(PC) Let's Play Can You See What I See? Part 4
ORDER #7
Name: Niall Armstrong
Total Items: 16
Address: 8906 Altisma Way
City: Carlsbad, California
ZIP: 92009
COLLECTIONS
BINS
Four Baseball Bats (NE: near the northwest corner of the wooden item bin; NW: the bat button near the northeast corner of the button bin and the bat of the blue batter in the figurine bin; SW: in between the bowling pin and the racket), Fork (NW: on the gear near the northwest corner of the metal item bin), Marble Earth (SE; above the blue star marble), Moon (NE; in between the tiny battleship and nut in the metal item bin), Seymour (NW; resting with the red and yellow beads), Spoon (SE: above the spool in the wooden item bin)
GAMES
Folding Fan (SE; below the rabbit in the tweed jacket), Jack-in-the-Box (NW; above the blue die), Oilcan (NW; on the card in between the little blue and big red checkers), Pocketbook (SE; to the left of the middle club in the Three of Clubs), Seymour (SE; inside square #58)
TOY ROBOTS
Seashell (SW; on the chest of the wind-up astronaut); Seymour (SE; standing above the magnet); Soup Can Robot (NW; standing in the back-left corner of the scene); Teapot (SW; behind the green scorpion robot); Whistle (NE; on the left shoulder of the robot behind the robo-lizard)
RARE COLLECTIBLE #7
Ben Franklin’s Bifocals
Approximate Value: $44,995
Clue: They’re held in place by nose and ears, and help one’s eyes in later years.
Location: Southwest Quadrant. On the side of the checkers box.
Clyde’s Notes: Besides being one of the Founding Fathers, Benjamin Franklin was also a scientist and inventor, sometimes out of necessity. Because he grew tired of switching pairs throughout the day, Franklin invented eyeglasses that can be used for seeing both near and far. He called them his “double spectacles,” as indicated in a letter dated August 21, 1784. The inventor of the trifocals, John Hawkins, coined the term bifocals in 1824 and gave credit to Franklin. This pair is one of only three pairs with his signature inscribed. I found these in a junk box I bought at a rummage sale in Coatesville, Pennsylvania.
ORDER #8
Name: Sally Sails
Total Items: 26
Address: 5555 County Road 741
City: Yancey, Texas
ZIP: 78909
COLLECTIONS
BLOCKS
Five Candles (NW, the blue candle on the side of the block below the green “F” block; SE, the birthday candles on the cake to the left of the faucet), Faucet (SE; to the left of the blue bear), Fence (SW; to the northwest of the blue hexagon), Handcart (SE; painted on the block to the right of the poem), Lamp (SW; painted on the block closest to the southwest corner of the quadrant), Seymour (NW; peeking out of the red arch block), Trolley (SW; the railcar to the right of the painted blue piano), Turtle (SW; on the side of the blue block to the northeast of the green “W” block)
DINOSAURS
Ringed Snake (SE; slithering to the right of the red Triceratops), Spotted Snake (NW; slithering to the left of the Dimetrodon), Seymour (SW; standing in the cave), Two Winged Dinosaurs (NE, to the left of the spool; NW, flying to the right of the Sun)
JUNK DRAWER
Blue Thumbtack (NW: poking through the bottommost hole in the slotted spoon), Jack (SW: above the red comb), Jet (NE: to the left of the screwdriver’s handle), Five Keys (NE: the weathered key laying above the screwdriver, the brass key below the plastic fork, and the silver key above the yellow wheel; NW: under the shovel; SE: laying below the hammerhead), Four Locks (NE: the pinkish lock above the silver key; NW: the silver lock near the northwest corner; SE: the blue lock to the right of the hammerhead; SW: the red lock in between the yellow dial and the silver scissors), Seymour (SE; resting under the red plastic lid), Soldier (NW; painted on the metal part, southeast of the red thread), Sword (SE; the red plastic sword above the blue lock)
RARE COLLECTIBLE #8
Pine Tree Shilling
Approximate Value: $75,200
Clue: It was minted with a phony date, in what is now a US state.
Location: Southeast Quadrant. Tucked away to the right of the poem.
Clyde’s Notes: The production of pine tree shillings was a defiant act against British law prohibiting private colonial coinage. The pine tree persisted as a symbol of independence, appearing on battle flags during the Revolutionary War. This 1652 coin (actually minted in 1667) was back-dated to make the English think it was minted when there was no king in England. This specific coin is rare because the coin maker did not have a “C” stamp, so he used a “T” instead on the word “Massachusetts”. I found this coin using my metal detector up in Half Moon Beach during my trip to Gloucester, coincidentally during the town’s Bicentennial celebrations.
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