Hardcover. Condizione: Good. Good. Lightly used with NO markings in text; binding is tight. Text block edges show sunning. Binding solid boards clean. Pasadena's finest independent new and used bookstore.
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Minor shelf wear, binding tight, pages clean and unmarked. Facsimile reprint; This was originally intended to be a Reference Book for Domestic and Foreign buyers of American goods.
Editore: Boston: Christian Register Office, Thomas G. Wells, 1824
Da: T. Brennan, Bookseller (ABAA / ILAB), Ellsworth, ME, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Good. Disbound pamphlet, third edition, octavo, pp. 32. GOOD only, with foxing and old creasing. Ensconced now in a clear new display sleeve with white cardstock backing board. American Imprints 15716.
Editore: Thomas Beyer distributed by Army and Navy Register, [, Washington, DC and New York City, 1906
Da: Under the Covers Antique Books, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Washington, DC and New York City; Thomas Beyer distributed by Army and Navy Register, [1906]. Hardcover. 8vo. Very good. Rubbing and edgtwear to exterior. Lacks front free end paper. Interior hinges are starting but have been reenforced. Minor foxing and browning though text remains clean and bright. Photographic illustrations throughout. 248 pages. MIL/090723. Book.
Hardcover. Condizione: Good. No Jacket. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
EUR 469,01
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrellohardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Very Good. Dust Jacket may NOT BE INCLUDED.CDs may be missing. SHIPS FROM MULTIPLE LOCATIONS. book.
Editore: Printed by Andrew, Thomas, & Clark, at the 'Register,' 'Observer,' and 'Journal' Offices, Adelaide, 1871
Da: Michael Treloar Booksellers ANZAAB/ILAB, Adelaide, SA, Australia
Prima edizione
EUR 1.371,41
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Very Good. First Edition. Adelaide, Printed by Andrew, Thomas, & Clark, at the 'Register,' 'Observer,' and 'Journal' Offices, 1871. Quarto, [42] pages with a diagram plus 7 plates (2 showing sunspot observations, the remainder meteorological graphs, numbered 1-5). Printed yellow wrappers lightly creased and marked, with minor loss to the ends of the spine; small burst with minor loss to one leaf, affecting a few words in a handful of lines of text in one column (recto and verso); small light stains to the bottom edge of the five meteorological graphs at the rear; a few creases, marks and other signs of age and handling; overall, in excellent condition. The pamphlet comprises a title page, list of office-bearers and members, and the report for the year (each one leaf, verso blank), followed by 11 papers read at the society's meetings during the year. The papers are: 'Irrigation' by C.S. Hare (2 pages with a small diagram); 'The Camel in South Australia' by J.S. Lloyd (4 pages); 'The Use and Properties of Plants. No. II' by Richard Schomburgk (2 pages); 'The Currents of the Air and the Ocean. No. III' by Benjamin Herschel (3 pages); 'The Importance of Silk Culture as a Branch of Colonial Industry' by T.S. Reed (2 pages); 'Remarks on Sun Maps' by D.B. Adamson (1 page plus 2 plates); 'Light Railway Construction' by R.C. Patterson (6 pages); 'The Influence of Forests on Climate' by Richard Schomburgk (2 pages, being the leaf with minor loss); 'Light Railway Construction' by A.F. Lindsay (5 pages); 'The Cause of Disease in Silkworms' by Richard Schomburgk (1 page); and 'Some Observation on the Rainfall at Adelaide, and the Connection between Meteorological Changes and the Yield of Wheat' by Benjamin Herschel (3 pages plus 5 plates containing meteorological graphs). Loosely inserted is a lengthy newspaper clipping from 'The Register', 19 May 1858, on 'Camels in Australia', based heavily on information supplied by Arthur Horrocks, brother of the ill-fated explorer John Ainsworth Horrocks. The Adelaide Philosophical Society was founded in 1853, and in 1880 became the Royal Society of South Australia. This annual report lists the name of the 73 current members: the president (His Excellency Sir James Fergusson), 12 'Honorary and Corresponding Members', and 60 ordinary members. The final paragraph of the short report will sound familiar to anyone who has served on a committee: 'The Council wish to impress upon members the necessity of paying their subscriptions punctually; during the past year, out of sixty-seven ordinary members, it appears only thirty-nine have paid their annual subscriptions'. These extremely small numbers, let alone the passage of 150 or more years, must account for the utmost rarity of this publication. Provenance: Thomas Gill (1849-1923), the South Australian historian and bibliographer, with his ownership signature on the front cover; later, the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia, South Australian Branch, with its stamp, ditto. 'Gill was also a governor of the Public Library, Museum and Art Gallery of South Australia from 1896 until his death, and a member of the Library Association of Australasia. He wrote "The History and Topography of Glen Osmond" (1905) for the Glen Osmond Institute. Gill was treasurer of the South Australian branch of the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia from its inception in 1885 until his death. The society's acquisition of the valuable York Gate Library was largely due to his energy and enthusiasm. His library was sold to the society for £300 as his will directed', but numerous items from his collection (mainly duplicates of existing holdings in the RGSSA library) were later sold.
Editore: W.K. Thomas, Printer, 'Register' Office [for The Author, Adelaide, 1857
Da: Michael Treloar Booksellers ANZAAB/ILAB, Adelaide, SA, Australia
EUR 218,18
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Very Good. Adelaide, W.K. Thomas, Printer, 'Register' Office [for The Author, 1857]. A broadside on thick paper (510 × 328 mm), printed recto only. Three horizontal creases; trifling chips, creases and marks to the blank left and right margins; an excellent copy. A fascinating retrospective account of Townsend aka Waxend and his 'delightful spreadeagling' appeared in the Adelaide newspaper 'The Register' on Saturday 11 April 1914. The article includes the full text of this 'Address to the Electors of Onkaparinga' in 1857. Some years later, he released an 'Address to the Electors of Sturt'; apart from the change of place-name, it is identical in content to this item.