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St. Sebastian Tended by St. Irene (oil on.. - 3x2 inch Fridge Magnet - large magnetic button - Magnet
Sale Price: $4.99
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Rectangular wrap-around refrigerator magnet and a glossy mylar cover.Large 2x3 inch rectangle fridge magnet or 'buttons' as they are sometimes known in the USA.Crop shown is automated for display purposes only. All magnets are hand finished and the best most appropriate crop will always be selected to best show the full image. Therefore, actual product may vary slightly from crop shown - this can include borders or slight cropping in order to best place the image within the fixed size.
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You Must Remember This
Sale Price: $10.96
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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![The Flame and the Arrow [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5150RBWHVPL._SL75_.jpg) |
The Flame and the Arrow [VHS]
Sale Price: $12.00
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Still in his first flush of muscular stardom, Burt Lancaster romps through this costume adventure in full awareness of his movie-star dazzle. The story is a Robin Hood-tinged yarn set in 12-century Lombardy, where ace archer Lancaster finds himself an unlikely rebel leader against the evil lord (Frank Allenby)--actually, our hero just wants to get his kidnapped son back. Oh, and maybe win the hand of the fair Virginia Mayo. Nobody from director Jacques Tourneur on down seems to have taken the story very seriously, which leaves plenty of room for the odd strolling minstrel (Norman Lloyd in puckish form), good-bad romantic rival (Robert Douglas), or mute sidekick. The latter is played by Nick Cravat, the stumpy and swarthy acrobat who had performed alongside Lancaster in their circus careers (he would return in The Crimson Pirate, the best-known of Lancaster's swashbucklers). Here, the two men execute a series of glorious physical stunts, showing off their crack timing and willingness to risk life and limb. That's really the appeal of the picture, along with Ernest Haller's Oscar-nominated Technicolor photography and the lavish Italy-by-way-of-Burbank studio sets. --Robert Horton
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RoomMates RMK1125SCS Fire Brigade Peel & Stick Wall Decal
Sale Price: $8.83
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RoomMates Fire Brigade Peel & Stick AppliqueThis Fire Brigade set of 22 peel and stick appliques is red HOT! Blazing fire trucks and an ambulance artistically rendered with very fine details - and complete with decorative flames, fire hydrant, extinguishers, hard hats, boots.... the whole gear! There's even a Dalmatian dog keeping guard. This is the stuff heroes are made of! Check out our coordinated self-adhesive border for an even hotter look!Number of Decals: 22Dimensions: 4 sheets of 10" x 18"
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TCM Greatest Classic Legends Film Collection: Burt Lancaster (Local Hero / The Flame and the Arrow / Executive Action / Seven Days in May)
Sale Price: $13.13
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A rousing adventure saga set in medieval Italy, "The Flame and the Arrow" (1950) stars Burt Lancaster as the leader of a rebel army tangling with Hessian troops, whose leader (Robert Douglas) has welcomed Lancaster's ex-wife (Lynn Baggett) into his arms and taken his son hostage. Virginia Mayo co-stars. Next, John Frankenheimer directs Rod Serling's script for "Seven Days in May" (1964), a political thriller about a U.S. president (Fredric March) whose nuclear disarmament treaty with the Soviets motivates a right-wing general (Lancaster) to plot to overthrow the government. Kirk Douglas, Ava Gardner, Edmond O'Brien co-star. And, "Local Hero" (1983) is an understated comedy from Bill Forsyth about an American oil executive sent to a Scottish seacoast village full of offbeat residents to close a land deal. Lancaster, Peter Riegert, Jenny Seagrove star. Two-disc set also includes "Executive Action." 6 3/4 hrs. total. Standard/Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono; Subtitles: English (SDH), French; audio commentary; featurette; bonus shorts "So You're Going to Have an Operation" (1950), "Strife with Father" (1950); theatrical trailers.
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Burt Lancaster: The Signature Collection (The Flame and the Arrow / Jim Thorpe All-American / His Majesty O'Keefe / South Sea Woman / Executive Action)
Sale Price: $74.99
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Burt Lancaster had bounced around, literally, before entering movies. A former circus acrobat, the strapping Mr. Lancaster became a heartthrob with his 1946 debut, The Killers, but insisted on being an actor as well as a movie star. With his athletic physique and restless curiosity, he succeeded on both counts. Burt Lancaster--The Signature Collection is a hodgepodge of titles that show off the grinning appeal of this thinking man's hunk. It really doesn't include any signature classics, and the emphasis here is on Lancaster the bounding romantic; all but one of the films are from the early 1950s. The best of the lot is the earliest in the collection, The Flame and the Arrow, a Robin Hoodian tale of 12th-century Lombardy, with Burt fighting an evil lord and wooing fair lady Virginia Mayo. Even director Jacques Tourneur doesn't seem to have taken this too seriously, but it's a colorful, buoyant piece of nonsense with some stunning acrobatic work by Lancaster and his old circus partner, Nick Cravat. Jim Thorpe--All-American is an earnest bio of the great Native American athlete, who won gold medals at the 1912 Olympic Games only to have them taken away on a technicality. See this movie in childhood, and you'll never forget it: the tale of Thorpe's inspirational journey into greatness, and subsequent struggle with alcoholism and poverty, is hard to shake. Lancaster brings the full tragic dimension to the role, and of course fits the athletic shoes. South Sea Woman is a WWII yarn in which a mouth Marine (Lancaster) finds himself court-martialed for some colorful activities on a Pacific island. Chuck Connors and Virginia Mayo are also in on the lightweight plot, which doesn't add up to much. His Majesty O'Keefe emphasizes Lancaster with his shirt off, a useful tactic in an otherwise humdrum account of a 19th-century adventurer in the South Seas. You might see the outline of a political parable if you squint hard, but mostly this is a slice of Technicolor exoticism. Jumping ahead considerably, Executive Action is a grim 1973 film that lays out an argument in favor of conspiracy in the JFK assassination. Lancaster and Robert Ryan lend their formidable authority to this low-budget film, which is much quieter in approach than Oliver Stone's JFK (and yet eerier because of that). It also shows how gracefully Lancaster had aged. Vintage cartoons, some Joe McDoakes shorts, and trailers fill out the usual Warners extras. --Robert Horton
Includes: The Flame and the Arrow (1950), Jim Thorpe All-American (1951), His Majesty O'Keefe (1954), South Sea Woman (1953), and Executive Action (1973).
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The Flame and the Arrow
Sale Price: $37.95
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An evil hessian warlord seeks to gain control over the land of dardo the arrow. Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 10/23/2007 Starring: Burt Lancaster Virginia Mayo Run time: 88 minutes Rating: Nr
Still in his first flush of muscular stardom, Burt Lancaster romps through this costume adventure in full awareness of his movie-star dazzle. The story is a Robin Hood-tinged yarn set in 12-century Lombardy, where ace archer Lancaster finds himself an unlikely rebel leader against the evil lord (Frank Allenby)--actually, our hero just wants to get his kidnapped son back. Oh, and maybe win the hand of the fair Virginia Mayo. Nobody from director Jacques Tourneur on down seems to have taken the story very seriously, which leaves plenty of room for the odd strolling minstrel (Norman Lloyd in puckish form), good-bad romantic rival (Robert Douglas), or mute sidekick. The latter is played by Nick Cravat, the stumpy and swarthy acrobat who had performed alongside Lancaster in their circus careers (he would return in The Crimson Pirate, the best-known of Lancaster's swashbucklers). Here, the two men execute a series of glorious physical stunts, showing off their crack timing and willingness to risk life and limb. That's really the appeal of the picture, along with Ernest Haller's Oscar-nominated Technicolor photography and the lavish Italy-by-way-of-Burbank studio sets. --Robert Horton
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Pyle PLBS122 Dual 12-Inch 1000 Watt Bass Box
Sale Price: $92.89
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Dual 12" high power 4-ohm subwoofer 800-watt max power handling Specially treated black rubber edge suspension 2" aluminum voice coilBlue flame polypropylene coneRear vented designLED light diodes PLBS122: 30" W x 14 1/8" H x 14" D
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More Info On Flame Arrow:

Oil From Ancient Times
Many people are surprised to hear that we’ve been using oil for almost seven thousand years. At first, we used oil that seeped to the surface in the form of thick black tar. In the Middle East, there is a huge oil reserve underground. In this area, there have been enormous oil seeps of bitumen, oil springs and oil-bearing rock. Oil has been readily available for use in this area since ancient times.
Oil was even effectively used in the time of the caveman. During the Stone Age, man used the bitumen tar to repair pottery and to seal water containers so that they would not leak. Oil and tar was also used in the Stone Age to make bricks and mortar. Not all ancient men were cave dwellers. Some, in the Middle East, were actually marsh dwellers. They are the ones that created bricks and mortar from the thick, black, sticky tar that they had readily available in their bitumen seeps. The area where they lived often flooded. Their oil and tar homes kept them safe and waterproofed from these floods. Entire cities were built of these bricks and mortars in Babylonian times. The oil trade was the catalyst for industrialization in the Middle East.
The next use of oil in ancient times, which we know about, was when ancient man started coating their boats with oil. They knew about the waterproof properties of oil and tar, which led to this very effective practice. Boats were made of reed. Bitumen kept them from leaking. The practice quickly spread around the world. Sailors would always be stained black from working in these bitumen sealed boats. They eventually became known as tars from all of the black stains that they had. The practice of caulking boats with bitumen remained unchanged for thousands of years. It only ended when people started switching to metal and fiberglass for boat production in modern times.
Currently, we use oil in all of its forms. In the past, oil and gas were considered flammable, dangerous and too thin to use for any practical purposes. Bitumen was mainly used as a glue and a waterproofing agent. The Persians were the first to use the thinner forms of oil. They realized that the flammable properties could be very useful in battle. This was the beginning of modern warfare. Flaming arrows quickly turned into fiery bombs made with bitumen.
The Chinese were the first people to drill for oil and spark a revolution. Purely by accident, they discovered that when drilling for salty brine water that they could get to oil. We don’t know if they used the actual oil, but we do know that they used the natural gas that they discovered to boil the brine and get the salt out. Companies like Triple Diamond Energy use the same drilling principles today.
About the Author
About the Author: Bob Jent is the president of Triple Diamond Energy Corp. Triple Diamond Energy Corp specializes in acquiring the highest quality prime oil and gas properties. For more information, visit http://www.triplediamondenergycorp.blogspot.com.
what is the best way to make a flaming arrow???
using TP does not work
If you are referring to a flaming arrow as lighting a campfire ... here you go:
**The Powered Flaming Arrow**
This next variation is a much more complex, but much cooler. It can be done in an area where the closest tree is up to 200 yards away.
Constructing this modified version takes a while longer, but if it is set up correctly, it is well worth the effort.
For this version you will need to use some kind of wire instead of kite string. This is a little more expensive, especially if you need a couple hundred feet. Using insulated wire works better than bare metal.
Take your wire and fasten it onto a stake in towards the back of the fire ring. Run the other end up into a tree making sure that the wire is clear of branches.
Now the fun part, take a flare, a dowel, a model rocket engine (size B or C), and some duck tape. With this assemble a unit where the dowel is taped above the flare, and the engine behind the dowel. Once you have made some kind of assembly (make sure the flare is pointing forwards and the engine is pointing backwards) cut 3 pieces of the wire into about 4 inch segments. Make a loop in the middle, and fasten the 3 loops to the flare assembly making sure you put the loops on the main wire first.
Tie a string to the flare and pull it up into the tree. Now put an ignitor in the engine and hook it up to a battery ignitor. Now you are ready to build your fire. Remember to put plenty of dry tinder so it will easily catch when the dowel hits. Suggestionfor use - a bag of pine shaving hampster litter.
*Hint: Have the dowel extend out past the flare so when it hits the stake in the fire pit it protects the flare from snuffing out.
When the participants arrive have one person up in the tree ready with a lighter to light the flare. The MC of the fire should have some kind of script like, "I call upon the spirits of the trees to send forth a ball of fire to light our fire!" This can be adapted and modified to make it more special and magical. Once this is said, the flare is to be lit, wait a few seconds, and ignite the engine. If all this is done correctly your flare should come speeding into the fire ring, it will be dark for a few seconds, then your fire will come alive.
New on DVD this week
THE HURT LOCKER (2009, Summit, R, $27) — Under Kathryn Bigelow's taut direction, the first great Iraq War movie dazzles on many levels at once. It's an explosive action thriller, a beautifully acted character study, and a spellbinding expose about how war can become as intoxicating as a drug.
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This entry was written by
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December 26, 2008 at 11:07 pm, filed under
Archery and tagged
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