Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
I don't recall you letting us know you had these paper editions before, JjKk40, so first and foremost, congratulations are in order - having the real thing as a collectible is awesome. 
But I will quickly add my obligatory plea that you please scan or make No. 134 (1934), No. 136 (1936), and No. C-1 available to Mark Stansbury for scanning into IA/ITCL. No. 33 (1933) and No. 138 (1938) are both available, but it's a pretty long leap in between, which you can fill quite nicely.
Perhaps even more significantly, as I told you on my Lugzsonian thread, the only postwar catalog I am aware of in the public domain prior to the M-1 (1951) is No. 46-J (1946), and it's very thin and abbreviated. It has the feel of them hastily recovering their commercial operations from wartime. So a PDF of your reportedly 1947-dated C-1 would be very welcome. That 1946 to 1951 leap is also a big one we do a lot of derived guessing about.
As for the numbering scheme, I'll repeat what I told you on my Lugzsonian thread. I don't know why Bonney added the numeral "1" to some catalogs in the mid to late 1930's (apparently 1934 through 1939), but 1933 was No. 33 (note no "1" prefix) and all numbered catalogs prior to that used a two-digit convention, and they moved away from it back to a two-digit format at least as early as 1941 (No. 41).
But I will quickly add my obligatory plea that you please scan or make No. 134 (1934), No. 136 (1936), and No. C-1 available to Mark Stansbury for scanning into IA/ITCL. No. 33 (1933) and No. 138 (1938) are both available, but it's a pretty long leap in between, which you can fill quite nicely.
Perhaps even more significantly, as I told you on my Lugzsonian thread, the only postwar catalog I am aware of in the public domain prior to the M-1 (1951) is No. 46-J (1946), and it's very thin and abbreviated. It has the feel of them hastily recovering their commercial operations from wartime. So a PDF of your reportedly 1947-dated C-1 would be very welcome. That 1946 to 1951 leap is also a big one we do a lot of derived guessing about.
As for the numbering scheme, I'll repeat what I told you on my Lugzsonian thread. I don't know why Bonney added the numeral "1" to some catalogs in the mid to late 1930's (apparently 1934 through 1939), but 1933 was No. 33 (note no "1" prefix) and all numbered catalogs prior to that used a two-digit convention, and they moved away from it back to a two-digit format at least as early as 1941 (No. 41).





















