The wood rod has four sections, is about 7.5-feet long, has a butt cap labeled "SWAN PATENTS," has a built-in single-action reel with one raised pillar, and - believe it or not - has a cricket cage fastened to the rod in front of the reel.

The line leaves the reel, goes under a rod that spans the cricket cage, through a ring guide at the front of the cage, and along the rod, where it passes through other ring guides attached to the ferrules, and finally through the rod's tip-top.

The cricket cage has a removeable rectangular cover plate.
Though the combo appears home-made, could it have been manufactured commercially in some other country?
Has anyone seen guides attached to the ferrules before?
Can anyone identify what the "Swan Patents" are? Were they granted for fishing equipment? Could this combo be for some-non-angling use?
Can anyone suggest why the cricket cage was placed in front of the reel, rather than behind it?
Inquiring minds are flummoxed.