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Published by St. Johns River Water Management
Seller: Bank of Books, Ventura, CA, U.S.A.
Unknown Binding. Condition: Very Good. We have 75,000 books to choose from -- Ship within 24 hours -- Satisfaction Guaranteed!.
Published by St. Johns River Water Management District, Palatka, Florida, 2000
Seller: Neil Shillington: Bookdealer/Booksearch, Hobe sound, FL, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condition: Good. Third Edition. 122 pages.
Published by St Johns Water Management District, 2003
Seller: Leilani's Books, Patrick AFB, FL, U.S.A.
Book
Soft cover. Condition: Near Fine. Loaded with detailed maps of the area. The pages and cover have very little wear.
Published by St. Johns River Water Management District, Palatka, Florida, 1995
Seller: James Lasseter, Jr, Brooksville, FL, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. 90 page pamphlet. Describes district lands in the Northern region St. Mary's River to S. R. 40, the Central Region (S. R. 40 to S. R. 50), and the Southern region, (south of S. R. 50). A bit of edge and corner wear but an inspection of the pamphlet finds no apparent underlining, no highlighting, no owner names, no bookplates, no folded pages, not ex-libris. A nice copy.
Published by Chichester: John Wiley & Sons (Water Science Series) 1st edn, 1996
ISBN 10: 0471965995ISBN 13: 9780471965992
Seller: G. & J. CHESTERS, TAMWORTH, United Kingdom
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. 224p, numerous figures in the text, 7.6"x 10", a Fine hardback (laminated boards so no dustwrapper called for) [0471965995].
Published by St. Johns River Water Management District, Palatka, Florida, 1995
Seller: James Lasseter, Jr, Brooksville, FL, U.S.A.
Book
Soft cover. Condition: Near Fine. Stated First Edition. A 90 page guide to St. Johns River Water Management District recreation lands. It covers parts of 16 Florida counties from Nassau to Indian River on the east coast and as far inland as Baker and Alachua counties. Very little, if any use, no apparent underlining, no highlighting, no markings, no bookplates, no owner names, not ex-libras, not a remainder. A nice copy.
Published by St. Johns River Water Management District, Department of Resource Management.
Seller: Lighthouse Books, ABAA, Dade City, FL, U.S.A.
Quarto, paperbound, 26 pp. Fine. Illustrated with maps, charts, tables, etc. Florida, Floridiana, Water Supply, Keystone Heights, St. Johns River, Water Management.
Published by St. Johns River Water Management District, 2006
Seller: James Lasseter, Jr, Brooksville, FL, U.S.A.
Book
Soft cover. Condition: Near Fine. Fifth Edition. 154 pages, many maps and illustrations. Clean & tight. A very nice copy.
Published by Waters, John, 2022
ISBN 10: 0374185727ISBN 13: 9780374185725
Seller: Ami Ventures Inc Books, Houston, TX, U.S.A.
Book
hardcover. Condition: New. About the AuthorJohn Waters is a writer, a film director, an actor, and a visual artist best known for his films, including Hairspray, Pink Flamingos, and Serial Mom. He is the author of the national bestsellers Role Models, Carsick and Mr. Know-It-All. His spoken-word shows This Filthy World, False Negative, and A John Waters Christmas continue to be performed around the world. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland.Product DescriptionA hilariously filthy tale of sex, crime, and family dysfunction from the brilliantly twisted mind of John Waters, the legendary filmmaker and bestselling author of Mr. Know-It-All.Marsha Sprinkle: Suitcase thief. Scammer. Master of disguise. Dogs and children hate her. Her own family wants her dead. She's smart, she's desperate, she's disturbed, and she's on the run with a big chip on her shoulder. They call her Liarmouth-until one insane man makes her tell the truth.Liarmouth, the first novel by John Waters, is a perfectly perverted "feel-bad romance," and the reader will thrill to hop aboard this delirious road trip of riotous revenge.ReviewNamed a Best Book of the Year by Esquire"Like any true weirdo, [Waters] seems to consider himself normal. When you read a book like this, you're wandering into a maze of anarchy that is fully legible only to its creator." -Molly Young, The New York Times"I couldn't put it down, like a bomb singing me a lullaby. For fans of John's movies, this will be a delicious treat. And for the boring people who don't know what's up, good luck. Marsha is probably the funniest villain I've ever read, and I was cheering for her the whole way through. Like all of John's work, this was true comedy, he has ransacked culture for its absurdity, violence and lunacy, and yet somehow I am happier to be here after going along for the ride." -Ottessa Moshfegh, author of My Year of Rest and Relaxation"There's a glee to Waters' writing. You can imagine him grinning as he pushes certain buttons, daring the audience to come along for the ride." -Andrew Limbong, NPR"Liarmouth: A Feel-Bad Romance is a hopscotching, subversive and full-versive, madcap version of Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Though I don't want to spoil the plot's twists and twists and twists-it's a delicious literary strawberry Twizzler embedded with Pop Rocks-by sharing too much detail, the pleasure of the novel is as much Waters' verbal acrobatics as the increasingly wacky plot, which includes extreme bouncing enthusiasts on a quest, nearly-immaculate conceptions, appendages that spontaneously talk, and cross-species pets." -Mandana Chaffa, The Chicago Review of Books"A characteristically Waters-ian phantasmagoria of good, unclean fun . . . [Liarmouth is a] campy, raunchy, surreal story, rife with ribald pleasures." -Adrienne Westenfeld, Esquire"Peak John Waters camp." -Keziah Weir, Vanity Fair"[Liarmouth is] full of characters and shocking twists-pet face-lifts, trampoline cults, a talking phallus . . . [Marsha Sprinkle] and the other dramatis personae of "Liarmouth" feel like they've just walked off a Waters set still in character." -Tyler Malone, The Los Angeles Times"Nasty, violent, and obscene? Over-the-top, ricocheting, and hilarious? All of the above describe the self-described Pope of Trash and Filth Elder's first novel . . . [The] misadventures are absurd, vulgar, bloody, comic, and weirdly sweet as devilish Waters keeps the pedal to the metal . . . and slyly advocates for acceptance and love." -Donna Seaman, Booklist"It's fetishistic and fantastical (there's a psychic talking penis that puts Tommy Lee's phallus to shame) but also smart, sarcastic, and satiric. It makes for a sexy, sometimes cringey but mostly very funny read, and like most of his output, it's boldly un-PC." -Lina Lecaro, The Village Voice"[Waters] has found a new way to channel his singular vision . . . As we follow the characters-mainly the irresistibly awful Marsha Sprinkle-and their schemes, which range from jus.
Published by James S. Waters, 1847. [John D. Toy, printer], Baltimore:, 1847
Seller: Noushin Books & Company, Hamden, CT, U.S.A.
Book
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 8vo. 95pp. Disbound pamphlet no wraps, few negligible spots of foxing otherwise just about fine. OCLC: 31299443 [3] [Whittingham, William Rollinson].
Published by John Humphries & Falconer Waters, Thurso, 1972
Seller: Philip Emery, Bridlington, United Kingdom
Book First Edition
Paperback. Condition: Good. First Edition. 46 pages, text by Donald Grant, illustrated, map, light soiling to covers.
Published by John E. Waters, Madison, WI, 1950
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Pamphlet. 19p. staplebound pamphlet, 4x8.75 inches. "Compliments of Protect America League, Inc. Middletown, Ohio" rubberstamped on front and rear covers. Waters was an instructor in Agricutlure for the Soviet Government, from around 1929 to 1931; here he argues that Communism puts the world in mortal danger of slavery, and that FDR had succumbed to its siren song.
Published by John E. Waters [195-], Madison, WI
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Pamphlet. 19p. staplebound pamphlet, 4x8.75 inches. New address of the Laymen's Commission of the American Council of Christian Churches rubberstamped on front cover. Waters was an instructor in Agricutlure for the Soviet Government, from around 1929 to 1931; here he argues that Communism puts the world in mortal danger of slavery, and that FDR had succumbed to its siren song.
Published by John Waters, Melbourne, n.d.
Seller: Sainsbury's Books Pty. Ltd., Camberwell, VIC, Australia
8vo, 104pp, colour illus. Very good hardback copy wrapped in good tissue paper which is torn and chipped at the edges, in fair slipcase which is heavily discoloured and spine is coming away and heavily chipped. Wood engravings by Dorthea Braby.
An uncommon anti-Communist treatise written and published by John E. Waters of Madison, Wisconsin. Waters describes himself on the cover as a former employee of the Soviet government. He blames Communism's growth in the U.S. to sympathetic policies by the Roosevelt and Truman administrations and through the Communist-directed labor movement. Stapled wrappers (4" x 9"), 19 p. Folded order form laid in. Some underlining in colored pencil. Only two copies found in OCLC (Wisconsin Historical Society & Kansas).
Published by John Rogan, Frances O'Kane Hale and Ian Waters Editor.
Seller: Page After Page, Box Hill, VIC, Australia
Wrapper, 20x27.5cm, 76 pages, small tear to bottom of f/c.
Published by John Humphries and Falconer Waters, 1972
Seller: Simply Read Books, Boat Of Garten, United Kingdom
Book First Edition
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. 1972 John Humphries and Falconer Waters first edition paperback, a 46-page booklet; Very Good copy, appears unread; UK dealer, immediate dispatch.
Published by Printed by Tiebout and O'Brien, for John Reid, Bookseller and stationer, no. 106, Water-Street., New-York, 1796
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. The 1st American ed., with addit. Volume 3 (of 4) only. Bound in contemporary sheep. Some rubbing, but binding sound. Scattered tanning, staining. Portrait frontis of Benjamin Franklin, [4], 519 pp, four plates of Bones of the Mammoth, Plan of Lystra, Nelson Co. Kentucky; Plan of Frankinville, Mason Co. Kentucky; hand colored drawing of a Tobacco Plant. Early signatures of Aaron Saunders, 1823. Howes W581. Sabin 104833.
Published by New York: Printed by John Buel, no. 152, Water Street [MDCCXCIV], 1794
Book First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Good. First Edition. [An Early American Pro-Union Sermon] Inscribed and signed from "The Author." Bound in 19th-century leather-backed boards. 24 pages. Cherubic image at final page. Evans 27169. Sabin 36241. An excerpt: "If war shall invade our territory, and we must draw again the keenly tempered sword of freedom, let it be grasped by the strong hand, and wielded with all the energy of the UNION. It shall then sweep down whole ranks of slaves, and slashing rapidly over their hosts, throw them into terror and defeat. Our laws shall flourish, our rights be never more invaded, and our glory endure while the sun rolls round the world, and the GREAT SPIRIT walks on the tops of the mountains, Freedom so often victorious, shall at length entirely demolish the throne of despotism, cause the thunders of war to be heard no more, and inspire ALL THE NATIONS OF THE EARTH with UNITED hearts, to raise the universal hymn to PEACE, to HAPPINESS and to LIBERTY." - 23-24 p. Signed.
Published by printed for John Tiebout. No. 238 Water-Street, New York, 1811
Seller: Rulon-Miller Books (ABAA / ILAB), St. Paul, MN, U.S.A.
First Edition
First American edition, 8vo, pp. viii, 365, [2]; unpaginated lexicon in double column; contemporary full calf, maroon morocco label on gilt-paneled spine; extremities rubbed, upper joint starting; good and sound. Bookplate of James Mead. Also published in quarto in Philadelphia the same year. American Imprints 22458. AAS notes: "In the 1811 volume of Shaw, entry numbers 22401-22460 are mistakenly repeated. The present title is recorded under the second instance of number 22458, and has been numbered 22458a in the Early American Imprints microform series.".
Published by Arthur W. Waters 64 Bath St. / Holland Bros. 21 John Bright St, Leamington Spa / Birmingham, 1921
Seller: Tavistock Books, ABAA, Reno, NV, U.S.A.
First Edition
12 plates laid-in. List of plates / novel source printed to inner wrappers. Line engraved reprocuctions of Brock's pne-n-ink drawings. 11-1/2" x 8-7/8" Portfolio - VG (light wear/age-toned). Illustrations - VG+ Printed buff paper portfolio, now housed in an archival mylar sleeve 1st edition (Gimbel H995; NCBEL III, 788).
Published by Suva, Fiji: John William Waters, Walu Bay Studio and Curio Depot, [ca 1900], 1900
Seller: James Arsenault & Company, ABAA, Arrowsic, ME, U.S.A.
Oblong 8vo (19 x 24.5 cm), red cloth, decorative gilt title on upper cover. 18 pp, 16 full page b&w illus. A scarce and evocative souvenir album of the Fiji Islands, picturing villages, mills owned by Colonial Sugar Refinery (C. S. R. Co.), fishing boats, huts, portraits of Fijian girls, Chief's house, feasts and more; including locations on the Ovalau, Navua and Lami Rivers, Lautoka, Kadavu, Naviti-Levu Bay, Nausori Rewa, Labasa, Levuka, and Suva. CONDITION: Good, most leaves detached from binding, light foxing, toning on first and last illustrations, images have strong tonality.
Published by Sykes, John (Bound by Thomas Waters of Newcastle), 1833
Seller: Burley Fisher Books, London, United Kingdom
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. These pair are a delightful artefact from the age of scholarship of leisure. Little of John Sykes, the author of this local record, appears in the historical record. We know that he was a bookseller of Newcastle, and we can assume that this trade is what allowed him to produce these these remarkable tomes, which cover happenings, deaths, and strange events in the region of Northumberland. It is filled with remarkable stories, most likely the life's work of the forementioned Mr. Sykes. As for the binding, it has been expertly put together by the noted Thomas Waters of Newcastle. The spine is marked with attractive glit, which has lost none of its vivaciousness or glisten through its long years of existence. The page ends are expertly marbled, which serve to offset an even more gorgeous paste-down and page end marbling work. As for minor defects, the boards suffer from minor discolouration, and the hinges have been scuffed (most likely from keen thumbing). The interior of both volumes suffer from foxing, which serve more-or-less as a mark of venerability and status. We are pleased to report that the interior remains exceptionally readable and tight. These are perhaps the best preserved copies in circulation at present.
Published by Printed by L. Nichols & Co. for John Tiebout, Bookseller & Stationer, No. 246 Water-Street, New York, 1801
Seller: David M. Lesser, ABAA, Woodbridge, CT, U.S.A.
63, [1] pp. Disbound. Light edge wear, a couple of inoffensive old institutional rubberstamps. Good+. This document prints the so-called 'Montgomerie Charter' of 1730, printed by Peter Zenger in New York in 1735. The Charter begins with a recitation of Dongan's Charter of 1686, which called for freemen in each of the six wards to elect an alderman and assistant who, with the mayor and recorder, form the Common Council, the City's primary governing body. The Mayor was appointed by the Governor. Montgomerie's Charter left intact the basic structure of City government, adding a seventh ward and enhancing the powers of the mayor to include some judicial functions. Montgomerie's Charter remained intact until 1813, when some minor modifications occurred. Howes N95 [ref.]. AI 1021 [3]. II Harv. Law Cat. 197. Sabin 54170. Jackson Encyclopedia of New York City 203. Cohen 8732-8733 [later printings].
Published by John van de Water, Utrecht, 1688
quater leather. Condition: Good. Reads right to left. (9) + 240+ (5)pp. lacking pages 131 and 132 and small corner of page 176. On verso of full title page: list of children written possibly in two hands, ie Moses born 14th of Adar 1758, Abraham 6th of Sivan 1759, Meley 7th of Tevet, 1761, Hanary 8th of Tishrei 1763, Rachal 3rd of Ellul 1766, George 4th of Sivan 1770, Zackall (spelling?) Binding: brown half calf with marbled paper; heavy blind tooling on front and back cover at edges of paper and outlining faked raised bands and on spine title. Title stamped in gold italic. Head and foot band glued on. Actual sewing done on three tapes. Endpapers cream laid paper. In rebinding and resewing the original signatures have not been damaged or trimmed. evidence of earler edge gilding. Leusden was a Professor of Oriental languages and Hebrew at the University of Utrecht, Work is dedicated to John Eliot for his prosletyzing work converting Indians to Christianity .Sabin 66451 OCLC Number: 978092282.
Published by John van de Water, Utrecht, 1688
Leusden was a Professor of Oriental languages and Hebrew at the University of Utrecht, Work is dedicated to John Eliot for his prosletyzing work converting Indians to Christianity .Sabin 66451 OCLC Number: 978092282 Location:175 Reads right to left. (9) + 240+ (5)pp. lacking pages 131 and 132 and small corner of page 176. On verso of full title page: list of children written possibly in two hands, ie Moses born 14th of Adar 1758, Abraham 6th of Sivan 1759, Meley 7th of Tevet, 1761, Hanary 8th of Tishrei 1763, Rachal 3rd of Ellul 1766, George 4th of Sivan 1770, Zackall (spelling?) Binding: brown half calf with marbled paper; heavy blind tooling on front and back cover at edges of paper and outlining faked raised bands and on spine title. Title stamped in gold italic. Head and foot band glued on. Actual sewing done on three tapes. Endpapers cream laid paper. In rebinding and resewing the original signatures have not been damaged or trimmed. evidence of earler edge gilding. 175.
Published by Printed for John Reid, No. 106 Water Street, by M. L. & W. A. Davis, New York, 1799
Seller: Antipodean Books, Maps & Prints, ABAA, Garrison, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Wraps. Scarce American account of the state of Egypt, published during Napoleon's Egypt Campaign, with an ownership inscription of the Green Press of New London, Ct., the second printing press in existence in the American colonies. The Green family was one of the earliest printing families of the American colonies, Samuel Green (ca.1614 - 1702) having taken over the first American printing press around 1649 from Stephen Day (Daye) and his son, Matthew, who began printing about 1639 in the Massachusetts Bay colony. At the first blank leaf of this volume, written in contemporary hand, is "Green's Press, Mr. Hart's". The topic of war in Egypt and Napoleon's invasion was an important one to the newly formed United States. As Remmey states, "at a time when the nations of Europe are engaged in a destructive and ruinous War, and one of them has actually transported a numerous army to the shores of Egypt, and made that ancient part of the Eastern world the seat of their hostilities, it may not, perhaps, be deemed improper to give an account of the present state of that country ." (Preface). Remmey's sources include "Norden, Savary, Nieubuhr, Bruce, Volney's Travels, and Payne's Universal Geography". Complete with the 2 copper engraved folding maps engraved by Benjamin Tanner, one a map of Egypt and the second of the Battle of Aboukir, titled "Disposition of the English & French Fleets, at the commencement of the Action, August 1st, 1798". The battle plan shows the positions of Admiral Horatio Nelson's and Vice Admiral Breuy's fleets, with an inset "A View of Bokier (sic) Castle". Both folding plates in very good condition. The last leaf printed with an Advertisement for a future pamphlet to be published "in the course of a short period, if the French army have penetrated into the province of Syria, or into Arabia ." Samuel Green, the progenitor of the Green family of printers, had numerous children. Twenty two of his descendants (including three sons) and his wife's brother became printers. Samuel Green's son Thomas helped edit and print the first newspaper in the Connecticut colony, the 1755 New Haven Gazette (for the owner, Parker & Company). Thomas Green next founded the Connecticut Courant (in Hartford) in 1764, America's longest continuous running newspaper, still in existence as the Hartford Courant. Thomas and his brother Samuel went on to found the Connecticut Journal (New Haven) in 1767. Timothy Green, brother of Thomas, took over the Connecticut Gazette in 1763, and changed the name to the New London Gazette. Additionally, Thomas Green, Jr. joined his father and Uncle Samuel on the Connecticut Journal sometime after its founding, later taking it over. The Connecticut Journal was published under that name until 1799, then went through a series of title changes, but survived up to 1987 as the Journal Courier. 8vo, [5], 10-107pp, [1], [2] folding maps. The Appendix includes "an accurate and impartial account of the late decisive Naval Action in the road of Aboukir, which is illustrated by a Plan, said to be correct, of the position of the British and French fleets at the commencement of the action." (Preface). In the original marbled stiff paper wrappers, with printed title label applied. Wrappers rubbed with a few small tears at foredge, not affecting the title label. Original stitched binding still secure. Some light foxing internally. Overall a very good copy. At the tail end of the book, in the text, second to last page, is the signature "Wm Eldridge, New London". There is a William Eldridge of New London who was one of the commissioners who laid out the "fire lands" in reparation for the "Connecticut sufferers" in the western end of the Connecticut Western Reserve, in what is now Ohio. This was restitution for residents whose homes had been burned in the Revolution by British forces. Evans 36202; OCLC: 3833343. An historically important colonial item.
Published by New York, Printed for and Sold by John Low, Book-Seller at The Shakespeare - Head, No.332 Water-Street, 1798 - 1799., 1799
Seller: Inanna Rare Books Ltd., Skibbereen, CORK, Ireland
Book First Edition
First Abridged Edition. Volumes I [Asia] and II [Africa] (of IV). Octavo - Edition. Pagination: Volume I [Asia]: Folded Frontispiece (Map of the World), XLVIII, 518 pages plus 10 unnumbered pages of an Index and one additional page with Directions for the Bookbinder for placing the maps and illustrations as well as Errata. Volume I includes all 10 Maps / Engravings as called for / Volume II [Africa]: Folded Frontispiece (Map of Africa), 578 pages plus 12 unnumbered pages of an Index plus one additional page with Directions for the Bookbinder for placing the maps and illustrations as well as Errata. Volume II includes all 10 Maps / Engravings as called for. Hardcover / Modern Library - Binding with the original 18th century - work bound in. Former library copy of Bergen County Historical Society (cancelled) and Johnson Free Public Library in Hackensack, New Jersey, with a very boring, modern library binding and library cards applied to the endpapers only, leaving the bookblock with text and maps and illustrations entirely untouched from any library-signs. Very good condition with some signs of external wear. The Illustrations in this work are profound and include important maps, handcoloured-engravings of botanical illustrations. Volume I includes the following 10 maps and illustrations (as called for): 1. Fold-out Map of the World (Frontispiece): "The World from the best Authorities" - Engraved for Payne's Geography and published by Low & Willis, New York. 2. "General Chart on Mercator's Projection" - Engraved for Payne's Geography and published by Low & Willis, New York. 3. "Artificial Sphere and a diagram of "The Copernican System" showing also two Comets (including the Comet of 1661), Saturn and his Moon, Jupiter and his Moon, Mars, Earth and its Moon. 4. Fold-out map "Asia from the latest Authorities" Engraved for Payne's Geography and published by Low & Willis, New York. 5. Fold-out Engraving of "The Observatory at Peking" showing in detail the setup of the Observatory with 18th century Astronomical Equipment: "Equinoctial Sphere", Celestial Globe, Zodical Sphere, Azimuthal Horizon, Quadrant, Sextant etc. 6. Engraving with "Ornaments worn on the Dress of the Chinese" [ornament, Signets, Allegorical Illustrations, Characters, Animals, Dragons etc. as examples of ornaments on Dresses and possibly war-garments in China and Asia in general [the engraving shows for example: Vases used in the Hall of Ancestors, White Rice, Sign for "The Stars", The "Character Fo", Battle Axe, A Pheasant, Aquatic Herb, Signs for Fire, Dragons, Animal Creatures standing for "The Sun" and "The Moon"] 7. Engraving showing "Warlike Instruments" [Shields, Helmets, Quiver with Arrows, Chinese Bow] 8. Illustration No. 8: Large, Hand-coloured fold-out-illustration of 18th-century Plants which were part of the international Trade of 18th-century "Vegetable Production constitution important Articles of Commerce or suited for such". Plants include: a. The Olive Tree b. Rice in Ear c. The Sugar Cane d. The Indigo Plant e. The New Zealand Flax Plant f. Ginseng in Flower g. Bread Fruit Tree h. Black Pepper Vine i. Root of the Ginseng 9. Illustration No.9: Large, Hand-coloured fold-out-illustration of 18th-century Plants which were part of the international Trade of 18th-century "Vegetable Production constitution important Articles of Commerce or suited for such". This plate includes hand-coloured specimen of: a. The Tobacco Plant b. Coffee Tree c. Cinnamon d. Coffee Pistil e. Sramen of Coffee f. Coffee Berry burnt [Pre-stage of Coffee-roasting] g. Nutmeg Tree h. Bark of the Cinnamon i. Bohea Tree Plant j. The Cotton Shrub k. The Nutmeg enclosed in the Mace l. Nutmeg Kernel m. Flower of tea 10. Fold-out Map of the "East Indies from the Best Authorities" [showing the Philippines, Borneo, Moguls Empire, Gulf of Tonquin, Ceylon etc.] - Engraved for Payne's Geography and published by Low & Willis, New York Volume II includes the following 10 maps and illustrations.