LOT #19070. Bubble from the spirits " Odessa ". Manufacturer: Artel / Cooperative, 1960s. Plastic. Size: 40 x 55 x 12 mm. Condition: Very good.
! There is rubbing from the back side.
LOT #19071. A pack of cigarettes (cigarettes), " Amateur " A pack of cigarettes (cigarettes), "Salve" Odessa Tobacco Factory. A beautifully preserved, packaging, beginning of the 50-ies. The size: - õ - cm., diagon. - cm. Condition: Very Good.
P.S. Cigarettes - tobacco products is made from yellow fermented tobacco (see Tobacco.). Cigarettes in the 50s consisted of a sleeve, part of which is not occupied by the mouthpiece, called a trigger. The latter was filled with chopped fibers to a mixture of aromatic and skeletal.
LOT #19072. Student tickets of the Odessa Medical University 1937 - 1944. Including the period of occupation of Odessa. An excellent piece of the history of the city.
! Of special interest is a student card issued by the occupation authorities of Romania (the territory of Transnistria).
Cover as a gift.
P.S. The Transnistria Governorate (Romanian: Guvernământul Transnistriei) was a Romanian-administered territory, conquered by the Axis Powers from the Soviet Union during Operation Barbarossa and occupied from 19 August 1941 to 29 January 1944. Limited in the west by the Dniester river (separating it from Bessarabia), in the east by the Southern Bug river (separating it from the German Reichskommissariat Ukraine), and in the south by the Black Sea, it comprised the present-day region of Transnistria (which compared to the World War II whole is only a small strip along the bank of the Dniester) and territories further east (modern Odessa Oblast eastward of the Dniester and southern Vinnytsia Oblast), including the Black Sea port of Odessa, which became the administrative capital of Transnistria during World War II.
In World War II, Romania, persuaded and aided by Nazi Germany, took control of Transnistria for the first time in history. In August 1941, Adolf Hitler persuaded Ion Antonescu to take control of the territory as a substitute for Northern Transylvania, occupied by Miklós Horthy's Hungary following the Second Vienna Award. Despite the Romanian administration, the Romanian state did not formally incorporate Transnistria into its administrative framework; the Nazi-friendly Antonescu government hoped to annex the territory eventually, but developments on the Eastern Front precluded it.
LOT #19073. A gift set of watches and a handle "Odessa - 200" This set was released for the anniversary of the city and was presented to the participants of the celebrations dedicated to this date. Box Made of wood. Size: x - x - x cm. Condition: New.
LOT #19077. Cliche (stamp), Odessa humor. The original cliche for the manufacture of souvenir-gift orders to Odessa humor. In the additional photo(for example), you can see the original order, which was made in two colors. In this lot, only cliche is included! Condition: Aluminum. Excellent. Size: 85 õ 1,5 x 110 mm.
LOT #19074. Perfectly preserved, a full set of souvenir colored postcards "Odessa" ed. "The Truth" 1959 y. Size: 14.5 x 10.5 mm. There are 28 postcards in the set.
LOT # 19076. An excellently preserved, full photo album of postcards "Odessa" ed. "Ukrphoto" in 1957. There are 20 postcards in the set. Size: 15.5 x 10 cm. Circulation - .
! There are several yellow dots from the glue (the manufacturer's marriage).
LOT #19078.The emblem of the hero-city of Odessa, 1968. Descriptions of the coat of arms of the hero-city of Odessa, 1968 and two specials. blanking 1969 Heavy paper. Size: A4 / A3. Condition: Very good, but there is minimal tear (shown in the photo in yellow). Circulation: 10,000
Rare preserved specimen!
LOT #19079.The magazine "Crocodile number 35" Odessa, 1911. Officially, the magazine Crocodile (considered) has been published since 1922, but it starts the issue in Odessa, where from 1911-1912. only 63 numbers were released, which represent an extreme rarity. Condition: satisfactory. ! 4 sheets are missing. Circulation: -
- The first "Crocodile" still comes from Odessa
In the years 1911-1912, the editorial office of the satirical magazine “Crocodile” was located on Gavannaya Street 13, which was created by the “Odessa News” feuilletonist B. Fleet and cartoonist F. Segal.
The Crocodile was read in Warsaw and Kremenchug, Tambov and Rostov, and the metropolitan magazines happened to pirate and “borrow” materials from it ...
Crocodile fought bribe-takers, anti-Semitism, etc. It was a democratic publication. After releasing 63 issues, the editors of Crocodile ceased to exist in 1912, and co-authors B. Flit and F. Segal after the February Revolution worked together in the “Journal of Revolutionary Satire” Bomb, moreover, F. Segal, in memory of the closed journal, took a pseudonym "F.Krokodilov".
And only then the Crocodile Magazine reappeared in 1922, first as an appendix to Rabochaya Gazeta, and was issued simultaneously with a large number of other satirical journals (for example, Zanoza, Projector, etc.). The symbol of the publication was the figure: a red crocodile with a fork -