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  • Chamberlain, John; Pressey, Benfield; Watters, Reginald E. (editors)

    Language: English

    Published by Charles Scribner's Sons, 1948

    Seller: Redux Books, Grand Rapids, MI, U.S.A.

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    £ 11.10

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    Hardcover. Condition: Good. Hardcover. No dust jacket. Pages are clean and unmarked. Covers show light edge wear with rubbing/light scuffing. Binding is tight, hinges strong. Previous owner's name on end paper.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day!

  • John Chamberlain, et al, Editors

    Language: English

    Published by Time Inc., New York, 1937

    Seller: Books from the Past, Memphis, TN, U.S.A.

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    Magazine / Periodical

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    Original Wraps. Condition: Good. 208 pages. Cover art by Ernest Hamlin Baker, of an airport's spotlights and wind sock. Contents: Koppers (coal and coke ovens), with color illustrations by John O'H. Cosgrave II; radio ranges for airports; The Struggle in Spain, which includes a color copy of El Greco's Toledo; Metropolitan Aqueduct for southern California, with color illustrations by Rex Brandt; Nash-Kelvinator; The American Museum of Natural History; Ads: Lincoln Zephyr V-12; Cunard White Star; Squibb & Sons' ad titled, "So You Are Fifty Today!"; city bus in silver ink for Alcoa; b & w illustration by Kenyon of Farallon Island and lighthouse NBC radio; Paul Brown golfing illustration for Brooks Brothers Clothing; a b & w and a color photo of Glenn Hardin for Camel cigarettes; color illustration titled, "We Moved A River," of Cuyahoga River in Cleveland, for Republic Steel; blue Cadillac-Fleetwood Series 75 sedan; yellow Pontiac, including a small cut-away view; back cover has a Chesterfield cigarettes ad with a woman riding a motorized scooter through the countryside. The spine leans and has rubbed spots on the sides. The back cover has a chipped corner, and half of the bottom edge is wrinkled and rubbed. Cover and articles' pages have darkened. The bottom edge of the last page has a 1/4 in. and a linear 1 3/4 in. chip; the bottom edge of the previous page has 3 short closed tears, and the next page has two. Selection of priority or international shipping will require extra shipping cost. Photos e-mailed upon request.

  • Chamberlain, John; Pressey, Benfield; Watters, Reginald E. (editors)

    Published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1948

    Seller: Top Notch Books, Tolar, TX, U.S.A.

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    £ 3.06

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    Hard Cover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. 56 essays in exposition. Boards are scuffed, edgeworn, fraying at spine. Pages are lightly tanning at edges. Small dampstain at bottom. Text is unmarked, binding is tight. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is Part Two (issued separately from Part One, the main issue, which I do not have) dated February 11, 1952 of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 10 - although not stated in this special supplement) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/8" and containing 12 pages including front and rear covers. Part Two is devoted to a lengthy article entitled "Prelude to Disaster - The Dismissal of General Douglas MacArthur" by George E. Sokolsky. Containing excerpts from the Senate Hearings, topics include: How Not To Fire A General (with subtopic The Acheson School of Falsification); Five Dates That Changed History (December 6, 1950 - Hush, Hush about Formosa; January 12, 1951 - The Joint Chiefs Agree with MacArthur; March 20, 1951 - A Cryptic Message; March 24, 1951 - MacArthur Offers a Cease-Fire; April 5, 1951 - General [Omar] Bradley's Amnesia); No Peace With MacArthur! Closed tear along outer spine fold; former owner's name to front cover.

  • Chamberlain, John L. and Margileth, Andrew M. (MD's), Editors

    Published by Children's Hospital Medical Center, Washington, DC, 1974

    Seller: UHR Books, Hollis Center, ME, U.S.A.

    Association Member: MABA

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    First Edition

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    Soft cover. Condition: Very Good -. No Jacket. Original Edition. Volume 30, No. 8, 9 and 10, 1974 issue of this medical journal, focused on kidney failure in children, dialysis and transplantation of kidneys in children. Includes 19 articles on the subject, by various authors. Light exterior fading; previous owner's name on front cover. Book.

  • Seller image for Fortune, April 1938 for sale by Books & Bidders

    Chamberlain, John; James Gould Cozzens; John Davenport; et al. [editors]

    Language: English

    Published by Time Inc., New York, 1938

    Seller: Books & Bidders, Cleveland, OH, U.S.A.

    Association Member: IOBA

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    Magazine / Periodical First Edition

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    Wrappers. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. Vol. XVII, No 4 - April 1938. Pictorial stiff paper wraps (softcover). 14 x 11-1/2 inches. 186 pages; illustrated in color and B&W, period automobile, alcohol, and cigarette advertisements, cover art by John O'H. Cosgrave II. Contains articles on Oskaloosa vs. United States, Business and Government, Peanuts, etc. Showing some light wear at extremities, spine slightly cocked, internally clean and bright.

  • Chamberlain, John, Et Al, editors

    Published by Time-Fortune Corporation, Chicago, 1936

    Seller: Willis Monie-Books, ABAA, Cooperstown, NY, U.S.A.

    Association Member: ABAA ESA ILAB

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    Softcover. Condition: Very Good-. Illustrated by Petruccelli, Antonio, Cover (illustrator). Spine has some splitting to the top end and slight wear. Spine is cocked. ; Contents include John D. Rockefeller Jr. ; Constitution of the U. S. ; and others.

  • Chamberlain, John, Et Al, editors

    Published by Time-Fortune Corporation, Chicago, 1936

    Seller: Willis Monie-Books, ABAA, Cooperstown, NY, U.S.A.

    Association Member: ABAA ESA ILAB

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    Softcover. Condition: Good. Illustrated by Petruccelli, Antonio, Cover (illustrator). Spine has a split to each end and slight wear. Spine is cocked. Front cover has a long crease from top to bottom (not noticeable on dark illustration) and has slight edge wear. Rear cover has a couple red streaks and a couple creases. ; Contents include Pennsylvania Railroad: II, including Electrification; Queen Mary [ship]; Youth in College; Constitution of the U. S. ; and others.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the October 8, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 1) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Hollywood's Premature Americans by Oliver Carlson ("In Hollywood, at last more or less converted to Americanism, the movie moguls are rewarding one another for their patriotism. But Oliver Carlson shows that there are no banquets and few jobs for those who were good Americans when it was the fashion to be Red"); Rebellion in the Potato Fields by Stanley High (which begins, "On last February 15, a special agent of the U.S. Department of Agriculture - one of its force of several thousand 'farm detectives' - arrived in St. Ansgar, Iowa, under orders to get the evidence by which, for marketing their crops as they had marketed them for more than a quarter of a century, one of the area's most successful farm families could be branded as 'law-breakers,' hauled into court, tried and drastically punished"); Free Enterprise: The Worker's View by A.A. Imberman; UN Information Please by Burton Rascoe ("for goshsakes, don't write or phone [United Nations] Information unless you want to get exasperated to the point of reaching for the fire-axe and going berserk - and still not get the information you want, however simple it may be"); Double-Talk on Formosa by Albert Y. Sze; The Return of Sacred Music by Ralph de Toledano. Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Concord, New Hampshire, 1950

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 25, 1950 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 7) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Concord, New Hampshire. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-3/8" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Our Political Paralysis by Henry Hazlitt (which begins, "If the military disaster in Korea had overtaken any nation with a responsible parliamentary government, there is not the slightest doubt what the result would have been. The chief executive and every member of his cabinet would have been forced to resign"); Senator [Robert A.] Taft's New Deal by Forrest Davis; Stalin's New World Strategy by Joseph Zack; Our Shrinking Dollar by L. Albert Hahn; Mid-Century Survey by William A. Orton; Lament for a Generation: The Class of '36 Reports by Ralph de Toledano (which begins, "We were not beautiful or damned. We did not dance to the sad, mannered jazz of Scott Fitzgerald's generation, nor did we kick the dust of the Ritz with silver slippers of disillusion. No one called us a lost generation; to be lost, there must be something to be lost from. If we had a poet laureate, it was T.S. Eliot whose 'Wasteland' left us more dismayed than shattered. But even Eliot was not really ours; he represented the revolt of an earlier generation against the sandy bohemianism of the Left Bank and the clatter of Hemingway's prose style"). Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1952

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the January 14, 1952 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 8) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: one-page Editorial "Two Massacres" (which begins, "The nightmarish atmosphere of unreality that envelops anything involving our relations with communism has almost smothered the revelation by Col. James M. Hanley in the middle of last November that 6,270 American prisoners of war had been murdered by Chinese and North Korean Communists"); The Sovereign Position by F.A. Voigt ("In a war between Soviet Russia and the West, says an eminent British authority, the decisive position is the Dardanelles. While the West holds that position Russia can not win"); The Crime of Crimea by Arthur Kemp (on the Yalta Agreement); A Slanted Guide to Library Selections by Oliver Carlson (on Helen E. Haines); Freedom Is Indivisible by Bruce Winton Knight; Letter to the Editor from Burton Rascoe (headlined "An Estimate of [Joseph B.] McCarthy"). Narrow closed tear along outer spine fold; former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 31, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 7) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Calling Stalin's Bluff by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson ("The most effective way to meet the Soviet menace, says Major Wheeler-Nicholson, is to hit Stalin where he is weakest - inside the Iron Curtain"); The Incentive to Produce by Edward F. Hutton; In the Wake of Liberation by Bertrand de Jouvenel (on France: "The French elections of June 17 showed that the Communists retain their hold upon a good fourth of the electorate. Nor is this the worst. Their electoral strength rests mainly upon their control of one-half of the wage-earning electorate" - "It is generally taken for granted abroad that after the crumbling of Vichy and the eviction of the Germans the prewar Republic was restored. It was not so"); Manners, Arts and Morals: Notes on the Entertainment Industries by William S. Schlamm; Norman Mailer's "Barbary Shore" reviewed. Front and rear covers detached but present; former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1952

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the March 10, 1952 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 12) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: My Father's America: I - A Pioneer of the Prairie by Alix du Poy ("How many Americans are old enough to remember the days before the New Deal? How many recall the spacious days of freedom? - The series of articles of which Miss du Poy's is the first is offered in the hope that it may help restore to this generation a knowledge of the heritage that made this country great"); Study in Planned Futility by George Creel (on the Voice of America); Indonesia's Little Kremlin by Edward Hunter ("Indonesia's recognition of Communist China has brought to her capital a Red Embassy that is a center of the Soviet conspiracy"); After Capitalism, What? by George Winder ("A British economist contends that the dreams of the Socialists can not be realized, and that the destruction of the free market system would be followed by the emergence of a new dark age"); near 1/2-page letter from Henry A. Wallace (headlined "Mr. Wallace Explains Further"). Narrow closed tear along outer spine fold; small chip to upper edge of front cover; former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the October 22, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 2) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Buy, Buy, Buy the World by Garet Garrett ("Mr. Garrett examines the Administration's international WPA projects, and shows that they have brought us chiefly debt and ill will"); The Menace of [Josip Broz] Tito by Bogdan Raditsa; The Duty to Oppose by Hugh Gibson ("It is time we considered honestly whether a bipartisan foreign policy is desirable"); Britain's Artful Dodger by Rene Kuhn (on Labor Party's Herbert Morrison); The Story of A Smear by W. L. White (which begins, "In the summer of 1932 as the depression was nearing its bottom, suddenly there poured into Washington a ragged army of veterans, asking of Congress payment of a bonus for their services in World War I. Failing to achieve their aim, this Bonus Expeditionary Force - or BEF - degenerated into a bitter mob. There followed scenes of violence which the Communist press has since converted into a widely believed story of a massacre of needy veterans by the guns and tanks of the regular army. But recent confessions of John Pace and other former Communists have thrown light on the hidden forces at work in that pathetic throng"); The Dance: Antidote to Neurosis by Ernestine Stodelle; lengthy review of "God and Man at Yale" by William F. Buckley, Jr. Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 17, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 6) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Europe Turns to Freedom by William Henry Chamberlin ("Mr. Chamberlin discusses the postwar trend to free enterprise in Continental Europe, and finds it the essential means to economic recovery"); Emmett Lavery's Strange Crusade by Oliver Carlson ("One of Hollywood's screen writers, Emmett Lavery, has just revealed that he was engaged in fighting movieland's subversives at the time when almost everyone else thought he was their faithful friend and ally"); The Weapon of Taxation by Towner Phelan (which begins, "In 1819 Chief Justice [John] Marshall said: 'The power to tax is the power to destroy'"); Pattern for Confession by Alice Widener (which begins, "Sometimes the truth is spoken in a negative way in the form of a denial, or of a confession made under strange circumstances. And so it is perhaps natural that now, when Americans stand aghast at the progress of Communist tyranny in a world they fought to free, an important truth has been told them in the form of a confession made by a muddleheaded man with his back against the mountainous wall of his own mistakes. That man is former Vice President Henry Agard Wallace. The strange circumstance was his urgent need, on October 5, 1951, to answer a charge made before the Senate Internal Security Committee that seven years ago he gave President Roosevelt advice on China that followed the Communist Party line"); What's Happening to Our Magazine Fiction? by Frances Beck; Laurels for Borrowers by Edward Dahlberg (on writers who publish books and essays on Herman Melville). Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Concord, New Hampshire, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 7, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 16) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Concord, New Hampshire. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-3/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Editorial - The Risk of No-Policy in Asia; Reclamation - For What? by Oliver Carlson (on the Bureau of Reclamation); Justice [William O.] Douglas's "Imperium" by Edward Jerome; UNRRA [United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration] in Yugoslavia by Leigh White; Ethics by Ear by C.P. Ives (which begins, "A man who reads the papers these days is struck by the evidence of very deep confusion among very brilliant alumni of very good universities"); half-page letter from Henry A. Wallace; Movie on a Myth by Burton Rascoe (on Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.). Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the August 13, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 23) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/8" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Africa and Our Security by Bonner Fellers; Clergymen and Socialism by Stewart M. Robinson; Man of the Half Century (Part 1) by Julien Steinberg (which begins, "Since January 1950 there has been much playful and earnest speculation on the figure most worthy of being named the 'man of the half century'"); It Started With Plato by S. Harcourt-Rivington ("Many people believe that this issue [government as "captain" or "referee"] arose with the advent of socialism a century or so ago and was given its impetus and virulence by the communist class-war dogma of Karl Marx. That is not so. The controversy is almost as old as civilization"); Our Avant Garde Illiterates by Edward Dahlberg. Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the July 30, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 22) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: What Really Happened in Pasadena? by Oliver Carlson ("The following report was already in the 'Freeman' office when the National Education Association, at its annual convention, cited the ousting of Pasadena's Superintendent of Schools as a horrible example of a campaign to destroy America's public schools. The charge, climaxing a nation-wide campaign against the citizens of Pasadena, gives Mr. Carlson's article a special timely interest"); We're Stronger Than We Know by Joseph Zak (which begins, "The third world war is now on; it has begun in Asia. Stalin has a temporary advantage over us. Our appeasement of the last fifteen years has contributed substantially to the building of his empire"); The Malady of Progressivism by Wilhelm Roepke; 1-1/4-page The Poems of Ridgley Torrence by Padraic Colum; "Design for War" by Frederic R. Sanborn reviewed by Frank Chodorov. Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Concord, New Hampshire, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the June 18, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 19) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Concord, New Hampshire. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-3/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: These Hated Americans by Garet Garrett (which begins, "The winds that blow our billions away return burdened with themes of scorn and dispraise"); More Medicine for Less by Oliver Carlson (on socialized medicine); EPU - or Honest Money? by Walter Sulzbach (on the European Payments Union); Stalin, Master Linguist by Roman Smal-Stocki; two-page book review of "Policy for the West" by Barbara Ward, reviewed by Eugene Lyons (headlined "Barbara Ward's Blindness"). Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Forrest Davis, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1952

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 22, 1952 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 26) edited by John Chamberlain, Forrest Davis, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 36 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Lessons of the Steel Strike: The Economics of Freedom by Leo Wolman ("How government policies precipitated the recent steel strike - disastrous to the nation both materially and morally - is analyzed, step by step, by a noted Columbia University economist"); Against Labor Blackmail by Towner Phelan ("To prevent labor dictatorship from paralyzing our economy and destroying individual liberty, Mr. Phelan suggests eight essential measures"); Motherhood Goes International by Don Knowlton ("Working mothers everywhere must be taken under government's protective wing, the recent ILO [International Labor Organization] Conference resolved. An American delegate wonders why our government representatives voted for this and other socialist programs"); Is Inflation Necessary? by Henry Hazlitt ("A reply to the contention of Professor [Sumner H.] Slichter and other writers who now advocate a 'planned' rise in prices as the only way to get 'full employment'"); "The Diary of a Young Girl" by Anne Frank reviewed. In worn covers; former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Concord, New Hampshire, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the June 4, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 18) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Concord, New Hampshire. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/2" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: Editorial - Appeasement Means War (which begins, "The chief rebuttal of the Administration, endlessly repeated, is that the policy General [Douglas] MacArthur has recommended in Korea will bring Russia into the war against our forces and precipitate World War III. Any detached analysis suggests exactly the opposite conclusion"); Our Teen-Age Drug Addicts by William Manchester ("Not since the Harrison [Narcotics Tax] Act was passed in 1914 have narcotics been such a national problem, and not since Napoleon fed a broth of opium to 2000 wounded Frenchmen who were hampering his army at the siege of Acre have so many innocent people been hooked to dope"); British Socialism is Dead by F. A. Voigt; How Not to Fight Russia by Asher Brynes. Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 10, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 25) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/8" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: The Midas Touch in Reverse by John Heffernan ("A British economic writer explains - with figures - why socialism has become 'the right to exploit at a loss monopolies which were previously profitable'"); The Heritage of UNRRA [United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration] by Hubert Martin (a critique of the agency); Formosa, Last Hope of Asia by Geraldine Fitch; Artists on All Fours by Ernst F. Curtz (which begins, "The desperate search for originality at all costs has evolved, among other monstrosities, a movement which has permeated all art forms and in not a few instances has combined with the scientific delusion - for very good reasons. I am speaking of the 'return to nature' - not by any means the nature of Breughel or even of Manet, but the shapeless, formless and chaotic nature of the primitives"); near-one-half-page book review of "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger (who writes, "So if 'The Catcher in the Rye' turns out to be a classic too, fifty or sixty years from now, it will be odd, perhaps, but not altogether surprising"). Former owner's name to front cover; chipping along outer fold; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins and front cover in pencil.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1952

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the January 28, 1952 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 2 No. 9) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. A magazine measuring 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" and containing 32 pages including front and rear covers. Containing articles, editorials, and book reviews. Highlights include: UN [United Nations]: Blueprint for Tyranny by John W. Bricker ("A majority of UN members, says Senator Bricker, 'subordinate the individual to the power of the state'"); The World of Sumner Welles by Forrest Davis; Presidents and the Press by A.R. Pinci ("The issue of veracity between President and journalist is nothing new"). Former owner's name to front cover; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins and front cover in pencil.

  • Chamberlain, John and Others (Editors):

    Published by Time-Fortune Corp., 1936

    Seller: Sperry Books, Rollinsford, NH, U.S.A.

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    £ 25.60

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    Paperback. Condition: Fair. Time-Fortune Corp. 1936 paperback, rubbed wrapper, chipped ends on cocked spine, faint moisture stain top fore-corner, tight binding, clean unmarked text Prompt reliable service mailed next business day.

  • John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette (Editors)

    Published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc., Orange, Connecticut, 1951

    Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.

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    Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Offered is the July 16, 1951 issue of "The Freeman" (Vol. 1 No. 21) edited by John Chamberlain, Henry Hazlitt, and Suzanne La Follette and published by The Freeman Magazine, Inc. out of Orange, Connecticut. Issued in Two Sections, separately published - each section measures 8-1/4" by 11-1/4" - Section 1 contains 32 pages (with articles, editorials, and book reviews); Section 2 contains 8 pages and is devoted to the lengthy article "Free Men vs. the Union Closed Shop" by Donald R. Richberg (the subtopics are: The Union Argument; Socialism and Fascism; "Security" for Whom?; Purpose and Value of Unions; What Is Democracy?; Union-Employer Monopolies; Warning Voices; and Conclusion). Highlights from Section 1 (the main issue) include: The Help Chiang [Kai-shek] Did Not Get by Lucian B. Moody; A Field For Americanization by Blake Clarke ("It is becoming a commonplace that the future of Western civilization will be decided in Asia, among whose peoples the Communists conduct unremitting psychological warfare against the United States"); Biddle Defeats Biddle by Burton Rascoe (which begins, "Francis Biddle, former Attorney General, is the first man in history, as far as I have been able to discover, who has ever carried on an agitation to have the United States Supreme Court declare him to have been not only frequently and flagrantly guilty of illegal acts and criminal malfeasance in office but also of 'arbitrary and capricious' statements of a libelous, slanderous and defamatory nature"); Planned Economy - A Case History by Towner Phelan (on the Central Arizona Irrigation Project); The Higgledy-Piggledy Nature of Bertrand Russell by Hugh Stevenson Tigner. Former owner's name to front covers; periodic light underlining to text and check marks to margins in pencil.

  • Cantwell, Robert and John Chamberlain, (Editors)

    Published by Time, Inc, New York, 1937

    Seller: Mullen Books, ABAA, Marietta, PA, U.S.A.

    Association Member: ABAA ILAB

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    £ 22.95

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    Softcover. Grey illustrated wraps; 232 pp. with illustrations and ads throughout; Articles include The Southern Pacific Co., The Industrial War, Dallas in Wonderland, Minneapolis-Honeywell, Painting Restoration, Paper II: Fifteen Companies / Moholy-Nagy Composition, Heart Disease and regular columns. Good but with a 3/4-inch piece missing from top of spine and light wear to covers; pp. 37 - 38 torn out;