I believe the "o" stamp, by consensus anyway, is a "position marker" used by workers to be able to tell the location of "down" on the reverse of a piece, so they would know where an attachment should go (in this case, so they would know that the bottom curvature of the loop would be placed correctly). This was once thought to be an S&L indicator, but the mark is also found on other pieces. Nothing to do, really, with Juncker.
Again, this is an S&L type set of Oakleaves, detectable by the shape of the curved line next to the righthand set of leaves and also by the flaw between the line and the second inboard leaf.
Again, this is an S&L type set of Oakleaves, detectable by the shape of the curved line next to the righthand set of leaves and also by the flaw between the line and the second inboard leaf.
Comment