150 résultats
16 pages. Features: The Lusitania's Armament of Twelve Six-Inch Guns, by Frank Koester - includes plan of the Lusitania armed, from "Engineering", London; The Embargo on Arms is the Pivot of German-American sentiment; How They Live in Berlin During War Time, by M.M.; Loyalty and a Sovereign People, by Dr. Edmund von Mach; The Warship Lusitania - editorial; A Policy of Intimidation? - are state and federal officials in League to suppress the truth in the Lusitania case?; Cancelling American Passports; What is the trouble with the President?; News from Germany - including 'the yellow peril'; Kaffee Hag ad on back cover; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. First page holding by one staple. Covers detached but present, otherwise a sound copy. Magazine
Pages 181-196 (16 pages in this issue). Features: Why the Money Trust Wants War - Part IX - The "American" Pilgrims, by Charles A. Collman - includes a list of Americans who supported the $half-billion loan to the King of England; Are the English a Civilized Race? - Affidavits on the Destruction of a German Submarine and Murder of its Crew by Captain McBride of the English Ship "Baralong" Flying the American flag; Dr. Von Bethmann-Hollweg's Great Speech - An Interpretation, by R.L. Orchelle; The "Brooklyn Eagle" Sounds Alarm on War Loan; A Manifesto of the Indian National Party; Belgium Under German Rule - "The Capital of the Monkeys", by Louis Viereck; Mr. Roosevelt and the Hyphenates; The Allies' Betrayal of Greece; How About the Jews?; Financial Forum; Back cover full-page ad for the German Relief Fund; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. A sound copy. Magazine
Pages 213-232 (20 pages in this issue). Features: Who is Using Our Life Insurance Funds? - Wall Street Again Defies the Law in Gambling with the Savings of the American People, by Charles A. Collman; How the Bank Depositors of New York Beat the Loan, by Jeremiah A. O'Leary; General Von Steuben, Washington's Friend and Aid, the German-American Who Helped Make the Republic, by Dr. C.J. Hexamer - with illustrations; Poem by Peter Golden; Secessionist in New England, by Frederick Franklin Schrader; Miss Cavell and Brand Whitlock; England's Darkest Hours; The Men of the Eitel Friedrich; The Pirate Ship "Baralong"; The Recognition of Carranza; How Belgium is Being fed, by Louis Viereck; Financial Forum; War bond ad for the German, Austrian and Hungarian Governments; Interesting ad for the "new trick toy Ding-a-Ling", with proceeds for relief of destitue Germans in Canada; Nice full-page Budweiser ad on back cover features John Hancock; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. A sound copy. Magazine
Pages 253-268 (16 pages in this issue). Features: Repudiating Wilson and Root - Administration Candidate in New York Congressional District Runs 13,000 Votes Behind His Party on Neutrality Issue; The Great News Conspiracy - How Unscrupulous Newspaper Owners, at the Behest of Wall Street, Deliberately Deceived the American People, by Charles A. Collman - includes a lengthy list of pro-Ally fake stories published in the New York Times; How the American Truth Society Defeated President Wilson's Congressional Candidate in New York, by Jeremiah A. O'Leary; Germany Opens Road to Turkey; The Death of Edward L. Pretorius; Austria-Hungary Teaches Mr. Lansing a Lesson; Three books to be read; The Most Hyphenated American - Editorial; Ad for war bonds of the German, Austrian and Hungarian Governments; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. A sound copy. Magazine
Pages 285-304 (20 pages in this issue). Features: Explosives - The Most Heinous Phase of the War Industry - Article VIII, by George Sylvester Viereck; Warring on Women and Children - Proof of England's cowardly war on helpless creatures; The Real History of Belgian Neutrality, by E.C. Richardson, Princeton University; John Wannamaker a Real Neutral; Sir Cecil Spring-Rice takes charge of Post Office Department; Americans vs. Armenians; Roumania; Sovereign or Servants? - By Dr. Edmund von Mach; Financial Forum; Full page ad for "The Battles of a Nation" - showing actual bombardment of Warsaw - being presented at Park Theatre, Columbus Circle; Full-page illustrated ad for Burroughs bookkeeping machines; Great Full-page Budweiser ad on back cover featuring The Pinckneys - "Fathers of the Republic"; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. A sound copy. Magazine
Pages 325-340 (16 pages in this issue). Features: "Prevention of Cruelty to Horses - Today" - American ships half a million horses a year to be killed on the European battlefields, by George Sylvester Viereck; Nice ad for "The War Plotters of Wall Street" by Charles A. Collman; Anglo-Russian Agreement - how the protectors of small nations proposed to treat Bulgaria and Roumania; Paul Ehrlich - a "Barbarian" who helped all mankind - Genius of the Laboratory, with photo; Germany - The Teacher of the World, by Theodore Roosevelt; The Truth of American History; George Von Skal Refutes O.V.G.; One of the Notes Not Given to the Newspapers by Secretary Lansing; German Atrocities & French Psychoogy, by Louis Viereck; Mr. Wilson's Thoughtfulness - Editorial; Financial Forum; War Bond ad for Germany and her allies; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. A sound copy. Magazine
Pages 393-408 (16 pages in this issue). Features: Bar the Red Cross From Britain!, by Charles A. Collman; How the Germans "Helped to Save the Life of the Nation" - Extracts from the Congressional proceedings that should make America blush; Behind the Scenes at the Capital; Right From the Shoulder - Congressman -at-large Jeff. McLemore of Texas Tells George Haven Putnam (Born in London) What He Thinks of His "American Rights Committee"; Thoughts of a "Gently Hazed" American; "American Rights and British Pretensions"; Genuine Belgian Atrocities - by Louis Viereck; Working for Mr. Morgan; Shamed by Austria; Mr. Wilson's Poor Rule; Who is Dr. Cecelie Greil?; Press Degrades itself in Foreign Eyes; War Bond Ads; Financial Forum; and more. Short opening along coverfold. Unmarked. Average wear. A worthy copy. Magazine
Pages 49-64 (16 pages in this issue). Features: Wall Street Wolves in "Hyphen" Guise - How Hypocritial Financiers Masquerade as German Americans, by Charles A. Collman - includes an interesting graphic entitled 'Race-Hatred and the Insurance Business' which links names, companies and certain acts; The War of Position in France and Russia; Adventures in Belgium under German Rule, by Louis Vierenck; General Hindenburg Thanks Readers of this publication; Let Congress See to it that no harm befalls the Republic; Our Own Little Belgiums; A Typical Russian"Victori"; Foreshadowing the sinking of the Lusitania; Financial Forum; War Bond Ads; Cover graphic shows the amount of land captured by the Germans, and compares it to the (smaller) size of Great Britain; and more. Openings along coverfold. Unmarked. Average wear. A worthy copy. Magazine
Pages -97-112 (16 pages in this issue). Features: The Great Conspiracy Exposed - What the Trust Fund Left in Cecil Rhodes' Secret Will is Doing to Spread the Seeds of High Treason - Shall the United States Become an "Integral Part of Great Britain"?, by Frederic Franklin Schrader - includes an interesting graphic entitled "The Poison Plant of Treason That Breeds American Toryism" which links certain notable personalities with Cecil Rhodes' Secret Will; Senator La Follette's Platform - Wisconsin Senator Outlines his Political Principles in Notable Speech; Behind the Scenes of the Capital; The Significance of the War Bazaars; Thoughts of a "Gently Hazed" American; Various Editorial Topics; Financial Forum; War Bond Ads; Financial Forum; Many other interesting ads; and more. Covers loose but present. Unmarked. Average wear. A worthy copy. Magazine
16 pages. Features: Organize! Organize! - organizing the German-American element and all German and Austro-Hungarian sympathizers; France in Desperate Straits; Our Debt to Germany; "Hoch Der Kaiser!"; For English Colonies - Peace with Freedom; Responsibility of the Press, by Frank Koester; The Division of the Nations' Forces, by Dr. Hanns Heinz Ewers; Causes of the War - Cecil Chesterton, of London, and George Sylvester Viereck of New York, in Joint Debate; Steinway Piano ad and many more. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy. Book
16 pages. Features: What Count Von Bernstorff Might Reply to Mr. William Jennings Bryan; Prof. Burgess Unmasks Sir Edward Grey; The Military Situation; The German Educational System, by Frank Koester; The Free Sea, by Dr. Edmund von Mach; The Incident of the "Gulflight"; Directors of Death Factories - a partial list of names of directors of American companies profiting by selling armaments to Germany's foes; Wisconsin and the Shipment of Arms - General Pearson seeks to stop the flow of arms; Kuno Meyer and Harvard - Harvard is neutral in the same was as the U.S. is neutral; Pogroms against the Jews in England; The Secret Aim of the British Press Bureau - some would like to see America join the British Empire; Louis Viereck's news from Germany; and more. This publication took Germany's side during WWI. Unmarked with moderate wear. Short openings to several pages at foot of coverfold. A sound vintage copy. Magazine
16 pages. Features: Supportive comments inside from cover; Who Provoked the War? - incidents showing the historical progress of events toward the inevitable clash; Has France a Title to Alsace-Lorraine? - extracts of a letter by Thomas Carlyle to the London Times during the Franco-German War; The American Press and the War, by Dr. A.B. Faust; Ernst Haeckel and Rudolph Eucken Rally to the Flag; Supportive letter from William C. Fox, Ex-American Minister to Ecuador; We and the World - poem by Hanns Heinz Ewers; Brief piece about the 'Loquacious" German Ambassador Count Bernstorff; A call for Americans of German and Austro-Hungarian blood to organize; Full-page image depicting Germany as the defender of civilization against the Barbarian Host; News the New York Times would like to suppress; Poem entitled "For All We Have and Are" by Frederick H. Martens; We Poles in Austria, by an Austrian Pole; The German-American and the President's Neutrality Proclamation, by Prof. Julius Goebel; The War Situation - latest news of WWI; and more. Average wear. Binding intact. Unmarked. Cover holding by one staple otherwise a sound copy. Magazine
16 pages. Features: The Turning of the Tide - The Germans More Than Our Brothers - The Champions at Fair Play; A White Man's War - poem by Frederick H. Martens; How England Treats Her Prisoners - Mr. Herbert Corey's Story of the Camp at Aldershot - How Germany is Treating the Captured English; The Menace of the Great Bear - Russia and the Ruthenians - A Phase of Pan-Slavism; , by Alexander von Nuber, Austro-Hungarian Consul General; The Voice of the People - A Symposium of Our Readers; England Threatens to Blackmail United States - Reports of U.S. Peace Moves Riles John Bull; English Disinformation Exposed; News from Germany; Anti-England Rumblings from Egypt; Harvard Cannot Be Bribed to Choke Free Speech; The Myth of Belgian Neutrality; Japan's Broken Pledges; The Present Status of the War - Antwerp has fallen; and more. Average wear. Binding intact. Unmarked. A sound copy. Magazine
16 pages. Features: What the Prolongation of the War Means to the American Farmer, by Dr. Hugo Schweitzer; Steinway Piano ad; Remarks on the Subscription for the German War Loan, by Prof. Dr. Riesser, President of the Central Union of German Bankers; Why England will never grant Freedom to Ireland, by James K. McGuire; Captain Karl von Muller of the "Emden"; Sir Roger Casement in Germany; Frank Koester Searchlights Modern German Development; American Citizens Arrested in Great Britain - further proof that an American Passport is only "A Scrap of Paper", by Frederick F. Schrader; The "Fatherland" in the day's news; The War of Nations - The Russian Campaign - Austro-Hungarian Efficiency; To the Fatherland, a poem by C. Edwin Hutchings; Letters from readers; Nice illustrated - and very pro-German - ad for the Otto Gas Engine Works of Philadelphia; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. Binding intact. A sound copy. Magazine
16 pages. Features: Steinway Piano ad inside front cover; "We Shall Conquer" - a cabled version of an address to the Reichstag by Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg, the German Imperial Chancellor; My Mother's House - a full-page poem by Hanns Heinz Ewers; Secrets of Success of a Great Commercial Nation, by Frank Koester; Cornell Students Found German Club; Sir George Plaish is pleased; How German Sympathizers Voted; Neutrals Waking Up?; The Proteus of War; Dr. Bernhard Dernburg Urges Strict Neutrality; How the American Manufacturer is Affected by War, by Dr. Hugo Schweitzer; Franz von Liszt on the Future of Europe; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. Binding intact. A sound copy. Magazine
578775Paris, C.E.D.R.E., 1986-1994. 5 vol. in-4, rel. pleine-toile bleue marine, pièce de titre rouge, titre et filet dorés.
Pages 361-376 (16 pages in this issue). Features: The Mystery of John Revelstoke Rathom, President Wilson's Confidant; Behind the Front - Impressions of a Tourist in Western Europe, by Aleister Crowley; Behind the Scenes at the Capital; Thoughts of a "Gently Hazed" American; Germany Repudiates War Plotters - Berlin Denounces Lawlessness - Consider Conspirators as Enemies; How They Make Cities in Germany, by Frank Koester; A Word with the Republicans; The Crisis with Austria; The President's Onslaught on Free Speech; Hitting Germany Hard; Financial Forum; War Bond ad; and more. Covers almost loose but present. Unmarked. Average wear. A worthy copy. Magazine
20 pages. Features: The Trade in the Tools of Death, by George Sylvester Viereck - an account of the tremendous development of the manufacture of munitions of war in the United States showing how this country, allegedly neutral, is helping to prolong the European conflict by furnishing firearms and explosive to the British Allies; Cartoon by A. Staehle shows the Prince of Peace coming out of Bethlehem, Palestine, and hell going out of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania in the form of munitions on railcars; White List - A list of some companies what have refused to manufacture arms and ammunition and ammunition-related manufacturing machinery; Money From Death - a partial list of American companies engaged in the manufacture of munitions of war; Victory - In Battle and in Balkan Diplomacy; The War of 1920 - 2nd Instalment; The Ocean Travelers' Suicide Club; Arm the German Ships in New York Harbor; The Cleveland Automatic Company and the New York Times - poison shrapnel being provided to the Allies; Mr. Pulitzer in Looking-Glass Land - he seems to exist in a land where everything is the reverse of the truth; The Verdict - Guilty! - England on the Witness Stand; Spring's Awakening in Berlin, by Louis Viereck; Ad for Kaffee Hag on back cover; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. Covers loose but present, otherwise a sound copy. Magazine
591751Paris, C.E.D.R.E., 1986-2007. 14 tomes en 31 volumes in-4 brochés, rare collection complète.
16 pages. Features: The War of 1920, being the fictional diary of Gustav Bauerfeldt, War Correspondent of the Berliner Rundschau - Part 1; What we Demand of President Wilson In the Spirit of 'Seventy-Six'; Behind the Scenes in Warring Germany with Edward Lyell Fox; The Eliots and the Parkhursts, a poem by Stephen Oland; "To See Ourselves as Others See Us", by Dr. Edmund von Mach; Mr. Bryan and the German-Americans; The Worm Turns - at last American manufacturers are making an energetic protest to President Wilson against England's strangulation of American commerce; Why Franklin Knight Lane, Secretary of the Interior, and William Bauchop Wilson, head of the Department of Labor, Should Resign; Why They Are Against Peace - one of the most virulent pro-Ally newspapers in New England is owned by interests manufacturing war supplies for the Allies; Swiss View on our "Neutrality"; News from Germany; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. Three-inch opening to bottom of coverfold otherwise a sound copy. Magazine
Pages 81-96 (16 pages in this issue). Features: What War Teaches Peace, by Frank Koester; India and Ireland - by Ernest P. Horrwitz of Dublin University; Lifting the Mask From England, by Aleister Crowley; Wilson Wants War - Why Henry Ford was Snubbed by the President, by George E. Miller of the Detroit News; Russian Corruption, by Louis Viereck; Behind the Scenes at the Capital; Stupifying the People - A Random Example of How a Harvard Professor Disseminates the Poison of Ignorance and Slander; Thoughts of a "Gently Hazed" American; Various editorial topics; War bond ads; List of contributors to the Emma Duensing Fund; Many interesting ads; and more. Opening along coverfold. Unmarked. Average wear. A worthy copy. Magazine
16 pages. Features: Great Britain's Paper Blockade of Germany and Austria-Hungary; Ships Seized and Detained by the British and French Authorities - a detailed list of the ships, their cargo, etc.; Alled Press Hysterical - young German reservists in New York accused of having obtained American passports by fraud; American Ships and British Arrogance - A Plain Statement of the Facts, the Law and the Precedents in the Issue Between the Governments of the United States and Great Britain, by William Bayard Hale; The Greatest Secret of German Progress, by Frank Koester; About the allegation of plagiariam against Count Bernstorff; Field Marshal Von Der Goltz; Buy American Goods; Hon. Joechoate Anti-German; Bringing Great Britain to Her Knees; Honesty is the Best Policy - Part 1 of 2, by Aleister Crowley; Interesting request for new advertisers - makes the case that neutral companies not avoid advertising in this publication; Stand Up and Meet the War - a poem by Wolcott Frederick; And more. Unmarked. Average wear. Binding intact. Openings along coverfold otherwise a sound copy. Magazine
16 pages. Features: Are Hyphenated Citizens Good for American?; Who Are Americans?; A Congressman Who is Not Afraid - Representative Joseph Taggart of Kansas Assails Harper's Weekly for its abuse of Germans; Hartelpool Well Defended; Brave American Actress - Fern Rogers; Honesty is the Best Policy (Part 2 of 2), by Aleister Crowley - a remarkably forcible exposition of the hypocrisy of his countrymen; The Greatest Secret of German Progress, by Frank Koester; The Division of the Nation's Forces, by Dr. Hanns Heinz Ewers - a keen analysis of the actual condition and strength of the armies at war; English Schemes against German and German-American Insurance Companies; American "Neutrality Notes"; England's Note - Refusal to safeguard American seagoing commerce; England Decadent - Fair-Minded Englishmen and Americans in London express their disgust; Jerome K. Jerome Protests Against the Infamous Treatment of English Citizens of German Birth; Advertising Talk - persuading neutral companies to advertise in this 'publication of class'; The Turks at the Suez Canal; Violation of Property Rights of Foreigners in France; Back cover is a full-time request for readers to convert their spare time into dollars by working for this publication; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. Binding intact. A sound copy. Magazine
32 pages. This issue is twice as long as previous issues due to its blockbuster treatment of "The Case of Belgium" with reproductions of documents incriminating to Belgium. Features: The (New York) "Times" in Despair; Irish Home Rule Bill; Government Control of Public Utilities, by Frank Koester; "I Protest", by Clara Viebig - one of the foremost novelists of Europe; We Demand Real Neutrality; What is an American German?, by Representative Richard A. Bartholdt of Missouri; The Case of Belgium - In the light of official reports found in the secret archives of the Belgium Government after the occupation of Brussels with facsimiles of the documents - a major article; cartoon shows a German dog being taken before an English firing squad; England's Embarrassment is Ireland's Opportunity; and more. Unmarked. Average wear. Binding intact. A sound copy. Magazine
1899ABC_46445Budapest Dresden Innsbruck München: Calderoni és társa Verlag von Stengel & Co Fritz Gratl 1899. Half black leather red buckram sides blind-stamped boards gold-stamped spine with the date "1899" marbled endpapers. Oblong album 32 x 41 cm. Album with 43 photographic prints of various sizes 22 x 16.5 to 30 x 24 cm pasted on thick paperboard. From mountains in Austria to city views and interiors of churches in Budapest Vienna Innsbruck and München: all can be found in the 43 photographic prints in the present album. They were taken in at the end of the nineteenth-century probably in 1897 and 1899 according to blind-stamps in the prints. The photographers of most images are unknown except for the 6 photographs of Innsbruck which were made by the Innsbruck photographer and publisher Fritz Gratl. He likely made some of the other photographs of Austrian mountains towns and the city of Salzburg as well since his other known photographs cover similar subjects. Most prints of Vienna and some of Budapest were published by Stengel and Company in Dresden Germany in 1897. They and also Fritz Gratl were famous printers and publishers of postcards with similar picturesque images and the photographs in the present album are possibly the original images used to make the postcards.22 photos bear the blind stamp of the photographic studio. 4 photos have handwritten captions in pencil. The binding shows some minor signs of wear slight foxing or browning of the outer edges of the paperboards not affecting the photographs some photographs slightly faded or rubbed mostly at the edges not affecting the actual image the paper board of the print of "Budapest - Neues Parlament" has a slightly damaged spot in the lower margin not affecting the integrity of the board or the print. Overall in good condition. An album of 43 photos showing the sights of Hungary Austria and Germany. Calderoni és társa, Verlag von Stengel & Co, Fritz Gratl, hardcover