THE SILLY THINGS PEOPLE DO
1837. Knife-Eaters. Note; there are no happy endings here. John Cummings, a sailor who ate at least 35 knives, and William Dempster, a juggler in Carlisle who swallowed a nine inch knife by accident. FEATURED in Chambers' Edinburgh Journal. A single article, extracted from an issue of the Chambers' Edinburgh Journal.
Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, 1837. First Edition, Disbound. Very Good Condition. A complete single article, running to approximately 316 lines, removed from a larger issue of varied topics. The picture along with this listing shows just a small portion of the article, not the entire piece. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Chambers' Edinburgh Journal; Inventory No: 364352.
Cosmo Books
Professional sellerBook number: 364352
GBP 15.00 [Appr.: EURO 17.75 US$ 19.09 | JP¥ 2991]
Keywords: BZDB395 Chambers' Edinburgh Journal; Unbranded THE SILLY THINGS PEOPLE DO 1837. Knife-Eaters. Note; there are no happy endings here. John Cummings, a sailor who ate at least 35 knives, and William Dempster, a juggler in Carlisle who swallowed a nine inch