Please advise what the attachment pictures are used for for this vintage tool
Assuming it is for dowels, wouldn't it turn the dowel into a half round?I'm assuming those two ridges in the cast side have a hole near the edge. You poke a dowel in and then spin the handle to shave the dowel into a tapered end. Or it is to shave a round something and use the shavings for?
just a guess
lg
no neat sig line
Assuming it is for dowels, wouldn't it turn the dowel into a half round?
I see what you're saying now. It just didn't look like the flutes where you would put the pencil are at much of an angle, if any.I have an old pencil sharpener that requires the human to rotate the pencil.
https://www.officemuseum.com/Sharpener Gallery 1900-1909/1904_Little_Shaver_OM.jpg
But, that lead (bad pun and poor spelling intended) me to a pencil sharpener museum, but I dint see a triumph.
https://www.officemuseum.com/pencil_sharpeners.htm
But look for this one, it seems promising, but They suggest German variants
U.S. Automatic Pencil Sharpener
Holy ****! lol It doesn't look very sanitaryGoogle reverse image search that image. https://www.google.com/search?q=ALE...ei1pbWc&sclient=img&ei=ajvFXsffJZnqtAXjxJC4AQ
Bean slicer.
Video demonstration.

Holy ****! lol It doesn't look very sanitary![]()
Most of the vintage meat grinders look like cast aluminum. Or some other material that doesn't rust.Just soak in vinegar or a bleach solution. Also not sure how sanitary anything was in the 1920-30s. Most were still using outhouses and collecting rainwater in cisterns.
I wonder how common bleach was back then...Or what was commonly used for such things. I think Lysol was starting then.
Most of the vintage meat grinders look like cast aluminum. Or some other material that doesn't rust.
...Bean slicer...
I can just imagine some of the **** that ended up in the food from those.Enamel for one, look at the chips..lolPretty sure plenty of iron meat grinders were used in the same era. I'm sure there were different price points back then too.
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https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/1920s-alexander-werk-remscheid-meat-1778021678
Hell I had a friend that lived like that in the 80's lol, but I see your point.Does not look sanitary??
We forget how things were before all of the modern convivences plus laws that require "sanitary" food, living, etc.
I remember the one room ranch house we moved into at $6 rent a month in the middle of the desert in New Mexico. Electricity was the only utility we had. Cistern pump in the yard off of a 100 + year old tin roof. Outhouse through the gate and turn right (check for black widows before sitting down). Bath on Sunday in tin tub behind a hung sheet for privacy with water heated on kerosene stove (yes we all smelled like kerosene), being the youngest I got the worst used water at the end.
Cleaned out the cistern once a year to rake out leaf's, branches, dead birds, etc. (I am sure most of the bird poop was still at the bottom). You ALWAYS boiled the water before using it for drinking or cooking. We think of this as unsanitary today but still think of wilderness natural spring fed pools as being pure and healthy (with the same branches, dead birds, poop, etc.) Its a mind set.
You did the correct things to keep healthy, boiling, well cooked, well cleaned, etc.
If you think this was a long time ago, it was, 1955.
I can just imagine some of the **** that ended up in the food from those.Enamel for one, look at the chips..lol
I'm not clicking that link, cause I don't want to know what it says..lol
Google reverse image search that image.
Bean slicer.