Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
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Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
Black Rifles Matter
Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
If I tried that, she would be my EX-wife. LOL
Was trying to tell how old that film was by the clothing and hair styles. I am guessing mid to late 1930's.
Edit to add: Found it on the original site efootage.com; 1931.
Was trying to tell how old that film was by the clothing and hair styles. I am guessing mid to late 1930's.
Edit to add: Found it on the original site efootage.com; 1931.
Keith
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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
You have got to be kidding me!!!!
“If you try to shoot me, I will have to shoot you back, and I promise you I won’t miss!”
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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
It reminds me of the Second Chance body armor demonstrations by Richard Davis
[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=5y44CdrBsfs[/youtube]
[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=5y44CdrBsfs[/youtube]
Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
From 1931, this could very well have been the husband and wife team of Ad and Pinky Topperwein, exhibition shooters for Winchester.
Mike
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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
Oh my!
How many rules were violated in that short clip?

How many rules were violated in that short clip?
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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
I don't think they concerned themselves with rules as they shot cigarettes out of their mouths and pennies pinched between thumb and forefinger.
Mike
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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
That gives me the willies. It's just plain wrong. 

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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
That is not the Topperweins in the video.Mike1951 wrote: From 1931, this could very well have been the husband and wife team of Ad and Pinky Topperwein, exhibition shooters for Winchester.
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I don't think they concerned themselves with rules as they shot cigarettes out of their mouths and pennies pinched between thumb and forefinger.
Mrs. Topperwein's nickname was PLINKY with an L.
She got it while shooting tin cans with a .22 and saying she heard them "plink".
Plinky was a shooter on a par with the more famous Annie Oakley.
She is in the Trap Shooting Hall of Fame.
There is no evidence that they engaged in unsafe gun handling such as shooting cigarettes
out of their mouths or pennies pinched etc.
They lived in San Antonio and their exhibitions primarily consisted of shooting aerial targets (2" square wooden blocks) and making drawings on sheet metal with a Winchester .22 Autoloader.
Black Rifles Matter
Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
She is NOT smilin.........



Ray F.
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Luke 22:35-38 "Gear up boys, I gotta go and it's gonna get rough." JC
-- Darrell Royal, former UT football coach - "If worms carried pistols, birds wouldn't eat 'em."

Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
On History Channel Intl's Sharp Shooters episode, I just watched her shoot either a cigarette or piece of chalk out of Ad's mouth with a rifle. Whatever it was, it disintegrated.TxD wrote:There is no evidence that they engaged in unsafe gun handling such as shooting cigarettes
out of their mouths or pennies pinched etc.
I figured it would air again if I waited long enough.
Mike
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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
That's one lucky lady. Penetration almost certainly would have occurred if a round had hit a previously damaged portion of the pane.
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"An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it." - Jeff Cooper
I am not a lawyer. Nothing in any of my posts should be construed as legal or professional advice.
Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
I did not know that. It explains the name of the street close to where I live. I have wandered for a while how that name would come to be a street. Just thought it came from the German influence here, not that it could be named after a family of shooters. That's cool!
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Re: Honey, Hold This Bullet Proof Glass
Originally it was Toepperwein with and extra "e". But at times they "Americanized" it to Topperwein. Yep, that'll do it.TxD wrote:That is not the Topperweins in the video.Mike1951 wrote: From 1931, this could very well have been the husband and wife team of Ad and Pinky Topperwein, exhibition shooters for Winchester.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I don't think they concerned themselves with rules as they shot cigarettes out of their mouths and pennies pinched between thumb and forefinger.
Mrs. Topperwein's nickname was PLINKY with an L.
She got it while shooting tin cans with a .22 and saying she heard them "plink".
Plinky was a shooter on a par with the more famous Annie Oakley.
She is in the Trap Shooting Hall of Fame.
There is no evidence that they engaged in unsafe gun handling such as shooting cigarettes
out of their mouths or pennies pinched etc.
They lived in San Antonio and their exhibitions primarily consisted of shooting aerial targets (2" square wooden blocks) and making drawings on sheet metal with a Winchester .22 Autoloader.