I stopped by the Habitat store t'other day - I'm lucky that my blood bank is three blocks away, so I can treat myself to more than just cookies when I donate blood. I wasn't finding much, but, on the way out, I noticed a large cardboard box of tools. A little rooting through that yielded a couple of tools:
Peck, Stow & Wilcox referred to this as a "Pony Draw Knife." Blade's about six inches long.

I'm not sure why you would need to use a draw knife on a pony, but...modern catalogs call it a carver's drawknife. First design like this I'd ever seen in the wild, so it jumped into my hand. I didn't know I had a Peck, Stow & Wilcox tool until I got it home; it's now part of the drawknife team.
I've got a bit of a jones for small (up to 4") C clamps, which I find endlessly useful. This Hargrave is nice:

and I'm amused by the creativity of the name for the clamp design:

I noticed an interesting detail on this clamp, too. At several spots along the flanges, inner and outer, there are flat spots, pretty clearly factory original:

What are these artifacts of? Part of the casting process? Machining fixturing?
Not pictured is a Disston Keystone 20" handsaw, a size I've been watching for. I'm now $12 less rich.