Books by "John P. Reynolds"

12 books found

Mayne's Treatise on Damages

Mayne's Treatise on Damages

by John Dawson Mayne

1920

Masonic History of the Northwest

Masonic History of the Northwest

by John Milton Hodson

1902

Woodfall's Law of Landlord and Tenant

Woodfall's Law of Landlord and Tenant

by John Mounteney Lely, William Woodfall

1889

"The present volume is the outgrowth of the authors' experience over many years in teaching large college classes in American Government at the University of Illinois. This experience has demonstrated the need of a book of documents and readings to supplement the textbook, since the size of the class renders it impracticable, even in the best equipped libraries, to send the students to the books and documents from which the material has been selected. The volume covers the whole field of American government, national, state, and local, and is designed for use in connection with, and supplementary to, any of the standard texts now available in this field"--Unedited summary from book preface.

Mineral Resources of the Cactus Plain and East Cactus Plain Wilderness Study Areas, La Paz County, Arizona

Mineral Resources of the Cactus Plain and East Cactus Plain Wilderness Study Areas, La Paz County, Arizona

by Richard M. Tosdal, R. G. Eppinger, James A. Erdman, William F. Hanna, Horace Richard Blank, James A. Pitkin, Richard M. O'Leary, John R. Watterson, Terry J. Kreidler

1990

Wallace's American Trotting Register ...

Wallace's American Trotting Register ...

by John Hankins Wallace

1913

"For the student of geology have been succinctly set forth the operation of the pre-historic influences which were at work upon the site of Chicago ages before man trod upon the earth. Following this is a complete and connected, though condensed, narrative history of the 'Garden City,' through its various stages of village, town and municipality, showing the formative causes and describing the central events of each decade in Chicago's civic, financial and political relations. In connection with this narrative history, but following it, many subjects of special interest or importance have been treated topically. Among the most prominent of these may be enumerated : trade and commerce, the railroad interests centering in Chicago, the enormous manufacturing industries, the financial institutions of the city, public works, the parks, the drainage canal, bridges, tunnels, intramural transit, the bench and bar (to which is appended a special chapter relating to notable trials), the growth of religion as shown by church history, the professions of medicine and dentistry, the steadily growing influence of the press, libraries, authors, art, amusements, clubs, homes, and the labor disturbances of 1894" --

The Works of John Ruskin

The Works of John Ruskin

by John Ruskin

1905