CollectingBanter

CollectingBanter (http://www.collectingbanter.com/index.php)
-   General Discussion (http://www.collectingbanter.com/forumdisplay.php?f=17)
-   -   More Argentine Perfins (http://www.collectingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=260970)

Tony Vella November 22nd 08 03:05 PM

More Argentine Perfins
 
Any help identifying these Argentine perfins appreciated in advance.

BE on a 1923, red, 5c San Martín (no dot after value)
FyP on a 1935, red, 10c Rivadavia
JBI on a 1935, buff, 1c Sarmiento
all three perfins are inverted.

During the early decades there was a Federal-Provincial bank (Banco
Federal y Provincial) operating in the major cities. FyP instantly
brought that to mind. However, all "bank" perfins I have seen to this
date (in other people's collections, I regret) have had Bco. perfinned
on the first line and whatever else on the second. My FyP does not.
--
Tony Vella
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
http://www.amedialuz.ca/

Blair (TC) November 22nd 08 04:09 PM

More Argentine Perfins
 
On Nov 22, 10:05*am, Tony Vella wrote:
Any help identifying these Argentine perfins appreciated in advance.

BE on a 1923, red, 5c San Martín (no dot after value)
FyP on a 1935, red, 10c Rivadavia
JBI on a 1935, buff, 1c Sarmiento
all three perfins are inverted.

During the early decades there was a Federal-Provincial bank (Banco
Federal y Provincial) operating in the major cities. *FyP instantly
brought that to mind. *However, all "bank" perfins I have seen to this
date (in other people's collections, I regret) have had Bco. perfinned
on the first line and whatever else on the second. *My FyP does not.
--
Tony Vella
Ottawa, Ontario, Canadahttp://www.amedialuz.ca/



Tony

B E is Banco Espanol (Note no Bco)

Proof: Argentina cover, Scott 620, horizontal pair perfin "B E",
crisp
BUENOS AIRES / 9 OCT 53 CDS ties both Antarctic Expedition Rescue
stamps to AIR MAIL cover addressed to Philadelphia.
Reverse: Printed Banco Espanol, Buenos Aires return address.

Blair



Blair (TC) November 22nd 08 04:37 PM

More Argentine Perfins
 
On Nov 22, 10:05*am, Tony Vella wrote:
Any help identifying these Argentine perfins appreciated in advance.

BE on a 1923, red, 5c San Martín (no dot after value)
FyP on a 1935, red, 10c Rivadavia
JBI on a 1935, buff, 1c Sarmiento
all three perfins are inverted.

During the early decades there was a Federal-Provincial bank (Banco
Federal y Provincial) operating in the major cities. *FyP instantly
brought that to mind. *However, all "bank" perfins I have seen to this
date (in other people's collections, I regret) have had Bco. perfinned
on the first line and whatever else on the second. *My FyP does not.
--
Tony Vella
Ottawa, Ontario, Canadahttp://www.amedialuz.ca/




Hi Tony:

FyP is the perfin of "Frugone y Preve Ltda. SA" .
of La Arrocera, Corrientes, Argentina, Italy etc.

It is seen with Buenos Aires cancels (1935-50).
http://www.cijoint.fr/cjlink.php?fil...cijZ6wFqUd.jpg

Blair



Blair (TC) November 22nd 08 04:48 PM

More Argentine Perfins
 
On Nov 22, 10:05*am, Tony Vella wrote:
Any help identifying these Argentine perfins appreciated in advance.

BE on a 1923, red, 5c San Martín (no dot after value)
FyP on a 1935, red, 10c Rivadavia
JBI on a 1935, buff, 1c Sarmiento
all three perfins are inverted.

During the early decades there was a Federal-Provincial bank (Banco
Federal y Provincial) operating in the major cities. *FyP instantly
brought that to mind. *However, all "bank" perfins I have seen to this
date (in other people's collections, I regret) have had Bco. perfinned
on the first line and whatever else on the second. *My FyP does not.
--
Tony Vella
Ottawa, Ontario, Canadahttp://www.amedialuz.ca/




Finally. we come to JBI.

JBI is the perfin of "Juan B. Istilart"
http://www.istilart.com.ar/

It is seen with Buenos Aires cancels from 1932-1978
http://www.cijoint.fr/cjlink.php?fil...cijdesEJjc.jpg

Blair




[email protected] November 22nd 08 05:03 PM

More Argentine Perfins
 
On Nov 22, 10:05�am, Tony Vella wrote:
Any help identifying these Argentine perfins appreciated in advance.

BE on a 1923, red, 5c San Mart�n (no dot after value)
FyP on a 1935, red, 10c Rivadavia
JBI on a 1935, buff, 1c Sarmiento
all three perfins are inverted.

During the early decades there was a Federal-Provincial bank (Banco
Federal y Provincial) operating in the major cities. �FyP instantly
brought that to mind. �However, all "bank" perfins I have seen to this
date (in other people's collections, I regret) have had Bco. perfinned
on the first line and whatever else on the second. �My FyP does not.
--
Tony Vella
Ottawa, Ontario, Canadahttp://www.amedialuz.ca/


The JBI pattern I have is on a cover postmarked Tres Arroyos in 1938.
The advert on the cover's reverse lists the firm as Juan B. Istilart,
Ltda. Tres Arroyos. Interestingly, in 1938 they were promoting their
'windmills' - apparently the type that were used with water wells.

Blair (TC) November 22nd 08 05:30 PM

More Argentine Perfins
 
On Nov 22, 11:09*am, "Blair (TC)" wrote:


B E is Banco Espanol *(Note no Bco)

Proof: Argentina cover, Scott 620, horizontal pair perfin "B E",
crisp
BUENOS AIRES / 9 OCT 53 CDS ties both Antarctic Expedition Rescue
stamps to AIR MAIL cover addressed to Philadelphia.
Reverse: Printed Banco Espanol, Buenos Aires return address.

Blair


ADDENDUM (BE)

The full name of the bank is
"El Banco Español de Rio de la Plata"
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edificio_Cari%C3%A1tides

The perfin was used by the Buenos Aires branch and others.
It was used from 1917 to 1975.
http://www.cijoint.fr/cjlink.php?fil...cijO6uP4Vr.jpg

Blair

hatssounteete April 19th 11 11:18 AM

South Africa travel, where provides greater than twenty thousand species of plants for plants lovers. The grasslands are made up of quite a lot of grasses, acacia trees and low shrubs. There are also different species of water-storing crops corresponding to aloes and euphorbia, in addition, mangrove can be found available in the coastal areas.
Easter time is a perfect time to visit, since most tourists get to attend the Merrie Monarch Hula Festival. This is an annually cultural event held in Hilo region of the Big Island, which begins on Easter Sunday and held for a week. Another annual festival is Made In Hawaii; this is a celebration of variety products and held in August.
In Finland, Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands and Denmark (for a period of three years commencing November 24, 2008), trucks with trailers are allowed to be 25.25 m (82.8 ft)long. Elsewhere in the European Union, the limit is 18.75 m (61.5 ft) (Norway (19.5 m or 64 ft). The trucks are of a cab-over-engine design, that is with a flat front, a high floor about 1.2 m (3.9 ft) above ground with the engine below. The Scandinavian countries are less densely populated than the rest of the EU countries and distances, especially in Finland and Sweden, are vast. Until the late 1960s, vehicle length was unlimited, giving rise to long vehicles to handle goods cost effectively. As traffic increased, lengths became more of a concern and they were limited, albeit at a more generous level than in the rest of Europe. In the United Kingdom in 2009, a two year desk study of Longer Heavier Vehicles (LHVs) including options up to 11-axle, 34 m long, 82 tonne combinations, ruled out all road train type vehicles for the foreseeable future. Sweden is currently (2010) performing tests on log hauling trucks, weighing up to 90 tonnes and measuring 30 meters and haulers for two 40 ft containers, measuring 32 meters in total.
On October 19, 2000, Doug Gould set the first of his records at Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, when a roadtrain made up of 79 trailers, measuring 1,018.2 m (3,341 ft) and weighing 1,072.3 t (2,364,000 lb), was pulled by a Kenworth C501T driven by Steven Matthews a distance of 8 km.
The fortunes of Amos Lincoln would begin to change on October 21, 1966 at New York’s famous Garden when he dropped a ten round duke to Johnny Persol. Amos came back with two quick wins but then he was again taken out again by Jimmy Fletcher. Amos was then brought over to Germany where he was stopped by Karl Mildenberger. Lincoln had now fallen dramatically in the ratings. He continued to tumble as Thad Spencer was finally able to beat Amos. †Big Train †finally got back in the win column with a points call over rugged Joey Orbillo in Los Angeles. Amos returned to Los Angeles to meet Buster Mathis who was on the comeback trail after a loss to †Smokin †Joe Frazier. In a bout the featured some odd scorecards, Mathis was awarded a split decision. One judge had it 11-0 for Buster. Another had it 9-1 for Mathis. The third judge had it 5-4 for Amos. Go figure…


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:28 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
CollectingBanter.com