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| National
Geographic . December 1919, Vol. 32, No. 6 |
SPECIAL
ISSUE: MILITARY INSIGNIA - 119 ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOR
THE ROMANCE OF MILITARY INSIGNIA: How the United States Government
Recognizes Deeds of Heroism and Devotion to Duty, by Col Robert E. Wyllie,
General Staff, U.S.A., with 27 Illustrations (Summary: The World War made
the sight of military uniforms commonplace throughout the U.S., and with
it a curiosity about the history and meanings of decorations, medals,
badges, and insignias. Related Subjects: Decorations, military; Insignia;
Medals; U.S. Navy)
American Decorations and Insignia of Honor and Service, by Robert E.
Wyllie, with 124 Illustrations (Summary: Descriptions accompany color
illustrations of the medals, decorations, ribbons, and insignias of the
U.S. armed forces. Related Subjects: Decorations, military; Insignia;
Medals; U.S. Army; U.S. Navy)
Celebrating Christmas on the Meuse (France), by Captain Clifton Lisle,
with 5 Illustrations (Summary: Christmas 1918 saw more than two million
Americans away from home. A tale of how, with the Christmas spirit, the
men of the 158th Infantry Brigade prevailed over the amazing mud and slime
of the French battlefield. Related Subjects: Christmas; France; U.S. Army;
World War I)
The Camel of the Frozen North (Alaskan Reindeer), by Carl J. Lomen, with
19 Illustrations from Photographs by Lomen Brothers, Nome, Alaska
(Summary: What the milk cow is to the Netherlands, what the sheep is to
Australia, and the steer is to Texas – all that, and more is the
reindeer to America’s farthest north. Related Subjects: Alaska;
Reindeer.)
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|
Simply
one of the BEST and rarest references for WW1 patches, medals and insignia ever
published!
This
is the highly sought after original December,
1919 issue that shows:
Color
images of all the types
of United States military medals that were issued during World War 1
AND
Color
images of all the Army
Divisional patches and insignia for divisions that took part in World War
One!
|
|
Unit
insignia are listed/shown for the following units:
First
Army, Second Army, Third Army, 1st Division, 2nd
Division, 3rd Division, 4th Division, 5th
Division, 6th Division, 7th Division, 8th
Division, 10th Division, 11th Division, 12th
Division, 13th Division, 14th Division, 18th
Division, 26th Division, 27th Division, 28th
Division, 29th Division, 30th Division, 31st
Division, 32nd Division, 33rd Division, 34th
Division, 35th Division 36th Division, 37th
Division, 38th Division, 39th Division, 40th
Division, 41st Division, 42nd Division, 76th
Division, 77th Division, 78th Division, 79th
Division, 80th Division, 81st Division, 82nd
Division, 83rd Division, 84th Division, 85th
Division, 86th Division, 87th Division, 88th
Division, 89th Division, 90th Division, 91st
Division, 92nd Division, 93rd Division, 1st
Corps, 2nd Corps, 3rd Corps, 4th Corps, 5th
Corps, 6th Corps, 7th Corps, 8th Corps, 9th
Corps, 2nd Corps School, 3rd Corps School, Ambulance
Service, Advance Section Service of Supply, Tank Corps, District of Paris,
Liaison Service, Postal Express Service, Army Artillery School,
North Russia Expedition, Camp Pontanezen, Reserve mallet, 13th
Engineers, Chemical Warfare Service, Central Records Office, Camouflage
Corps, Railway Artillery Reserve, Railheads Regulating Stations, General
Headquarters and Service of Supply.
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| The
medals and decorations section gives color pictures of medals including:
Congressional Medal of Honor, Certificate of Merit, Distinguished Service
Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Puerto Rico Occupation Medal, Civil
War Campaign Medal, Indian Campaign Medal, Spanish Campaign Medal, Cuban
Occupation Medal, Philippine Occupation medal, Congressional Philippine
Medal, Spanish American War Medal, Cuban Pacification Medal, China Relief
Expedition Medal, Mexican Border Service Medal, Mexican Campaign Medal,
Life Saving 1st Class Medal, Life Saving 2nd Class
Medal, Navy Cross, U.S. Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal, Meritorious
Service Medal, Navy Good Conduct Medal, Sampson Medal, Dewey Medal,
Nicaraguan Campaign Medal and Haitian Campaign Medal.
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in very good condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 1" chip at the bottom and the top.
Interior pages are in excellent condition. |
| Price: $55.00 SOLD |
|
| National
Geographic . November 1919, Vol. 32, No. 5 |
SIXTEEN
PAGES IN COLOR
The Rise of the New Arab Nation, by Frederick Simpich, with 18
Illustrations (Summary: Sprung free from Turkish hegemony and its own
hermit spirit, the Arabian Peninsula holds far-reaching possibilities for
peace and trade. Related Subjects: Arabian Peninsula; Bahrain; Jidda,
Saudi Arabia; Mollusks; Oysters; Pearl Industry; Saudi Arabia; World War
I; Pearls.)
The Land of the Stalking Death: A Journey Through Starving Armenia on an
American Relief Train, by Melville Chater, with 23 Illustrations (Summary:
American relief helps Armenians cope with poverty after the break up of
the Russian empire as hunger and war devastate these mountain people.
Related Subjects: Armenia; Erivan, Armenia S.S.R., U.S.S.R.; Famine;
Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, U.S.S.R.; Russia; Tiflis, Georgian
S.S.R., U.S.S.R.; Transcaucasian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic,
U.S.S.R.; Turkey; Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)
Where Slav and Mongol Meet: 16 Full-Page Color Illustrations of the
peoples of the Caucasus and Central Asia, by Maynard Owen Williams
(Summary: Color photos of some of the peoples of the Caucasus and Central
Asia. Related Subjects: Soviet Central Asia, U.S.S.R.; Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics; Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic, U.S.S.R.)
Syria: The Land Link of History’s Chain, by Maynard Owen Williams, with
21 Illustrations (Summary: With the withdrawal of Turkish power, this land
of latent wealth may yet realize its 20th-century destiny for world-class
trade. Related Subjects: Beirut, Lebanon; Haifa, Israel; Hittites;
Lebanon; Religious ceremonies and festivals – Christina; Syria;
Religious ceremonies and festivals.)
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean free from chips . Interior pages are in excellent
condition. |
| Price: $30.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . October 1919, Vol. 32, No. 4 |
A
VANISHING PEOPLE OF THE SOUTH SEAS: The Tragic Fate of the Marquesan
Cannibals, Noted for Their Warlike Courage and Physical Beauty, by John W.
Church, with 23 Illustrations (Summary: The vices and diseases of the
white man have all but annihilated the robust and unblemished people of
this once lush paradise. Related Subjects: Cannibalism, human; Marquesas
Islands, South Pacific Ocean; Cannibalism.)
A MEXICAN LAND OF CANAAN: Marvelous Riches of the Wonderful West Coast of
Our Neighbor Republic, by Frederick Simpich, Formerly American Consul at
Nogales, with 17 Illustrations (Summary: A mineral treasure-house and a
fertile Eden, Mexico’s western coast, though impoverished, holds the
promise of spectacular development and ready markets. Related Subjects:
Baja California, Mexico; Bats; Mexico; Seri Indians; Sonora, Mexico;
Tiburon, Mexico; Yaqui Indians.)
WILD DUCKS AS WINTER GUESTS IN A CITY PARK, by Joseph Dixon, A
Contribution from the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology of the University of
California, with 11 Illustrations (Summary: Offering wintertime sanctuary
and sustenance, Oakland, California’s Lake Merritt attracts legions of
migratory waterfowl. Related Subjects: California; Ducks; Merritt, Lake,
California; Oakland, California; Parks)
CURIOUS AND CHARACTERISTIC CUSTOMS OF CENTRAL AFRICAN TRIBES, by E. Torday,
with 35 Illustrations (Summary: Cannibalism, cicatrisation, trial by
poison, and live burial are just a few of the exotic customs found among
these isolated peoples. Related Subjects: Bambala people; Belgian Congo;
Cannibalism, human; Cannibalism.)
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| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean free from chips . Interior pages are in excellent
condition |
| Price: $15.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . September 1919, Vol. 32, No. 3 |
The
Shattered Capitals of Central America (Devastating Earth Quakes), by
Herbert J. Spinden, with 31 Illustrations (Summary: While the man-made
cataclysms of the Great War have monopolized the world’s attention, the
destructive forces of nature have wrought utter devastation on the
capitals of Central America. Related Subjects: Central America; Costa
Rica; Earthquakes; El Salvador; Guatemala; Nicaragua; San Salvador, El
Salvador; Volcanoes)
The Isle of Capri: An Imperial Residence and Probably Wireless Station of
Ancient Rome, by John A. Kingman, with 17 Illustrations (Summary: Capri
held a place in ancient Roman history as an imperial residence, and today
is a probably wireless signaling station. Related Subjects: Capri, Italy;
Lighthouses; Roman Empire; Roman ruins.)
Shantung: China’s Holy Land, by Charles K. Edmunds, with 22
Illustrations (Summary: Confucius’ place of birth and burial, this
densely populated Province around sacred Tai Shan plays host to hordes of
pilgrims. Related Subjects: Canals; China; Confucianism; Grand Canal,
China; Hwang Ho, China; Kufu, Shandong Province, China; Shandong Province,
China; Yellow River, China)
The Descendants of Confucius: Toilers of Shantung, by Maynard Owen
Williams, with 15 Illustrations (Summary: Having been exposed to the West,
the vast reservoir of labor of Shantung Province is set to exercise its
strength and modernize. Related Subjects: China; Confucianism; Shandong
Province, China.)
America’s South Sea Soldiers, by Lorena Macintyre Quinn, with 8
Illustrations (Summary: The courageous and dashing Fita-Fitas, native
soldiers of American Samoa, proudly serve the United States in our often
forgotten South Seas territory. Related Subjects: American Samoa, South
Pacific Ocean; Fita-Fitas; Pago Pago, American Samoa; Samoa, South Pacific
Ocean; Soldiers; Tutuila (island), American Samoa.)
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 1/2" chip at the top and bottom.
Interior pages are in excellent condition. |
| Price: $10.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . August 1919, Vol. 32, No. 2 |
The
Geography of Games: How the Sports of Nations Form a Gazetteer of the
Habits and Histories of Their Peoples by J. R. Hildebrand, with 61
Illustrations (Summary: As climate and geography determine a nation’s
favored games and sports, so do forms of play reveal much about a
people’s character. Related Subjects: Games; Sports.)
Weavers of the World: 8 Full-page B/W Photographs on special darker stock
paper (Summary: A pictorial world survey of embroidery and weaving.
Related Subjects: Weaving.)
Exploring the Glories of the Firmament, by William Joseph Showalter, with
21 Illustrations (Summary: At Wisconsin’s Yerkes Observatory and
California’s Mount Wilson, mirrors of unprecedented size give
astronomers the chance to observe celestial objects. Related Subjects:
Astronomy; Spectroscopes; Stars; Telescopes.)
Between Massacres in Van, by Maynard Owen Williams, with 3 Illustrations
(Summary: An army of orphaned boys appeal to an Armenian governor for guns
– the 12-year-old leader is given a wooden sword instead – not enough
to protect his village from the Turks. Related Subjects: Armenia; Turkey;
Van, Turkey.)
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 3" chip at the bottom. Interior pages
are in excellent condition |
| Price: $35.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . July 1919, Vol. 32, No. 1 |
The
Progressive World Struggle of the Jews for Civil Equality, by William
Howard Taft, with 15 Illustrations (Summary: Subjected to nearly two
millennia of persecution, denial of opportunity, and massacre, the
world’s Jews have preserved themselves from demoralization and despair
with a rich inner life. Related Subjects: Jews.)
Exploring Unknown Corners of the Hermit Kingdom (Korea), by Roy C.
Andrews, with 31 Illustrations including Map Illustration of Korea
(Summary: Finding an anthropological bonanza previously unseen by Western
eyes, an American Museum of Natural History team explores the remote
headwaters of Korea’s Yalu and Tumen Rivers. Related Subjects: Forests;
Korea; Musan, North Korea; Nonsatong, North Korea; Tumen River,
China-North Korea; Yalu River, Korea-Manchuria.)
Masters of Flight, by photographer William Lovell Finley: 8 Full Page Bird
Photos on special paper including: Golden Eagle, Caspian Terns, Barn Owls,
Pelican, Blue Heron, Pelican Colony, Caspian Terns Family, and Gull
A Hunter of Plants, by David Fairchild, Agricultural Explorer, In Charge
Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction, U. S. Department of
Agriculture, with 18 Illustrations (Summary: An encomium to the late Frank
N. Meyer, the unsung Columbus of horticulture who combed Central Asia and
the Far East for plants. Related Subjects: Botany; China; Korea; Meyer,
Frank N.; Plants; U.S. Department of Agriculture.)
The Land of Lambskins: An Expedition to Bokhara, Russian Central Asia, to
Study the Karakul Sheep Industry, by Robert K. Nabours, Of the Kansas
State Agricultural College, with 15 Illustrations (Summary: With worldwide
demand for furs exceeding supply, the author explores the possibilities of
the warm and beautiful pelts of the Karakul lamb, and explores the ancient
lifestyles of their shepherds. Related Subjects: Bukhara, U.S.S.R.;
Karakul sheep; Sheep raising; Soviet Central Asia, U.S.S.R.; Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics; Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic, U.S.S.R.)
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 1/2" chip at the TOP. Interior pages are
in excellent condition |
| Price: $25.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . June 1919, Vol. 31, No. 6 |
THE
MILLENNIAL CITY: The Romance of Geneva, Capital of The League of Nations,
by Ralph A. Graves, with 13 Illustrations (Summary: Astride the Rhone and
below the gaze of Mount Blanc, this historic Swiss city is poised to
become the center of man’s moral universe. Related Subjects: Bonivard,
Francois de; Calvin, John; Geneva, Switzerland; League of Nations;
Switzerland.)
DEVIL-FISHING IN THE GULF STREAM, by John Oliver La Gorce, with 7
Illustrations (Summary: The waters between the Bahamas and Florida’s
Atlantic coast make for a sport fisherman’s paradise of tarpon,
bonefish, sailfish, and the monstrous devil-ray. Related Subjects:
Bahamas, West Indies; Devilfish; Fishing; Florida; Gulf Stream; Sports;
West Indies.)
SIGHT-SEEING IN SCHOOL: Taking Twenty Million Children on a Picture Tour
of the World, by Jessie L. Burrall, Chief of School Service of the
National Geographic Society, with 14 Illustrations (Summary: With the
National Geographic Society leading the way, the photographic revolution
is helping to spark among the world’s schoolchildren an interest in
geography, culture, and world unity. Related Subjects: Education;
Geography education; National Geographic Society – Educational products;
Public Schools.)
WHO SHALL INHERIT LONG LIFE?: On the Existence of a Natural Process at
Work Among Human Beings Tending to Improve the Vigor and Vitality of
Succeeding Generations, by Alexander Graham Bell, with 13 Illustrations
(Summary: Inventor Alexander Graham Bell marshals statistical evidence
that longevity is an inherited trait and that people who have the most
children live longest. Related Subjects: Anthropology, physical; Eugenics;
Longevity; Medicine and health.)
THE AZORES: Picturesque and Historic Half-way House of American
Transatlantic Aviators, by Arminius T. Haeberle, Formerly American Consul
at St. Michaels (Sao Miguel), with 27 Illustrations (Summary: The verdant
Portuguese islands in the Atlantic play an important role for navigators
and pilots, and were a vital stopover on man’s first transatlantic
flights. Related Subjects: Aviation; Azores (islands), North Atlantic
Ocean; Ponta Delgada, S,o Miguel, Azores; St. Michael’s (island),
Azores; Seaplanes; U.S. Navy.)
A Map of the New Germany As Provided in the Peace Conference (Black &
White Illustration map) (Summary: In the wake of World War I, the map of
Europe is redrawn at Versailles. Related Subjects: Germany.)
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 1/2" chip at the TOP. Interior pages are
in excellent condition |
| Price: $10.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . May 1919, Vol. 31, No. 5 |
THE
INDUSTRIAL TITAN OF AMERICA: Pennsylvania, Once the Keystone of the
Original Thirteen, Now the Keystone of Forty-eight Sovereign States, by
John Oliver La Gorce, with 34 Illustrations (This is the first in a series
of articles on Our States.)
HUNTING BIG GAME OF OTHER DAYS: A Boating Expedition in Search of Fossils
in Alberta, Canada, by Barnum Brown, Associate Curator of Vertebrate
Paleontology in the American Museum of Natural History, with 25
Illustrations (Summary: Thanks to a once warmer climate, the prairies and
forests of Alberta yield fertile prospecting for dinosaur remains. Related
Subjects: Alberta, Canada; Dinosaurs; Fossils; Paleontology.)
INDIANA’S UNRIVALED SAND-DUNES: A NATIONAL PARK OPPORTUNITY, by Orpheus
Moyer Schantz, with 18 Illustrations (Summary: Abundant precipitation and
a reliable source of fresh water make the dunes along a 20-mile stretch of
Lake Michigan a habitat for a unique variety of flora. Related Subjects:
Indiana; National parks – United States; Sand dune.)
HELIUM, THE NEW BALLOON GAS (Kansas-Oklahoma-Texas area including the
Petrolia Field, Texas, located approximately 100 miles north of Fort
Worth), by G. Sherburne Rogers, Ph. D., Of the United States Geological
Survey, with 11 Illustrations (Summary: The world’s only workable supply
of helium promises to make balloons and airships a safe and practical
reality. Related Subjects: Balloons; Gases; Helium; Radium.)
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover has some pencil writing.
Back cover is in very good condition.
Spine is clean with a 1/2" chip at the bottom and the top.
Interior pages are in excellent condition. |
| Price: $10.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . April 1919, Vol. 31, No. 4 |
THE
CONE-DWELLERS OF ASIA MINOR: A Primitive People Who Live in Nature-Made
Apartment Houses, Fashioned by Volcanic Violence and Trickling Streams
(Troglodytes of Cappadocia in Asia Minor: Turkey), by J. R. Sitlington
Sterrett, with 53 Illustrations (Summary: A stone’s throw from the
cradle of civilization live some cave dwellers who make their home among
lava and pumice formation left by an extinct volcano. Related Subjects:
Archeology; Argaeus, Mount, Turkey; Armenia; Asia Minor; Bakluzan Dere
people; Cappadocia, Turkey; Cone dwellings; Troglodytes; Turkey.)
THE MURMAN COAST: Arctic Gateway for American and Allied Expeditionary
Forces in Northern European Russia, by Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor, with 31
Illustrations (Summary: Warmed by the Gulf Stream, an ice-free stretch of
Russia along the Arctic Ocean provides a lifeline for the feeding,
clothing, and arming of Allied expeditionary forces. Related Subjects:
Archangel, U.S.S.R.; Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, U.S.S.R.;
Murman Coast, U.S.S.R.; Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; World War I.)
ON THE TRAIL OF A HORSE THIEF, by Herbert W. Gleason, with 6 Illustrations
(Summary: Cutting a trail of breathtaking beauty, romance, and commercial
potential, the powerful Columbia River bestows multiple blessings on
Oregon and Washington’s Inland Empire. Related Subjects: British
Columbia, Canada; Canada; Columbia River and Basin, Canada-U.S.; Horse
Thief Creek, British Columbia, Canada; Windermere Lake, British Columbia,
Canada.)
THE TEN THOUSAND SMOKES NOW A NATIONAL MONUMENT: The President of the
United States Sets Aside for the American People the Extraordinary Valley
Discovered and Explored by the National Geographic Society, by Gilbert
Hovey Grosvenor, with 5 Illustrations (Summary: President Wilson
establishes 1,700 square miles of Alaska hot springs, preeminent among the
wonders of the world, as the Katmai National Monument. Related Subjects:
Alaska; Katmai National Park, Alaska; Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes,
Alaska; Volcanoes.)
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 1/2" chip at the bottom. Interior pages
are in excellent condition. |
| Price: $15.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . March 1919, Vol. 31, No. 3 |
SPECIAL
ISSUE - DOGS. Color Illustrations from Paintings of DOGS by Louis Agassiz
Fuertes. Thirty-two Pages in Color
MANKIND’S BEST FRIEND: Companion of His Solitude, Advance Guard in the
Hunt, and Ally of the Trenches, by Ernest Harold Baynes, with 11
Illustrations
OUR COMMON DOGS, by Louis Agassiz Fuertes and Ernest Harold Baynes, with
73 Type Portraits in Color by Louis Agassiz Fuertes
THE SAGACITY AND COURAGE OF DOGS: Instances of the Remarkable Intelligence
and Unselfish Devotion of Man’s Best Friend Among Dumb Animals, with 13
Illustrations
SHEEP-KILLERS: THE PARIAHS OF the Canine World, with 3 Illustrations
INDEX TO OUR COMMON DOGS
|
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition with a few stray pencil
marks.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean without any chips . Interior pages
are in excellent condition |
| Price: $45.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . February 1919, Vol. 30, No. 2 |
The
North Sea Mine Barrage, by Capt. Reginald R. Belknap, U. S. N., with 25
Illustrations (Summary: A combination of American ingenuity and British
pluck made possible an extraordinary underwater minefield from Scotland to
Norway, which contained the German submarine fleet in the North Sea and
hastened the armistice. Related Subjects: Mines, submarine; North Sea;
U.S. Navy; World War I.)
Sarawak (Borneo): The Land of the White Rajahs, by Harrison W. Smith, with
59 Illustrations (Summary: By showing solicitude for the welfare of its
diverse peoples, British rule in Borneo has supplanted tyranny and
oppression. Related Subjects: Borneo (island), Indonesia; Cockfights; Game
fowl; Indonesia; Kayan people; Long Palei, Sarawak (state), Borneo,
Malaysia; Mulu, Mount, Borneo (Kalimantan), Indonesia; Sarawak (State),
Borneo, Malaysia.)
American Berries of Hill, Dale, and Wayside, with 29 Species Illustrated
in Full Color, by Mary E. Eaton, Artist (Summary: This is the fourth in a
series on American wild flora, with illustrations of 29 species of
American berries and their blossoms. Related Subjects: Berries; Flowers;
Shrubs; Trees; Wildflowers.) |
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 1/2" chip at the TOP. Interior pages are
in excellent condition |
| Price: $10.00 |
|
| National
Geographic . January 1919, Vol. 31, No. 1 |
Chicago
Today and Tomorrow: A City Whose Industries Have Changed the Food Status
of the World and Transformed the Economic Situation of a Billion People,
by William Joseph Showalter, with 28 Illustrations
The League of Nations, What It Means and Why It Must Be, by William Howard
Taft, Ex-President of the United States, with 16 Illustrations
Medicine Fakes and Fakers of All Ages: Strange Stories of Nostrums and
Kingly Quacks in Every Era and Clime, by John A. Foote, M. D., with 14
Illustrations |
| Magazine
is complete and in excellent overall condition with minor cover wear.
Front cover is in excellent condition.
Back cover is in excellent condition.
Spine is clean with a 1/4" chip at the bottom. Interior pages
are in excellent condition |
| Price: $10.00 |
|
|