Warsaw 1929, "Ilustrowany Kurier Codzienny". 31x46 cm, each issue with approx. 12 pages, numerous black and white photographs and illustrations in the text, several color reproductions by Alfred Żmuda, half cloth bookbinding. Good condition (numbers 7 and 33 missing, one page missing in Nos. 12 and 16, first page of No. 13 missing, isolated minor tears and small edgewear).
Contents include: Explosives as tools of crime. Pelplin - a Pomeranian village the capital of the bishops of Chelmno. Molodechno. On the 750th anniversary of the royal city of Skarszew. Primitive (ancient) hunting in Poland. Wieleń near Notecja. Secrets of the magic arts. Jan Zamoyski, hetman and chancellor of the V.K.. Magical caves in Podolia. Goluchow. Radziwill family. Tarnopol - the borderland bastion of Polishness. In the snows of the Tatra Mountains. Cheese-making. About mountain tourism in Poland. Wonders of modern illuminated advertising: neon signs. Folk fishing. Folk Easter games in Central and Eastern Little Poland. Napoleon Bonaparte. On the 10th anniversary of the liberation of Vilnius. Folk instruments. Silesia's eternal ties with Poland. Tatra Museum in Zakopane. Spring season in Truskavets. Kashubian paintings on glass. Tasks of Polish scouting. Gypsies in the Polish lands. The ancient city of Czeladz against the background of the area. The summer season in Druskininkai. General education in Spisz and Orava. About Vilnius and Vilnius region a century ago. Chodzież, the future summer resort of Greater Poland. Jan Karol Chodkiewicz hetman v. litewski. In the decade of the first Upper Silesian uprising. Silhouettes and profiles: Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz. Vistula - queen of Polish rivers from its sources to Plock. Resin and ways of obtaining it. Seals of Polish kings. The 350th anniversary of the Stefan Batory University. The Mazurian Museum in Działdów. Food industry: sugar industry. Wandering through the churches of Vilnius. Milling and brewing. Krasinski family. Library named after Józef Szujski in Nowy Sącz. About old Polish porcelain. Jews and Jewish types outside Poland.