No one Posted August 22 Posted August 22 Dear Gentlemen, A prize from the "Hoten Mainichi Shimbun / Mukden Daily News Agency (Newspaper)": The maker is from Osaka Minami Ward: Yours sincerely, No one
No one Posted August 22 Posted August 22 Dear Gentlemen, I forgot the name of the company in Osaka: "Kōrindō / 香林堂". Yours sincerely, No one
No one Posted August 22 Posted August 22 Dear Gentlemen. Another one from Mukden "Fengtian Sightseeing Memorial": The maker "Masuda / マスダ " from Tōkyō: Yours sincerely, No one 1
No one Posted August 23 Posted August 23 Dear Gentlemen, I forgot those two links: 奉天北陵 MF003 | 奉天 | 中国戦前絵葉書データベース | 愛知大学国際中国学研究センター (aichi-u.ac.jp) Shenyang - Wikipedia Yours sincerely, No one
Bruce Pennington Posted August 23 Posted August 23 13 hours ago, No one said: The maker "Masuda / マスダ " from Tōkyō: Sorry for the sidetrack, but a set of binoculars just popped up at THIS WARRELICS THREAD made by Matsuda.
No one Posted August 23 Posted August 23 Dear Bruce, It's ok to sidetrack, I don't mind. The binoculars were made by "マツダ / Matsuda". The bage above was made by "マスダ / Masuda". Yours sincerely, No one 1
No one Posted August 23 Posted August 23 Dear Gentlemen, Still in Manchukuo with this one, "Zennei Student Center": Image courtesy of Japan-China Friendship Hall: A book: And this doctoral degree request thesis 2019 by Lǐ Sīqí: lan020202000203.pdf (hit-u.ac.jp) Yours sincerely, No one 2
No one Posted August 25 Posted August 25 Dear Gentlemen, Still in Manchouria with this badge of the "Manchukuo Shōgi Association" ... I think. Is this related to attending a lecture? 角道 - Google 検索 Yours sincerely, No one
No one Posted August 25 Posted August 25 (edited) Dear Gentlemen, Today, let's cross the border to Inner Mongolia with the Ueda Unit: There seems to be a spelling mistake, which is interesting: The maker is "Kinkōdō Kishō Seisakujo" from Nagoya. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of this company: 株式会社 金工堂 (kinkodo.net) Yours sincerely, No one PS: next will go back to China Edited August 25 by No one 1
No one Posted August 26 Posted August 26 Dear Gentlemen, Another Chinese hospital: "Guǎngxī Province Liǔzhōu Rehabilitation Hospital", I'm not 100% sure about the two in the middle, "rehabilitation", this inscription is not easy to read. Yours sincerely, No one 1
No one Posted August 27 Posted August 27 Dear Gentlemen, A badge of the "Executive Yuan. Assistant" (the executive branch of the government of the Republic of China) for the year 1959: 行政院全球資訊網 (ey.gov.tw) Executive Yuan - Wikipedia Yours sincerely, No one
No one Posted August 28 Posted August 28 Dear Gentlemen, Today, a civilian one for a change: "Republic of China. Member of Guangzhou Mortgage Shopkeepers Union". Or it could be pawnbrokers. Yours sincerely, No one
No one Posted August 29 Posted August 29 Dear Gentlemen, Dong River (China) - Wikipedia Yours sincerely, No one
huiehuierhgu Posted August 30 Posted August 30 The medal with the pigeon design was given to the Chinese soldiers in the Korean War
No one Posted August 30 Posted August 30 Dear huiehuierhgu, It's a dove, symbol of peace, not a pigeon. Yours sincerely, No one
No one Posted August 30 Posted August 30 Dear Gentlemen, I forgot the name: "Resist US, help North Korea Commemoration". "抗美援朝 / Kàng Měi Yuán Cháo / Resist US, help North Korea" was a 1950s slogan. Yours sincerely, No one 2
Bruce Pennington Posted August 30 Posted August 30 13 hours ago, No one said: Dear Gentlemen, Dong River (China) - Wikipedia Yours sincerely, No one What does the "71" mean?
No one Posted August 30 Posted August 30 (edited) Dear Bruce, I don't know. Is it seventy-one or seven one? I am unable to locate any documentation. Yours sincerely, No one Edited August 30 by No one 1
No one Posted August 31 Posted August 31 (edited) Dear Gentlemen, The "Ordre des Palmes académiques" was established by decree No. 35.1323 on October 4, 1955 and came into force on July 14, 1956. Before 1955, it's "Officier de l'Instruction Publique" when the ribbon is without a rosette, and "Officier d'Université ou Officier d'Académie" when the ribbon is with a rosette. Since 1955, the badge has been composed of two identical branches, mostly laurel (the olives have disappeared). In this case, I think, it's "Officier d'Université ou Officier d'Académie": A diplome of an "Officier de l'Instruction Publique" (1933) : Yours sincerely, No one Edited August 31 by No one 1
No one Posted September 1 Posted September 1 Dear Gentlemen, The triumphant return of the 9th Battalion from the Shanghai incident May 1932: Yours sincerely, No one
Bruce Pennington Posted September 1 Posted September 1 12 hours ago, No one said: 9th Battalion Do you know the significance of the lion, shovel, and pick? Was the unit an engineer group?
No one Posted September 3 Posted September 3 (edited) Dear Bruce, "Do you know the significance of the lion, shovel, and pick?" No, I don't. I am intrigued by this lion's head. " Was the unit an engineer group?" The only document I could find is this one: O_10_021_1.pdf (heiwakinen.go.jp) 輜重 - Wikipedia 輜重兵 - Wikipedia Yours sincerely, No one Edited September 3 by No one 1
No one Posted September 3 Posted September 3 Dear Gentlemen, The "Fifth National Industrial Exhibition (the last but the largest National Industrial Exhibition in Japan)". For this one, there is a link in English: Fifth National Industrial Exhibition | Part 1: Expositions Held in and before 1900 | Expositions, where the modern technology of the times was exhibited (ndl.go.jp) Yours sincerely, No one
No one Posted September 4 Posted September 4 Dear Gentlemen, This one is missing something. It's a graduation commemoration from the Central Military Academy. Some links: 1939年中央陆军军官学校第十四期第二总队同学录|静思斋整理_静思斋历史文献收藏研究中心_新浪博客 (sina.com.cn) 中央陸軍軍官學校第十四期第二總隊晉籍同學 -台湾大陆同乡会文献数据库 (tongxianghuicn.com) 早期:中央軍校十四期二總隊同學畢業四十週年紀念照片盤 | 露天市集 | 全台最大的網路購物市集 (ruten.com.tw) Yours sincerely, No one 2
No one Posted September 4 Posted September 4 Dear Gentlemen, For this medal see: Yours sincerely, No one 1
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