Want this question answered?
L F Nonnast TablesYou man find some for sale on eBay.
A response received from the Chicago Historical Society: "Thank you for contacting the Chicago Historical Society. We own no promotional literature from the Louis F. Nonnast Company, however, we did find some city directory listings. Louis Nonnast appears as early as 1902 (we did not search earlier), identified as a table manufacturer; decades later, in 1923, Louis F. Nonnast Sons Inc is listed at 936-1025 N. Halsted, manufacturers of dining room tables and special cafe tables. The company is also listed in the 1928 directory, the last year we checked. The Illinois Statewide Death Index indicates that Louis F. Nonnast died on May 17, 1930, however, we were unable to find a death notice/obituary in the Chicago Tribune."
We can find a table of the value of ionic compounds in periodic table
determination of log table value
A table you make to find the coordinates to graph.
One can find table top exhibits on Skyline. Skyline is a company that specializes in selling table top displays. The company offers value and portability.
We have a similar "Watertown Slide" table, made by the Louis F. Nonnast Company of Chicago, IL. It is a round table, and the stamping on the underside indicates that it would expand to 10 feet 1/2 inch, with all the leaves in place. That's one big table! It has four "ball & claw" feet, two each of which spread with the center column, as the table is expanded on it's "slide mechanism." It was, according to what we can find, patented in 1899 in Chicago by Mr. Nonnast,. himself. He has always been recognized as a very high-quality Victorian Era furniture manufacturer in the Chicago market, but shipped his goods on both national and international markets. We have been contacted by an Illinois Auction company, (I wish I would have kept their name), who offered to send one of their trucks if we would consign this table to one of their auctions. FYI, they valued it, at auction, (in the early '90s), at "possibly in excess of $5000," for whatever that is worth. All this, even though our table has only one leaf left. There's usually a story behind most antiquities, . . . Apparently, during the 1930s Great Depression Era, one year there was a terrible blizzard, and the woodpile had been either depleted, or was somehow inaccessible, so the family burned several of the leaves for this table in either the fireplace or the stove, in order to stay warm. That's the hand-me-down story on the missing leaves from our family's table, which will remain in our family for generations to come. FYI, for the past seven years, I have had a daily search on two auction sites, (eBay and Boocoo), and have never had a hit. This is apparently, not only a very high-quality table, but one that is extremely RARE.
You can use HLOOKUP.
Pick any two points in the table. The slope of the line is(change in the y-value from one point to the other)/(change in the x-value from the same point to the other)
The function table will have two columns, one for the x-value and one for the y-value. Form ordered pairs (x,y) by inserting the values from one row of the table.
If you have a vanity table dated April 18, 1923 made by NMP CO and are trying to find value and have picture, you should first look on antique auction sites. You may be able to find the antique vintage table on some auction websites and compare the tables with yours.
There must be at least one common field in the tables that are related. In simple terms you find a value in that field in one table and then find the corresponding value for that field in another. At least one of them will be unique, like in a one to many relationship. One the one table, that value can appear only once in the table. On the many table it can appear more than once. In a one to one relationship, each can only appear once in each table in the relationship. In a many to many relationship, an intermediate table is set up and two other tables are joined to it.