I found this a few weeks ago and posted it on the Garage Sale thread, tentatively identified as some kind of dresser, though I wasn't at all positive.

It looked like an antique dresser to me, in terms of the cast iron handle and the shape of the shielding around the business end. But I had never seen one fitted with a stone wheel before, usually cutters of different shapes (regular, corrugated, stepped, diamond point, etc) for trimming, truing, and shaping an emery, carborundum, or corundum wheel. Or the tube or cartridge and diamond point type for finer dressing.
GJ member
@gamescastspencer identified it as a "
crackerjack dresser", and sure enough, that term got some hits in several vintage trade mags, including this funky two-hander from Desmond-Stephan!
I am starting to get the feeling they are kind of unusual and rare as a type. They don't show up in any of my 1930's or 40's general hardware catalogs, and they were not specified in any wartime tools manuals. But I have more digging to do.
In the meantime, does anyone recognize the initials "M&S" in the M&S Manufacturing, Hartford, Conn. branding?