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From a small town thrift. A USA made bandana, a coffee mug and an awesome belt buckle.
That buckle is sweet!!
Are you a coffee hound? I know I am! [emoji14]
you scored big time with that plate topper!!!
That's super cool!^^^^
My personal favorite would be the Western Flyer X-53 bicycle which was my very
first bike as a kid.
It’s old & has been repainted, but it’s all there. Just need some dusting & it’s
good to go.
I found it in the same location where I lived as a kid.
Not too many of these models around anymore.
I’d like to think it’s the same bike that I got for Christmas in 1955.
I didn't post this before now, because I spent two weeks restoring it. But this is a mid-1800s solid brass nautical telecope I got for my birthday:
It is 11in. closed, and extends to 39in. long. It weighs about a pound and a half (approx 750g), and has solid brass construction, with a mahogany sleeve over the barrel. It's a four-draw telescope with four lenses and a two-piece achromatic objective lens.
It took several days of cleaning, lubrication, cleaning, lubrication, more cleaning, more lubrication, yet more cleaning and still yet more lubrication to clean out ALL THE GUNK (150 years' worth!) inside the telescope so that it would open and close properly. I also wrapped tape around some of the threads to improve grip and friction, and cleaned the lenses as best as I could.
It now works really well!
Here it is, with my three-draw pocket telescope, from around 1890-1905-era:
The small 'scope is 6in. closed, and 16in. opened. The same basic construction is seen in both telescopes. It was a style of construction that existed for CENTURIES (which can make these things hard to date...)
What made this book exciting was the fact that it was signed by Popski himself and given to George Lee. Lee was a Canadian Lieutenant who commanded 'R Patrol' of Popski's Private Army from mid-1944 to May 1945. When I got it home I found that Lee had taped in the funeral program for Peniakoff's funeral from 1951. In addition I found an original photograph of a group of 42 PPA troops in the back of the book, as well as clippings about Peniakoff's death and an interesting receipt from Fortnum and Masons for 6 pairs of boots dated October 1943.