Three bay walked into a trap coming over to my place. I’m preparing to set up at a tractor show in a few weeks and did a quick set up to see how much table space I needed.
I was impressed by Three bays restraint looking over everything. That is until I set out the three sets he posted up.
So I don’t have anything to show for the first day, but I did enable!!!!
It was good to see you today.





I already knew I was going to buy it as soon as I saw it, but his sales pitch assured me that I could "easily just cut the lock off with bolt cutters."
(He obviously never looked at the back of the lock, or, if he did, he didn't know what the logo was and didn't bother researching. I didn't tell him that the lock was worth more than the trunk many times over.)


Would that be Tacony Palmyra?I decided to do some picking today after all. I don't know whether to fold this up into a tri-corner metaphorical casket flag or use it down in the Lugzsonian as a dust curtain, but my first "find" of 2020 is the last thing I will ever take away from one of my three sources, which just closed forever.
Nope. Lakewood.Would that be Tacony Palmyra?
Wow. Some kind of Quartermaster Corps safe. I wonder what they kept in there? Payroll maybe. Nice. And quite a bit more secure than the Yale & Towne padlock on my Ordnance Dept Grindstone chest.That's funny Lugz, I took these photos yesterday at the flea because I thought of both you and Jeff Moss. Seller wanted 200 and said it was valued at 5.




Nice find. I like the hand-forged no-two-wrenches-alike look on early Cornwell. We have a good Cornwell thread down on the GJ Vintage Discussion forum with many fine examples and good dialogue. Click on the Sticky at the top of the Vintage Discussion forum. Scroll down through the Index until you come to 'Cornwell' and click on that link.a Cornwell-A box wrench.
Thanks, Tex.
I've been doing a little light reading. Apparently that series of Yale & Towne lock was used by others as well (US Forestry Service, for example), so the blanks and keyway are well known. I was going to contact Jeff, but I think I need to get a number off it to help him narrow it down first. All day I've been thinking how fortunate it was that it was locked up with the YALE logo facing out and the Ordnance Dept logo facing the trunk.
If you're interested in the history of objects, Capt. Samuel R. Kimble (the name on my trunk...) had quite an intriguing career.
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If you don't know how to read an Army Register, I will translate...
He was born in Kansas in 1882, enlisted (at the age of 35!) in the Army in 1917, which is when the US entered WWI. Between April and June he was promoted from Private to Sergeant and finally transitioned to the Coastal Artillery as an officer (2nd Lieutenant), and promoted again to 1st Lieutenant a month later. In Nov 1920 he was moved to the Ordnance Department. (The "7th Corps Area," stenciled on the trunk is an interwar designation. The army was responsible for huge geographic swaths between the wars, sort of like an early version of the Dept of Homeland Security. 7th Corps Area included Arkansas, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, ND, SD, Iowa and Nebraska, with HQ in Omaha. It's during this time that he re-purposed this trunk from a "GRINDSTONE CHEST" to a transport trunk for his personal "BOOKS.") He was promoted to Major in Aug 1930 and Lt. Colonel in July 1940. He retired in June 1942, but he was put back on Active Duty (a month later!) and served in WWII until November 1943.
The 1958 edition of the Army Register indicates that he died in 1957 at Monmouth Junction, NJ, not too far from the flea market.
I finished 2019 with a bang, and rang in the new year with a unicorn!
Today I ventured north into no-man's land, roughly half way between my home in Portland and the ravenous GJ crew in Seattle, to buy this 1 HP Craftsman Block grinder on pedestal stand.
The deal has been in the works for a week, but since I was in Texas for the holidays, I wasn't able to get it until today. Listed on FB Marketplace for $175, I offered the seller $200 if he'd hold it.
I have to say: if you have to drive between Portland and Seattle, do it on New Years day. I've never had an easier drive to, or from!
Brian
There were no interesting sales around here, but I needed to get over the winter doldrums. So, I went out to the old stand-by; Restore! And looky at what I found:
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a very early Fulton socket set, minus ratchet. I also found a Penens extension and a '50s Thorsen socket.
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Nice and clean inside. Things like this are really fueling my 20s-30s collection. After the Restore, I headed over to one of my favorite bookscouting haunts, where I picked up these lovely ladies:
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Edit: I was wrong, it isn't missing a ratchet! There is a drive plug in the T-handle.

Craigs List Estate sale this morning about 45 min from my place. Got there early and managed to talk my way into the garage. It was definitely SK Day for the Rickster this morning. I was picking tools out of this old rusty hand box and the gal said she'd charge me less if I just took the whole box...OK, sounds like a deal to me! The guys coming up the driveway were giving me the stink-eye as I was walking out with the toolbox and a canvas bag of tools.
1/2dr Deep set 1/2to 15/16 and a shallow set 7/16 to 1-1/4
3/8dr sets deep 3/8 to 13/16, shallow set 3/8 to 7/8, metric deep 10 to 19 missing a couple.
Two wrench sets SAE & Metric
3/8dr swivel socket set 3/8 to 3/4 and a mix-mosh of 1/4dr SAE sockets.
1/2dr Ratchet, Roto-head 3/8dr Ratchet, couple of speeders, breaker bars and extensions.
Two SK ball peen hammers and a couple of Vulcan body hammers.
Husky USA 3/8dr set, the ratchet is a bit sticky so it's soaking in some trans fluid.
Also a brand new in the box Buck Brothers 7" adjustable block plane.

Craigs List Estate sale this morning about 45 min from my place. Got there early and managed to talk my way into the garage. It was definitely SK Day for the Rickster this morning. I was picking tools out of this old rusty hand box and the gal said she'd charge me less if I just took the whole box...OK, sounds like a deal to me! The guys coming up the driveway were giving me the stink-eye as I was walking out with the toolbox and a canvas bag of tools.
1/2dr Deep set 1/2to 15/16 and a shallow set 7/16 to 1-1/4
3/8dr sets deep 3/8 to 13/16, shallow set 3/8 to 7/8, metric deep 10 to 19 missing a couple.
Two wrench sets SAE & Metric
3/8dr swivel socket set 3/8 to 3/4 and a mix-mosh of 1/4dr SAE sockets.
1/2dr Ratchet, Roto-head 3/8dr Ratchet, couple of speeders, breaker bars and extensions.
Two SK ball peen hammers and a couple of Vulcan body hammers.
Husky USA 3/8dr set, the ratchet is a bit sticky so it's soaking in some trans fluid.
Also a brand new in the box Buck Brothers 7" adjustable block plane.

RagTop, you seem to be claiming a very large territory! You're a mite closer to Okla. than to San Antonio where TinMedic just became my local competition.
Let the hunt begin!
Cool, you're giving me your Plomb stuff??
Haha. I already have dibs.
Looking for the following Plomb Pebbles Wrench 3061
I finished 2019 with a bang, and rang in the new year with a unicorn!
Today I ventured north into no-man's land, roughly half way between my home in Portland and the ravenous GJ crew in Seattle, to buy this 1 HP Craftsman Block grinder on pedestal stand.
The deal has been in the works for a week, but since I was in Texas for the holidays, I wasn't able to get it until today. Listed on FB Marketplace for $175, I offered the seller $200 if he'd hold it.
I have to say: if you have to drive between Portland and Seattle, do it on New Years day. I've never had an easier drive to, or from!
Brian