No, it was my bad influence friend John's older brother who led us down that path...
Anyway, I had a nice plan of attack on the days' sales, when my last-minute check of Craigslist showed me one in a small town outside my normal loop that had an interesting sale... Sadly, it started yesterday, but I was able to make the trip worthwhile:

Chassis punch, vintage casement window hold-open in original envelope, Husky single offset, and a Proto LA ignition roll with a set of Craftsman ignition wrenches! And although I seemed to have missed a bit, that made my day. $2.

Although I didn't realize it, the second stop had a lot of really good vintage books, so I picked up a first of Zorba the Greek 1952, Tolstoi's Resurrection from 1899, and a wonderful travel book about a caravan from Bombay to Constantinople that was published in 1890. I also pick up this from the tools in the back shed:

That is an original Stanley A5, one of the short-lived aluminum planes they made. A Sweetheart, all original made from '25 to 35'. $14 for everything.

I have combined the 3rd and 4th stops as they both looked better in the ad than in real life. But I did manage to find a couple of things. From the 3rd, an almost complete set of General jewelers drivers, a tin of SuperDomes in .177, and a Herbrand socket (not pictured). $2. The fourth stop yielded the Stanley #4, and while I am not exactly sure of the age as it is missing the lateral adjustment lever, it is from sometime before 1899. $5 for that old girl. The fifth stop was a waste of time, so that is all I will say about that!
Six stop wasn't there, probably due to rain, but the sixth stop, which came after a lunch break at a local brewery was only last due to being another 10 am start, which I kvetched about yesterday. So, many of the good tools that were in the pics were gone, which probably isn't too bad as everything was priced pretty high. I did manage to pick up some more paper, but they were asking used bookstore prices(!) and I ended putting some back.

Pretty self-explanatory, but the real score is the little envelope at the bottom:

An original set of vintage instructions for a Weaver scope, in the original envelope. Those three things came to $8.50, still too much for an estate sale, but sometimes that is how it goes.