Hello from Sheffield, England! I am an 18 year old who's Grandfather served in WW1, I have several medals, newspaper articles from 1918 as as some other miscellaneous items. I made a video with the items in the hopes that someone could shed some light on them, I will also get around to scanning the paper works later but for now here is the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1SQ2v1gy1MY
Medal card of Heiser, Gustav Corps Regiment No Rank Middlesex Regiment G/45999 Private Date 1914-1920 Catalogue reference WO 372/9 Dept Records created or inherited by the War Office, Armed Forces, Judge Advocate General, and related bodies Series War Office: Service Medal and Award Rolls Index, First World War Piece Hampton E - Holland D Image contains 1 medal card of many for this collection
Number of image files: 1 Image Reference: 134265 / 21868 Format and Version: PDF 1.2 Part Number: 1 Size (KB): 346 Number of Pages: 1 Price (£): 2.00 Total Price (£): 2.00
If your Grandfather's name was Gustav Heiser you might like to purchase an image of the card but, perhaps more importantly, armed with his Regimental Number (G/45999) you would be in a much better position to talk to the Regimental museum. I think they relocated fairly recently and probably need all the detail you can give them to be able to help you further.
Once you have his Battalion either from the museum or from the medal card you will be in a good position to find out more about his movements and actions with the Regiment - see http://www.1914-1918.net/msex.htm
And I think that "shopping list" constitutes the parts for a radio receiver (an amplified crystal set). If he understood German he might have heard some very interesting things with the assembled device but I'm not sure that such intelligence-gathering was a regimental (or even divisional) responsibility.