What a sin...

sphen

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So how badly does doing something like this to a nice Mauser destroy the value? Just curious if big bold initials like this completely kill the value as a collector gun or if it's just a minor depreciation in value? This is of course assuming the rest of the gun (stock, barrel, bore) is in very good condition.

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Certainly a substantial hit to the value. Stock also looks like it has been varnished. Really need to see more pictures and get a better description of the rifle to be more definitive.
 
How do ya know the rifle didn't belong to K. Paulus...ya can't right???
Could have been his...and now...now it's yours!!!

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Itys pretty obvious that this rifle was captured somewhere in Europe by an American mobile boot repair unit and kept in the unit kitchen to shoot rats. The initials "KP"(kitchen police) are a dead giveaway.;)
 
That rifle appears to be a mauser 98? From an earlier conflict - Anglo-Boer War 1899-1902, it was very much a "thing" for Boer soldiers to carve up and identify their rifles - by order of their General Joubert! I have three books, "Carvings from the Veldt" by Dave C George (first, Part Two and Part Three) which document hundreds of those carvings. Most all of those Boer rifles were 1893 pattern Mausers (small ring), although plenty of Guides (sp?) , Lee Enfields and others appear in those books.
 
I once had 1858 Remington with Johnson on the 1 grip. Many people thought belonged to Gen Johnson CSA. Even if period, must have been 10,000 soldiers by that name.
 
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