b'107644SOPWITH CAMEL propeller section circa 1920s, together with a photograph of three planes in flight, (2 items)23cm across$150250 645Thursday Island Present For Honour Faith And Friendship silk embroidery, early 20th century,41 x 35cm$400600646Military group comprising gloves, compass, lighter, binoculars, gun scope, headset, telegraph key, Sir John Monash cribbage board, whistle, artillery shell, soldiers pocketbook and pay book plus waterproof edition of The Raft Book with world charts. (15 items).$150250 647Australian folk art Thompson (Tommy) machine gun with rotating clacker action, circa 1940,75cm long$80120 648WORLD WAR TWO RECRUITING POSTERWere Coming! Join The AIF Now!1940 colour lithograph, numbered AIF-19 lower left.73.5 x 50cm.Linen-backed.Text includes the newspaper heading Spirit of AIF to win again. 648$1,2501,500649THOMAS WILLIAM PARKER (VX 83897) Gunner 2/2 Australian Field Regiment, WW2 service medals and associated items$200400 650[GERMAN INTERNMENT CAMPS IN AUSTRALIA]c.1942 metal cigarette box with wooden base, which has a hand-painted view on the lid, titled INTERNMENT - CAMP - HAY - N.S.W. showing two barracks buildings, a stockade, fences and lights and is endorsed B to D at upper left.The Internment and POW camps at Hay, were established during World War II as prisoner-of-war and internment centres, due in no small measure to the isolated location of the town. Three high-security camps were constructed in 1940.The first arrivals were over 2,000 refugees from Nazi Germany and Austria, most of whom were Jewish; they had been interned in the United Kingdom when fears of an armed invasion of Britain were at their peak. The British government then made the decision to forcibly transport these refugees to Australia on the HMT Dunera. The internees were kept in conditions on board the Dunera that were cruel and inhumane, and after the war the Dunera story became quite infamous, leading the British government650to apologise for their egregious mistreatment of innocent civilian refugees.$2,0002,500'