6. TIAS.com is on Twitter! Click here and be sure to follow us!
https://twitter.com/TIASdotCOM
We've also started an Instagram page, so please be sure to follow us there too!
http://instagram.com/tiasdotcom We recently added quite a number of really unique items there!We now have a Instagram button at the top of the page at
http://www.tias.com, along with the Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest buttons.
7. This Week's Stories and Requests for Help We try to post stories and comments from our readers each week. Send your story to
newsletter@tias.com.
Can anyone help identify this tool? One of our readers sent this in for assistance. It's approximately 14 inches long, ratchets closed and has a release pressure point. The dial handle spins to different size shapes. There
are no markings, numbers or words, but it look like it may have had a nameplate
at one point, having a rectangular shaped empty spot on the side. Any ideas? Here's a link to the picture:
http://bit.ly/2ciZ4ob
We posted this story in the last newsletter. Anyone care to share a personal story about a haunted item?
"With Halloween only a few months away, I have an idea for the round robin story telling in the newsletter. My entire house is full of collectibles and antiques. It's an eclectic mix that brings me comfort, but apparently it's not
for everyone. I've had people ask me if I don't feel uncomfortable bringing dead people's stuff into my home. I have yet to see the spirit of someone upset that I own their old dresser or mixing bowls or what have you. However, I have heard enough stories over the years to know that some inanimate objects do have a life of their own sometimes. So in the spirit of Halloween, maybe the next round of story sharing would have to do with 'haunted' items. I have an awesome account about a friend of mine written out below, and it is a true story!
My friend (we'll call her Mary) had a sister (we'll call her Sue) with whom she
was very close. Sue passed away unexpectedly in her 40s, leaving Mary devastated. After the services, Mary's brother in law told her to feel free to
go through her sister's belongings and take what she wanted. Sue had collected
music boxes, and she was particularly proud of the star of her collection, an early 1900s German inlaid wood box. Mary knew it was her sister's favorite--she'd been with her when she purchased it a dozen years earlier--and so she decided that would be the one momento she'd keep. She took it home, cleaned it up and put it up on a shelf above her bed. Before putting it up, she listened to the disc inside, letting it wind down into silence. One year to the day of Sue's death, Mary was in terrible shape, missing her sister. Sitting at the kitchen table, she had a photo album out and was looking at old pictures of happier times. Then she heard a sound coming from somewhere in the
house. Thinking she might have left the TV on, she went to the family room. The TV was off. Perhaps hubby had left on the bathroom radio. It, too, was off, but when she stepped into the hall, she realized the sound was coming from
her bedroom. It wasn't until she pushed the door open that she realized what the sound was. . .Sue's music box was playing its tune. No one had moved the
music box since Mary had tucked it onto the shelf a year earlier. The moment she touched it, the music stopped, and it hasn't played by itself since. We like to think it was Sue stopping by just to say "I miss you, too."
Ali K, Mesa AZ"
If you have a "haunted" collection, drop us a note at
newsletter@tias.com. --------------------------
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