Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Popular Publications, Kokomo, IN, 1950
Librería: Argyl Houser, Bookseller, Altadena, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 8,87
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoSoft cover. Condición: Good. Pages are tanned. Most pages are otherwise clean, unmarked and undamaged. A few pages have a tiny tear or two along the edges. Some pages have a mildly bent or creased corner tip. Exterior covers are lightly soiled. The back cover has a few chips and tears in the edges, and a rough tan surface--I don't know what caused it. There are a couple of small tears at the top of the spine. The magazine will be bubble-wrapped and carefully packed in a sturdy box to ensure safe transit. This issue includes: "Recipe for a Class I Railroad" by John A. Thompson; "China Interlude" by Jesse D. Cope; "Shortline to Nowhere" by Othmar Tabische; "True Tales: Frozen Stiff" by Joe Fountain; "True Tales: Traveling Auditor (Part I)" by Samuel James; "True Tales: While the Angel Watched" by William F. Knapke; "Fiction: Ticket to Destruction" by E.S. Dellinger; "Short Hauls: Incidentally" by Frank Herold; "Short Hauls: Vatican City Railway"; "Short Hauls: Along the Iron Pike" by Joe Easley; "Short Hauls: Fiddletown & Copperopolis Ry. (No. 27)" by Carl Fallberg; plus "Light of the Lantern (ET Brake Equipment)"; "Model Railroad (P&R's Camelback, Part I)"; "Electric Lines (Citizen's Traction Co., Part I, Slick)"; "On the Spot (Switch Shanty Gossip)"; and "Railroad Camera Club (Switch List, Model Trading Post)".
Idioma: Inglés
Librería: Legacy Books II, Louisville, KY, Estados Unidos de America
Arte / Grabado / Póster
EUR 83,71
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNo Binding. Condición: VG. No place, no date, circa 1900, sized about 8 x 10.5 inches, with facsimile signature, very sharp, clean, and bright, on heavy plate paper. The subject was a dentist in West Chester, Pennsylvania, and an amateur microscopist. He was a long-time member of the West Chester Microscopical Society, and was one-time president. He made several microscopes for his own personal use, and exhibited one at a meeting of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, 1880.