I asked about them...it is no secret I am a proud freemason.
I did see that, was just trying to get a laugh.
Mike
I asked about them...it is no secret I am a proud freemason.
NJ is definitely a Mid-Atlantic state, while Penn is part of the rust belt, Pennsytucky notwithstanding.I agree that NJ is not part of New England, and neither is PA, though there was a portion of PA claimed by Connecticut, leading to the Yankee-Pennamite War.
I got a nice small haul over the weekend. I was shocked to see the Craftsman Spinner when I opened a tool box under the work bench.
Also 8 shells left in the tattered box and a cool can of spray paint. I was in for $50 but knew the spinner was a descent one. The Tormek
I never heard of and took a chance as they are NOS and will see what grinder these parts are for.
Thanks for the lead! I haven't researched it yet. Busy with other things.Lugz - the St Clair do-dad is indeed a household item: a milk cap lifter. I have one somewhere. I do not recall using one, even in childhood, which makes me think it may precede the waxed cardboard daisy lid with the heavier cardboard disc centers. Or maybe that is what it’s for and we were just too uncivilized to use one.




Same. Ours - called Hahn's, was a little farther away. Our bottles were delivered to our front porch, like the big tins of pretzels, chips, and A-Treat. No tool required for the tops.There was a local dairy farm 1/8mile from my childhood home, and we got milk in returnable glass half-gallons there.
I've been through it several times. Had a girlfriend in Shamokin. (Remember, I was born and raised in Carbon County.)St Clair (Schuylkill County) is in the anthracite coal region of PA
There really isn't any debate about it, but I didn't mean for my post to 'call out' OR about his designation. I was only kidding. In my experience, it's actually fairly common for many people from other parts of the country to use "New England" as a synonym for "Northeast", an even more unwieldy term that encompasses both New England and the Mid-Atlantic States. The concept of regions is itself untidy. Technically, New York and Pennsylvania are also Great Lakes states, for example, by dint of their sheer size and westward shorelines, and, while the Mid-Atlantic States have a lot in common, that old Mason-Dixon Line still cuts a bit of separation through our collective history and psyche. On the other hand, Cape May, NJ is further south than Maysville, Kentucky.I agree that NJ is not part of New England, and neither is PA,
Maybe it's just me, my computer, browser etc, LS, but all I am seeing is the little doc symbol thingie and the filename (USD43278.pdf).Note the Newark origin of this one!
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...I am suddenly hankering for a bowl of cereal.![]()
No way there is a debate on Raisin Bran vs Fruity Pebbles.... Fruity Pebbles wins every timeHey, you acquired it at a sale, it's a tool, so I'm not seeing drift.
The tangent I was referring to was a debate over Fruity Pebbles vs. Raisin Bran...
Mike
Congratulations to bobcat and baby bobcat!Just wanted to let everyone know that baby Wyatt and mom are home safe from the hospital! As for picking not much to report on here but I did order something brand new which I started a thread in free parking for.
Congratulations to bobcat and baby bobcat!

Contest addendum: Without looking it up, (and if you already have, shut up) What does BOAC stand for and what happened to them?
I'd love to live near a place that threw out as much good stuff as your employer! I'd be checking their dumpster every day! You **** on multiple planes!Grabbed a few items being thrown out at work today.
Ideal electrical fish tape
Milwaukee drywall screw gun
Dewalt 1/2” drill with a broken forward/reverse lever
Partial spool of weld wire I plan to use to hang parts when painting
2 4’ pressure treated 4x4’s I need for a project.
Lastly, a 30” magnetic roller sweep.
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Another You **** for Marty for all the free stuff he got with his CM Spinner!I got a nice small haul over the weekend. I was shocked to see the Craftsman Spinner when I opened a tool box under the work bench.
Sheesh! Touchy. Easy to understand how you "Mid Atlantic" boys came up with the Gadsden Flag!I agree that NJ is not part of New England,
Congratulations to Mrs. Bobcat on the safe delivery--and for the minor part you played in the enterprise!Just wanted to let everyone know that baby Wyatt and mom are home safe from the hospital! As for picking not much to report on here but I did order something brand new which I started a thread in free parking for.
Snerk. I've been waiting for the responses to get more light-hearted, so I can make my joke...--and for the minor part you played in the enterprise!
Peck, Stow, and Wilcox (PEXTO)P.S & W 240 linesman pliers, (not a brand I have seen before),
That looks like an H in a diamond Herbrand logo. Very early.DOE wrench with screwdriver blade off the end, (marked K-99 and an unrecognizable symbol inside a diamond),
I'd like to see additional photos either here or on the Wakefield thread down on the vintage board. See A-Z Index in the Sticky at the top of that forum.Wakefield hex ratchet #24,
WWII. No serifs on the letters. They were part of many kits, most prominently Corps of Engineers, but they were also on many vehicles in a special rack with a shovel and axe. If you clean it up you may find a logo on the blade. Verona Tool Works, Charles E. Hall, etc.pix/mattock/trench tool stamped 'US' on the handle and head.
According to several sites, they were cardboard or paperboard as late as the mid-to-late 1950s here in the US, when they were deemed unhygienic.When did they have a paper cap? I thought they were metal.
Not in my house. I am not sure I have ever tried Pebbles of any sort. Nor Frankenberries nor Boo Berries. I ate a good deal of Froot Loops in the mid 1980s. And Capn Crunch. Mostly Saturday and Sunday morning hangover paliatives, till I could drag myself down to Pizza Hut brunch to rebalance my electrolites.No way there is a debate on Raisin Bran vs Fruity Pebbles.... Fruity Pebbles wins every time
Happy to help. Nice diverse haul.Thanks for the quick reply and all the details.
I think we're all talking about two different things. The caps on our glass milk bottles in the 60s were indeed paper with foil to wrap around the lip. Or mine were foil, anyway. Then metal and foil. No tool required. What I was referring to were bottles with a recessed lid or cap inside. Those were stiff cardboard or paperboard and you could not get them off without a special tool, or a fork or a knife etc, to pry them out. If you visit the Lugzsonian thread I posted more photos and trade mag ads for other kinds of openers, and most of them show the bottles and describe the recessed cardboard cap.
How did you seal it back up?Yes growing up in TX Borden milk had paper caps.