan upper left. Near fine copies. The matches and staples have been removed from the match covers.
Published by ATLANTIC CITY GUIDE, 1962
Seller: Princeton Antiques Bookshop / Ruffolo Enterprises, Atlantic City, NJ, U.S.A.
STAPLED BLUE. Condition: GOOD. General wear, worn spine, creased spine edge DATE PUBLISHED: 1962 EDITION: 40.
Published by [London: 1839], The Pulpit,, 1839
Seller: Alec R. Allenson, Inc., Westville, FL, U.S.A.
Pamphlet. Condition: Good, removed. of religion" (Chalmers, continued) -- The pulpit, v. 35, no. 879, p. 129-144 in double columns; 20.5 cm.
Published by [London: 1839], The Pulpit,, 1839
Seller: Alec R. Allenson, Inc., Westville, FL, U.S.A.
Pamphlet. Condition: Good, removed. and Lectures on Butler's "Analogy of religion" (Chalmers) The pulpit, v. 35, no. 874, p. 25-40 in double columns; 20.5 cm.
Published by Castro Theater; Stagestruck, San Francisco, 1993
Seller: G. F. Wilkinson Books, member IOBA, GRASS VALLEY, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Magazine / Periodical
Magazine. Condition: Fine. CASTRO: 11.5" x 9", folds out to four pages appox. 23" x 17.5"; with double columns on three sides; calendar back side; photo-illustrated from the movies showing. Photo from Fritz Lang's Metropolis front cover. STAGESTRUCK: 32 pp. ; 11" x 8", glossy color magazine with photographs and ads throughout. Where were you in '93?
Published by Not Available, 1197
Seller: Sunny Day Bookstore, SINGAPORE, Singapore
Condition: Fine. The book is in fine condition.
Published by Not Available, 1197
Seller: Sunny Day Bookstore, SINGAPORE, Singapore
Condition: Fine. The book is in fine condition.
Published by Not Available, 1197
Seller: Sunny Day Bookstore, SINGAPORE, Singapore
Condition: Fine. The book is in fine condition.
Published by Not Available, 1197
Seller: Sunny Day Bookstore, SINGAPORE, Singapore
Condition: Fine. The book is in fine condition.
Published by Not Available N.A
Seller: Sunny Day Bookstore, SINGAPORE, Singapore
Condition: Fine. The book is in fine condition.
Published by Not Available N.A
Seller: Sunny Day Bookstore, SINGAPORE, Singapore
Condition: Fine. The book is in fine condition.
Published by Launched by Toyota City Board of Education, china, 1989
Seller: Sunny Day Bookstore, SINGAPORE, Singapore
Soft cover. Condition: Fine. Number of pages: 172p Size: 27cm Number of books: 1.
Published by Ticknor & Fields, New York, 1985, 1985
Seller: Brainerd Phillipson Rare Books, Holliston, MA, U.S.A.
Association Member: SNEAB
First Edition Signed
Dust Jacket Condition: dj. First Edition with complete number line. Very good plus in black cloth spine and gray paper-covered boards. Clean and tight throughout; unread. With a tiny sticker residue on the front paste-down. In a very good dust jacket with the price of $16.95. Light wear at the top and bottom of the spine ends. Signed by Gloria Naylor on the title page. With another item: near-fine copy of the Advance Reader Sample in wrappers. Signed"Gloria Naylor" on the title page.
Published by ( Frederick Warne? ) (c. 1900-), N. P., 1900
Seller: G. F. Wilkinson Books, member IOBA, GRASS VALLEY, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. Moderate soil to covers; some rubbing and wear at edges; moderate toning to page edges; the first page of Painting of Objects has been nicely hand colored by previous owner. ; Color illustrated wrappers of coated stock; 18 leaves each; 10 double page facing illustrations utilizing inside front and back covers; six of the facing illustrations are chromolighograph, the others sepia. No title pages as issued, and no publication information. The back covers are printed with instructions for coloring with Frederick Warne & Co. Imprint at the bottom. Both front covers have circled numbers printed in the corner indicating perhaps quite a few books in the series, but where are they? ; Small 4to 9" - 11" tall.
Published by New York: Printed by Thalmessinger and Cahn, 1864
Seller: Dan Wyman Books, LLC, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Hardback. Original boards. 8vo. 181 pages, 18 cm. In English and Hebrew. Singerman 1845. Includes Order of prayer in the house of Mourners and Hymns for divine service in the Temple Emanu-El. Reform siddur. Samuel Adler was a prominent German-American Reform rabbi who authored many works on the Talmud and other topics. He succeeded Dr. Leo Merzbacher as Rabbi of Temple Emanu-El, the first Reform Jewish congregation in New York City (Wikipedia, 2019). SUBJECTS: Siddurim - Texts - Reform Judaism. OCLC lists 12 copies worldwide (OCLC:11329485). Third edition. Spine rebacked lacks blank endpapers. Lightly damp stain to left margin. General wear and staining but all contents good. (B) (AMR-56-56-D!B-'@).
Published by No publisher listed, 1928
Seller: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. HOOVER, Herbert. 4 items, two from the WHITE HOUSE library, one from H.L. Mencken. (1) Address of Mr. Herbert Hoover, Republican Nominee for President. Delivered at Newark, N.J. September 17, 1928. 9"x6". 15 sheets, printed on one side only, staple-bound at upper left. *This in my opinion are proof sheets for the full publication, with text on both sides and side-stapled. (2) "Inaugural Address of Herbert Hoover, President of the United States. Delivered at the National Capitol, Washington D.C., March 4, 1929. 9"x 6". 11pp. Original wrappers, side-stapled. From the WHITE HOUSE Library, transferred from there on 6 July 1934, early in the first term of FDR. I don't know if everything from Hoover's WH library was sent away, or just, um, selected bits. But it is certainly interesting and a little poetic about the FDR White House getting rid of this (and the following) item, given the extended snub given FDR by HH, and then the subsequent silence of the Sphinx from Hyde Park, who refused HH's memorandum of suggestions on curing the Depression. (3) "Inaugural Address of Herbert Hoover, President of the United States. Delivered at the National Capitol, Washington D.C., March 4, 1929." 11 sheets, printed on one side only. Original wrappers. This is an ADVANCED PRINTING of the speech, and is stamped "CONFIDENTIAL" with a warning on the use of the content, banned until the speech was actually given. Partially disbound, with numerous chips. GOOD copy, only. This is from the WHITE HOUSE LIBRARY, transferred 9 July 1934. Provenance: White House Library to the Library of Congress. All three have the small (10mm) "LC" perforated stamp on front wrapper and the LC rubber stamp on rear wrapper. (4) "Address of Acceptance of the Republican Nomination for President", delivered at Stanford University, August 11, 1928. 13pp, printed on one side only. ADVANCED reading copy, stamped "Confidential". Also this was the copy of HL Mencken, with about 10 penciled underlinings. This was sent to the Library of Congress in 1929. Original wrappers. VG copy.
Publication Date: 1885
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
together, 2 items. (illustrator). together, 2 items. E.I. Thompson, Attorney-at-Law [Thompson, Edgar Isaac (1854?-1932)]. [Two 4" x 2-1/4" Tintype Portraits]. [Whitewater, WI, c.1885]? [with] Thompson, Edgar Isaac. [2-1/8" x 3-7/8" Business Card for E.I. Thompson, Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Municipal Court]. Whitewater, WI, [c.1885]. Moderate toning to business card, fading or tinting to one of the tintypes, altogether three items in very good condition. $150. * Born in New York, Edgar I. Thompson began practicing law in the early 1880s as an apprentice with the firm of Page & Cass in Whitewater, Wisconsin. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin Law School with the class of 1885 and was elected to the Whitewater municipal court that year. He relocated to the West Coast in the 1890s, where he established a creamery alongside his law practice and became heavily involved in the dairy industry. He died in Los Angeles in 1932.