Published by The Biltmore Company January 1975, 1975
Seller: Hennessey + Ingalls, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Used - Very Good. BEAUTIFUL COPY!!! Very nice clean, tight copy free of any marks.
Published by The Biltmore Company, 1975
Seller: MyLibraryMarket, Waynesville, OH, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: As New. ***Please Read*** No marks on text - My shelf location - 72-b*.
Published by Grand Lodge of England, I.O.G.T., 1947
Seller: Gwyn Tudur Davies, Aberystwyth, United Kingdom
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. Pbk, 105p. Birmingham: Grand Lodge of England I.O.G.T., 1947. Staples rusty o/w a clean unmarked copy in very good condition. 'The Temperance worker needs to have a good general knowledge of the laws under which the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor are carried on' d482 / m2698.
Published by Canadian Peacekeeping Press, 2000
ISBN 10: 1896551351 ISBN 13: 9781896551357
Seller: Yellowed Leaves Antique & Vintage Books, Wolfville, NS, Canada
Soft cover. Condition: As New. 179 pp. Illustrated. Deals with the liberation of Kamp Westerbork by the Canadians.
Published by Oxford University Press, 1991
ISBN 10: 0198256809 ISBN 13: 9780198256809
Seller: moluna, Greven, Germany
Einband - flex.(Paperback). Condition: New. Dieser Artikel ist ein Print on Demand Artikel und wird nach Ihrer Bestellung fuer Sie gedruckt. An account of the singular way in which the American tort system has evolved and operates today. The book deals with such topics as judicial activism, the jury in civil trials, the trial lawyers, the contingent fee and mass litigation: all subjects of conte.
Published by Without place or date but after the demise of the 'New Witness' in and before G. K. Chesterton's death in 1936, 1923
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
3pp., 4to. In fair condition, on aged, worn and browned paper. Ada Chesterton worked with her brother-in-law while assistant editor of the 'New Witness'. Her admiration for his talents was fully reciprocated, G. K. Chesterton describing his sister-in-law as 'brilliant'. It begins: 'Very much has been written and said of G. K. C. the poet, the pamphleteer, the genius of paradox, who holds the attention of his listeners by his dazzling sleight of words. I am going to write of him from a different angle - G. K. C. the journalist as he is known and gauged in Fleet Street. There is held, generally speaking, a most mistaken view of that same Fleet Street which is for the most part regarded as the mere receptacle for the Capitalist press: the place where mis-statements by the million are issued from a rapidly revolving hoe and distributed broadcast.' She proceeds to describe 'another side of Fleet Street', 'an informal tribunal where men are tried for offences never mentioned in the public press', a place where arrogance is 'a sin'. It is here that there is 'no greater idol' than Chesterton, 'a supreme journalist' who 'can write anywhere and anywhen on anything'. She recounts an anecdote regarding an incident involving a 'distinguished literary critic' and Chesterton, 'during the life of the New Witness'. She concludes by stating that, having 'worked with him in difficult and troublous circumstances', she feels that Chesterton proves 'his title to genius more in his capacity for turning the commonplace of existence into the pure gold of fine thought'. It is unknown whether the piece was published.