Null Marklin interest: A Marklin 81562 mini club z gauge starter Gift Set contai…
Description

Marklin interest: A Marklin 81562 mini club z gauge starter Gift Set containing 2-6-0 DB black 74 Class Tank Loco No.74 701, open wagon and private refrigerator van, oval of track, controller and an adapted plug (not transformer) together with 2 x 8700 passenger cars, a 8817 railbus trailer class 998, a 8831 railbus DB 798 and accessories to include: 3 x mini-club boxed items, 8569R, 82378 and 8831 together with a quantity of track (11 x 8500, 7 x 8520, 7x 8521, 1 x 8562, 1 x 8563, 2 x 8591) a transformer, a bridge etc.

1229 

Marklin interest: A Marklin 81562 mini club z gauge starter Gift Set containing 2-6-0 DB black 74 Class Tank Loco No.74 701, open wagon and private refrigerator van, oval of track, controller and an adapted plug (not transformer) together with 2 x 8700 passenger cars, a 8817 railbus trailer class 998, a 8831 railbus DB 798 and accessories to include: 3 x mini-club boxed items, 8569R, 82378 and 8831 together with a quantity of track (11 x 8500, 7 x 8520, 7x 8521, 1 x 8562, 1 x 8563, 2 x 8591) a transformer, a bridge etc.

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Winner's medal issued to British sprinter Guy Butler at the Antwerp 1920 Olympics. Silver, 60 mm, 87 gm, by Josue Dupon. The front shows a victorious athlete holding a laurel wreath and palm branch, with a statue of Renommee in the background, inscribed "VII Olympiade"; the reverse depicts the Brabo fountain above the Antwerp shield, with the Cathedral of Our Lady and city looming in the background, inscribed above, "Anvers MCMXX." Bottom edge is stamped “A” for Argent and is engraved with the name of the event, the recipient, and his placing: “400 Meters, G. M. B. Butler, 2nd.” Accompanied by two sterling silver winner’s shield plaquettes issued to Butler at a Cambridge University Athletic Club track-and-field event at Trinity College in 1919, which identify Butler as the winner of the “¼ Race” and the “100 Yds Race.” Sprinter Guy Butler (1899-1981) remains one of the most awarded runners in the long history of British Olympians. Butler’s four Olympic medals — a gold in the 4 x 400 at Antwerp, this offered silver in the 400-meter, and two bronzes in the same events in Paris four years later — tie him with athletes Sebastian Coe, Christine Ohuruogu, and Mo Farah for the most athletic medals in British Olympic history. A total of 29 nations attended the VII Olympiad in Antwerp, Belgium, with Hungary, Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire all banned from competing due to their involvement in World War I and the cancelation of the 1916 Games. Despite such political unrest, the return of the Games debuted a trinity of enduring Olympic traditions—the voicing of the Olympic Oath, the symbolic release of doves, and the initial flying of the Olympic flag. An exceptional first place medal of the utmost historical interest and rarity.

Set of 10 studies on Balzac: Barbéris, Balzac, a realistic mythology. 1971. P Louis, Les types sociaux chez Balzac et Zola. 1925. Abraham, Créatures chez Balzac. 1931. Clouard, Balzac, pages sociales et politiques. 1910. Flat, Seconds essais sur Balzac. 1894. Lemer, Balzac sa vie son oeuvre. 1892. Fleichsmann, Napoléon par Balzac. Sd. Honoré de Balzac, Morceaux choisis, introduction et notres de Joachim Merlant, 1927. Lukacs, Balzac and French Realism. 1967. Bellessort, Balzac et son oeuvre. 1936. Good lot, most volumes bound. Lot of 4 studies on Balzac: Wurmser, La comédie inhumaine. 1970. Fine mailing from the author. Important and interesting work. Dictionary of Balzac. 1969. Delattrre, Les opinions littéraires de Balzac. 1961. Citron, Dans Balzac. 1986. Set of 6 studies on Balzac: Le dictionnaire Rastignac. Paris, Valmonde, 1998. Faillie, La femme et le code civil dans la Comédie humaine d'Honoré de Balzac. Photocopied copy bound in half binding with corners (imitation leather). Colloque de Cerisy, Balzac l'invention du Roman. Paris, Belfond, 1982. F Marceau, Balzac et son Monde. Paris, NRF Gallimard, 1970. Saint Paulien, Napoléon Balzac et l'Empire de la Comédie humaine. Paris, Albin Michel, 1979. Gagneux, Le musée imaginaire de Balzac. Paris, Beaux-Arts éditions, 2012. Publisher's boards. Lot of 12 studies on Balzac: Bertault, Balzac l'homme et l'oeuvre. Paris, Boivin, 1946. Envoi au vicaire général Pierre Gounin. Alert de Bersaucourt, Etudes et recherches. Paris, Mercure de France, 1913. Half-chagrin with corners. Guichardet, Le père Goriot by Honoré de Balzac. Folio. Verdoot, Ce sacré Balzac ou une histoire d'amour. Paris, Panthéon, 1999. P-L Rey, La comédie humaine - Balzac. Paris, Hatier, 1979. Lovenjoul, Autour de Honoré de Balzac. Slatkine, 1973. Proust, Le Balzac de monsieur de Guermantes. Ides et Calendes, 1950. Francesco Fiorentino, Introduzione a Balzac. Laterza, 1989. Roland Barthes, S/Z. Éditions du Seuil, 1970. Frederick Wedmore, Balzac. London, Walter Scott, 1890. Bertaut, Balzac's Le père Goriot. Sfelt, 1947. Henry James, Tre saggi su Balzac. Il melangolo, 1988. Honoré de Balzac - A Paris. Editions complexe, 1993. Set of 8 studies on Balzac: Aurée d'Esneval, Balzac et la provinciale à Paris. Nouvelles éditions latines, 1976. Le Breton, Balzac. Boivin & Cie, sd. A-M Baron, Balzac ou l'auguste mensonge. Nathan, 1998. Bertault, Balzac et la religion. Slatkine, 1980. Colloque Balzac - Europe. January-February 1965. Traces of readings (underlining in bic and stabilo). Guyon, La pensée politique et sociale de Balzac. A. Colin, 1947. Guyon, La Création littéraire chez Balzac. A. Colin, 1951. Berthier, La vie quotidienne dans la Comédie humaine de Balzac. Hachette, 1998.

Group of certificates, documents and paper ephemera from the estate of Arthur and Miryam Meyerstein, amongst the founders of early Eretz Israel aviation and gliding. The items in this lot include a German Gliding Certificate dated 1932, German paper ephemera (1930s), an Eretz Israel Immigrant Certificate (1935), British Mandate passport (1944), Turkish passport and ID Card belonging to Miryam, a double Israeli passport with many visa and other ink stamps, an Israeli Laissez Passer passport, a Haifa Police Special Constable certificate (1941), a pass allowing entry into British Mandate Army bases (1942), a British Mandate Authorities Employee ID Card (1944), an entry pass to all Israel Air Force bases (Oct 1948), and other interesting documents (‘Israeli Fishing Permit’), early Eretz Israel public transportation tickets and more. 1930s through early 1950s. Generally very good condition. (See also lot 480 in this auction.) Arthur Meyerstein (1908-1964) was one of the founders of Eretz Israel aviation and one of the first flight instructors in pre-state Israel. His wife Miryam (1912-2005) was one of the first two women glider pilots in Eretz Israel. Arthur was born in Breslau, Germany, where he learnt to pilot glider airplanes and became a senior instructor. He made Aliyah in 1935 and immediately initiated activities on behalf of the local aviation industry, including founding the Haifa branch of the Eretz Israel Aviation Club. There he met Miryam, who had made Aliyah from Turkey in 1929. Arthur and Miryam were active as glider pilots and instructors, in parallel to being members of the pre-state paramilitary Haganah organization. In early 1948 Arthur designed and constructed the airstrips in Nahariya and Metzuba in northern Israel. After the founding of the state he served in various engineering roles related to the founding of the IAF and its airstrips.