Thermos is green made of SS has a glass liner in excellent condition with a cork to seal it has minimal cosmetic damage to exterior i only found one other one with identical picture online and it said it was made around 1909?
The larger of the two objects is just over six inches long. It is made of a solid piece of wood that was turned on a lathe. The wood is fairly heavy (lignum vitae?). The round ends are of unequal size--one is 2" in diameter, and the other is 1 3/4." Each round end has three finely inscribed lines around its circumference.
The smaller object is 4" long, and it tapers ever so slightly from 3/8 to 7/16" diameter. The two items were together when found, but I am not positive that they are related. It does not look as if the smaller piece was ever attached to the larger one. Neither piece has wear marks.
I have no idea what these items are for. Your input will be appreciated!
These beautiful prints are of the Midwest where corn is a major commodity. The first one is of corn stalks and pumpkins in the field; the second one is a print of an old barn with the plow and cornfields in the forefront; the third is a print of the cornfields looking out of the window. A jar of pickles, an old syrup jar and a Bible are sitting on the counter in the forefront of the print. The tones are subdued colors of green, yellow, and brown.
This belonged to my great aunt, and she had it as long as I can remember. Externally it isn't in good condition but is inside. I'm curious of it's history and would like to know it's worth as I would like to get rid of it. Any information shared would be very much appreciated. I have many more pictures, but I wasn't able to display them.
Black mohair teddy bear. May be a Stieff. There is a hole in left ear where tag would be. Pads all look like they were hand sown. Has orange thread for nose. Has amber eyes, straw stuffing and a squeaker in the belly part that still squeaks a bit. The head arms and legs all rotate 360 degrees. There is a hole on the side of the nose, you can see the stuffing is straw.