Picture of the day

Winchester made M1 Garands, M1 Carbines, Model 1912 Shotguns and Model 1897 Shotguns on government contracts during WW2. I believe that they also supplied Model 67 bolt action .22s as training rifles. Garands and Carbines were crated, rather than individually boxed, so I`d wager that these are probably Model 67s shipped to the Brits on lend lease for use as training rifles. Besides, those young British ladies wouldn`t have been smiling if they were hoisting 5 x Garands weighing 50 lbs an armful.

I wish the pic was just a bit clearer. One can make out "model" on each endflap, but the number looks like 76 to me, which would make no sense at all.
 
I double dirty dog dare ya to say that to some of the "Cowpersons" I shoot with .....

I promise to help you limp back to the saloon once you stop retching.
 
Main parachute top left. Reserve belly shoot top right. Not sure what the tarp and pins are for in between. M1 Garand. With bayonet. Gloves with glove pouch. Wireless radio. Rifle sheath? From left, spool of rope? Flares/smoke? Mags in pouch for 1911. Bandolier of m1 garand enblocs with ammo. Machete. Canteen. 1911 in holster. Trench dagger under 1911. Compass. Notepad of some sort. Light. Pencils. Folding knife. Matches in canister. Spoon. Oil bottle. Rations? Hand grenades.

Took some guesses.

You forgot the tarp/groundsheet/shelter half/poncho that everything is sitting on.

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I am admiring those rigger pouches for the Garand ammo.
 
I'd vote for the Carl G as well. A lot of old tank hulls get to be hard targets on the range and they get shredded in the process, even when they are filled with concrete.

My mate is rebuilding one that was rescued from a military range-took nearly a year to get all the concrete out of it!
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And this is how it looks now (well, last week)
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Still got plenty of work to do to get her back on the road but its nice to be bolting bits back on instead of struggling to get parts off.
 
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