These are the before and after pictures. The left is the picture of the radio as it was listed on ebay, although I have lightened it considerable so that some detail can be seen. I bought this radio for $13 and when you add another $10 or so for shipping, its questionable as to whether it was a good deal. I The "after" shows that the radio turned out rather nice, so it probably worked out well for the price.

The radio arrived (surprisingly) in one piece. The top veneer was missing and one of the sides was beyond repair, so I wound up replacing the veneer on both. The bottom black band of veneer was gone or so disintegrated that I had to replace it as well. This picture shows radio after being glued and partially sanded.

Here's a picture fully stripped.
This Radio ran off of a 32 volt DC power supply which was used on some farms. Windmills would capture energy and store it in batteries. I was lucky that the whole thing wasn't shot because it had a plug that looked like a regular 110 VAC plug. I've heard of people plugging in these sets to modern receptacles and ruining all the tubes.
In order to even begin to see if the radio had any hope, I needed to construct a 32 volt power supply. I built a bread-board-style supply using a power transformer from Radio Shack, a bridge rectifier and a resistor and capacitor. Here's a look at the insides of the supply.
The chassis was another rodent mess. The choke had been bitten through and numerous wires had been gnawed. The chassis was severely rusted, so I opted to paint it black.
Although it is not original, it looks pretty good. After all of my restoration efforts, the best I could get out of the radio was one faint station and some oscillation. I haven't exactly given up on it yet, its just on the back burner. I still need a knob too and the estuation never cleaned up from its green tarnish.