yes you can
all of the above homesTo make it as easy as possible for the ACME toaster Co. to resolve the problem.
all of the above homesTo make it as easy as possible for the ACME toaster Co. to resolve the problem.
Boxing glove
391129
There ARE other markings on the shotgun, you just have to look to find them. Assuming your gun is a single-shot break-open shotgun, it was probably made by the WH Davenport Firearms Co from c.1885-c.1910. ACME was a known tradename used by this company. If the marking is actually ACME ARMS CO, and it is a single-shot shotgun, it is probably a Stevens product as made for Cornwall Hardware in New York around the same time period. In either case, there is no collector interest and resale prices are below $100. PLEASE have the gun checked over by a competent gunsmith before attempting to shoot it - these guns were never designed for the pressure curve of today's ammunition. ACME was also a tradename applied to inexpensive pocket revolvers by various makers.
The last shot gun made by Midland Gun Co. was in the late 1950s. I got this answer from.....enquiries@bwildandson.co.uk
it's an 1850 american gun co. double barrel shotgun made in baltimore maryland
That is not a question. It is a statement with a question mark at the end. A question usually has who, what, when, where, why or how in it somewhere.
Spencer Gun Co was a trade name retailed by Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co Hardware of Chicago. Their guns were made by a varitey of manufacturers, but the patent date on yours identifies it as a product of WH Davenport Arms Co.
If the company name is marked exactly as you have written it, the gun was made between 1920 and 1948. The date will not be marked on the gun and it is probably not serialized so the exact year of manufacture cannot be determined.
Out of business