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Antiques tend to come around


Published: Sun, June 8, 2008 @ 12:00 a.m.

Collectors can tell you strange stories about how an antique or collectible will come in and out of their lives until at last it finds a home with them.

We chased a large dresser for 10 years through several auctions, always the under-bidder. One day the dealer called to tell us he was closing his shop and would sell us the piece at a bargain price. It is now in our bedroom.

Recently, a buyer at a Crocker Farm auction in York, Pa., finally got the item of his dreams after 30 years of following it through three collections.

The unique item was a water cooler in the shape of a woman.

It was made in Taunton, Mass., in July 1824 and the words “Betsy Baker is my name” were incised on it.

Alas, Betsy’s head was missing, so the cooler sold for $34,500.

Experts can only guess what the price would be if the head could be found.

So don’t despair if you can’t buy that special collectible now. If it’s meant for you, another chance will come your way.

Q. My uncle died a few years ago and we were given an old metal box that held many of his childhood mementos. One is an Old Maid card game with 54 round-cornered cards. It was made by the Milton Bradley Co. of Springfield, Mass. The number 4907 is under the company’s address. The cards are black, white and reddish-orange. Some of the character’s colorful names are Copper Mike, Mose Snow, Hobart Bran, Cosmetic Cora, Flapper Fan, Tailspin Paul, Lena Wile and Sailor Al K. Hall. It’s a complete set in the original box. Is the card game worth anything?

A. Milton Bradley opened a lithography company in Springfield in 1860. He invented his company’s first published game, “The Checkered Game of Life,” in 1866, and by 1880 he expanded into manufacturing jigsaw puzzles. The card game we know as Old Maid was probably invented long ago in the Far East. Milton Bradley Co. has published several versions of Old Maid with various numbers of cards. The four-digit number on your box doesn’t help date the deck, but the fact that the cards are not in full color suggests they might have been made during the Depression. Your deck is larger than most Old Maid sets. An Old Maid game identical to yours recently sold online for $36.

Q. I have a solid brass pail that’s stamped on the bottom “H.W. Haydens, patent Dec. 16, 1851, manufactured by the Ansonia Brass Co.” Can you give me an approximate value?

A. Hiram Washington Hayden (1820-1904) was an inventor who patented a design for brass kettles in 1851. Pails like yours have sold recently for $100 to $150.

Q. My friend is a direct descendent of Roger Williams. She has a pitcher that has been in the family for years. Around the sides, there’s a picture of Williams with American Indians, the date 1630, a portrait of Williams and a copy of an Indian covenant. The borders and part of the decorations are orange, yellow, blue and green. The bottom says “Roger Williams Jug Made by J. Wedgwood & Son’s, Etruria, for Messrs. Warren & Wood, Providence, Rhode Island.” Have you ever seen another pitcher like this?

A. Yes. The pitcher is part of a commemorative series made by Wedgwood, probably in 1936, that was sold by Rhode Island gift shops. Another similar pitcher pictures Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, perhaps because of his many visits to the state and his famous poem about the Jewish cemetery in Newport. Several of these commemorative pitchers have auctioned this year for about $200 each.

Q. I found a box of 12 silver balls filled with some kind of liquid. Each ball is marked “Silverice” with a patent number I can’t read and “Fifth Ave., Baltman & Co., New York.” What can you tell me about them?

A. The company name on the balls is “B. Altman & Co.,” not Baltman. B. Altman, founded in 1865 by Benjamin Altman, was a big department store at Fifth Avenue and 34th Street in New York City. It later expanded into a chain of stores, but filed for bankruptcy in 1989. The last B. Altman store closed in 1990. Silverice Balls were marketed in the early 1930s by Silverice Inc. of New York City. The company’s headquarters were on Lexington Avenue. Ads at the time explained that you should freeze the balls and use them as you would use ice cubes. The ads also said that “the water inside them is hermetically sealed” and that the balls “are much more convenient than ice cubes.” But the idea never took off. In the 1930s, a box of six Silverice balls sold for $5. They probably wouldn’t sell for much more today.

Tip

To remove the odor in a closed chest or trunk, try spreading cat litter on the inside. Close the drawer or lid for several days. Repeat until the odor is gone. Then wash the inside and let it dry.

XThe Kovels answer as many questions as possible through the column. By sending a letter with a question, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names and addresses will not be published. We cannot guarantee the return of any photograph, but if a stamped envelope is included, we will try. The volume of mail makes personal answers or appraisals impossible. Write to Kovels, The Vindicator, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019. Visit www.Kovels.com for more information.

2008 by Cowles Syndicate Inc.


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