The Fatherland - Fair Play for Germany and Austria-Hungary, November 4th, 1914
The Fatherland - Fair Play for Germany and Austria-Hungary, November 4th, 1914 | Rare and modern books | Viereck, George Sylvester, Schrader, Frederick F.: Editors
The Fatherland - Fair Play for Germany and Austria-Hungary, November 4th, 1914
The Fatherland - Fair Play for Germany and Austria-Hungary, November 4th, 1914 | Rare and modern books | Viereck, George Sylvester, Schrader, Frederick F.: Editors
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- PayPal
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Details
- Year of publication
- 1914
- Place of printing
- New York
- Author
- Viereck, George Sylvester, Schrader, Frederick F.: Editors
- Publishers
- The International Monthly
- Size
- 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall
- Edition
- F First Edition
- Keyword
- Pro-German Propaganda WW1 Military Expenditures By Country, Arnold Bennett Censorship Prussia Emperor William Judge Peter S., Grosscup Belgium Henry Labouchere Conspiracy November 4th 1914, History Magazine Back Issues
- Binding description
- S Paperback
- State of preservation
- Fair
- Languages
- English
- Binding
- Softcover
- First edition
- True
Description
16 pages. Features: The "Militarism" of Germany - a comparison of military expenditures between the participants; Recent Fiction by Arnold Bennett and others; New York Dailies getting tired of being the victims of the London Censor; When We Needed Prussia - A reminder of our obligations to Emperor William's Ancestor, in the undying words of John Quincy Adams; Germany's Case as Stated by an Eminent American Jurist - Judge Peter S. Grosscup; Poem by George Sylvester Viereck; The Outlook justifies Germany's retributive action in Belgium; Where is the flag of England? - poem by Henry Labouchere; England the Arch Conspirator - important documents reveal secret military convention with Belgium - evidence from Authentic Russian and Belgian Sources; and more. Covers detached and separated. Unmarked. A worthy reference copy. This issue noteworthy for the fact that it is one of the first to contain several paying advertisers. Most prior issues had none or very few. Magazine