Southeastern Antiquing and Collecting Magazine July 2014
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Transcript of Southeastern Antiquing and Collecting Magazine July 2014
urfreesboroAntiques Show 2014
47th Annual
Middle Tennessee Expo Center1209 Park Ave. • Murfreesboro, TN 37129
Managed by: Virginia HallettHome: 270-237-5205 • Cell: 270-991-0907
www.murfreesboroantiqueshow.com
Friday, July 18th - 10am-6pmSaturday, July 19th - 10am-6pm
Sunday, July 20th - 11am-4pm
Silver Repair Available
Auction House & Gallerywww.EliteAuction.com
Upcoming Auctions:• July 12th - Decorative Arts Sale• July 26th - Decorative Arts Sale• Sept. 20th - Fine Asian Carvings & Works of Art
Quality Consignments Now Being Accepted For These And All Sales!
Auctions held every two weeks!
Location: 1034 Gateway Blvd. Ste. 106-108Boynton Beach, FL 33426
Phone: (561) 200-0893 • Toll Free: 800-991-3340
Fla license # AB2984
Specialists of the South_07.14_SEA_Gloss
14% Buyer’s Premium, As-Is, Where-IsAll Sales Final – AU#3226 AB#2366
THE SPECIALISTS OF THE SOUTH, INC.850-785-2577
Featuring many wonderful furniture pieces dating from the mid-20th century to the present day, decorative accessories galore,
cameras, counter-top radios from the 1940s, decorative ceiling lights from the 1960s, single and double candelabras;
lamps (some ornate), Dresden Porcelain, Lefton William and Mary figurines, Christmas serving dishes (Fritz & Floyd) and tablecloths (Lenox), unique wooden serving trays, fine linens, Gorham china, ladies’ hats, furs, evening bags, entertainment and hostess items, sterling and silverplate flatware sets by International, Mepocoware Luster cannisters, woodworking tools, books on antique furniture and woodworking, carpentry and hobby items, canings supplies,
stained glass supplies, cornice boards, fern stands, much more.
ON-SITE ESTATE AUCTIONPAUL H. (“BILLY”) EUBANKS LIVE AND INTERNET
1219 MARIE ANN BOULEVARD, PANAMA CITY, FL 32401Live Saturday, JULY 26, 2014 at 8 a.m. (CDT)
Previews by appointment and on auction day, 7-8 a.m.Online bidding via LiveAuctioneers.com and Invaluable.com
www.specialistsofthesouth.comTruly a treasure trove of
ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES
�Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Modern Facility • Former Wal-Mart
57,000 Sq. Ft. • 4 Acres of Parking
Large Secured Showcase Gallery
Flea Mall & antique Center
OPEN7DAYS!
1605 Asheville Rd. • Leeds, Alabama 35094400 Dealers • Open 7 Days • 10am-6pm • Easy Access Off I-20
From Birmingham: Take Exit 144-A, make a right, go half a mile andwe are on the left. From Atlanta: Take Exit 144-B
Limited Booth Space Available! (205) 699-2499
BAMA
GARDENDALEFLEA MALL & ANTIQUE CENTER
2405 Decatur Highway • Gardendale(205) 631-7451
www.gardendalefleamall.com
ANTIQUES • COLLECTIBLES • FURNITURE • NEW & USED ITEMS
From I-65 North: Take exit 272 (turn right) Go to 2nd light and turn left onto Hwy. 31 N. We are 1/4 mile on the right.
Over 300 DealersLimited Booth Rental Available
44,000 Square Foot Facility
Fully Stocked Showcase Gallery
Floor Space Packed With Unique and Hard-to-Find Antiques
& Collectibles
Dealer Inquiries Welcome
Air Conditioned, Modern Facility
2 Large Floors
Downstairs Now Open
Indoor Loading & Unloading
Open 7 Days: 10AM-6PM
ALABAMA’S LARGESTTREASURE CHEST!
ALABAMA’S LARGESTTREASURE CHEST!
www.bamafleamall.com
� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Frank Sinatra: “All Aboard!” By John Aaron
SINATRA THE ENIGMA. Frank Sinatra was vast, complex and controversial. Since his death in 1998 at age 82, it seems like a new book comes out every year outlining his remarkable career and promising that the author has gotten to the root of what Sinatra was really like. No one gets it entirely right because Frank was a many-faceted person, and people became familiar only with those aspects of his personality he chose to show them. Over the years, I interacted with him as a musician, piano technician and fellow toy train enthusiast. I might just as well have been dealing with three different people. Add to this the legends and rumors that surrounded him—most of which he neither confirmed nor denied—and it’s no wonder he was a hard character to nail down. I eventually decided not to attempt to do what so many others failed to accomplish. Therefore, I will confine my narrative to our mutual hobby of collecting and operating toy trains. All aboard! SINATRA THE COLLECTOR. Frank collected and operated toy trains, a hobby that should not be confused with model railroading. Toy trains are the big, heavy, colorful,
noisy electric trains that were most popular from the 1920s to 1960s and were a fixture under most families’ Christmas trees. Almost every major department store had an operating layout on display during the holiday season. As a youngster growing up in Hoboken, N.J., Frank made the pilgrimage to Manhattan whenever possible to view the department store holiday layouts and the year-round showroom layouts at the Lionel and American Flyer headquarters. Most of us who collect toy trains got hooked on them as kids. Operating them on our home layouts now takes us back to our childhood times. The hobby has wide appeal to people in high stress professions. For example, of the nearly 30,000 active toy train enthusiasts in the United States, the largest single professional group represented is doctors, followed by corporate CEOs and CFOs, lawyers, business owners and clergymen. People in show business, although the smallest professional group, are naturally the most visible. Besides Mr. “S,” there is Neil Young, Rod Stewart, Mandy Patinkin and Joe Regalbuto (“Frank” on the Murphy Brown TV series). Now deceased, there was also Jackie Gleason, Tom Snyder, Ward Kimball, Dudley Moore, Arthur Godfrey, Tommy Dorsey and Gary Coleman. In my more than 50 years in the hobby, I have had the pleasure of visiting the home layouts of many of these famous collectors. Many celebrity train layouts can be viewed via the Internet.1
IT'S HUGE!
Voted Area's Best
Antique Mall
Tour buses welcome! A few booth spaces are still available for quality dealers!
ANGEL'S ANTIQUEand Flea Mall
In Historic Opelika, Alabama• Located just 1 block off I-85 (Exit 62)
• Corner of 431 and Old 280 • Over 65,000 Square Feet...monstrous!• East Alabama's Largest Antique Mall
• Tremendous Tourist, Local & Dealer Trafficopen 7 Days: mon.-sat. 10-7 Cst, sun. 1-5 Cst
(334) 745-3221 • www.angelsmall.info
450+Dealers!
Angels Antiques.qrt.H..10.2009_SEA.indd
IT'S HUGE!
Voted Area's Best
Antique Mall
Tour buses welcome! A few booth spaces are still available for quality dealers!
ANGEL'S ANTIQUEand Flea Mall
In Historic Opelika, Alabama• Located just 1 block off I-85 (Exit 62)
• Corner of 431 and Old 280 • Over 65,000 Square Feet...monstrous!• East Alabama's Largest Antique Mall
• Tremendous Tourist, Local & Dealer Trafficopen 7 Days: mon.-sat. 10-7 Cst, sun. 1-5 Cst
(334) 745-3221 • www.angelsmall.info
450+Dealers!
IT'S HUGE!
Voted Area's Best
Antique Mall
Tour buses welcome! A few booth spaces are still available for quality dealers!
ANGEL'S ANTIQUEand Flea Mall
In Historic Opelika, Alabama• Located just 1 block off I-85 (Exit 62)
• Corner of 431 and Old 280 • Over 65,000 Square Feet...monstrous!• East Alabama's Largest Antique Mall
• Tremendous Tourist, Local & Dealer Trafficopen 7 Days: mon.-sat. 10-7 Cst, sun. 1-5 Cst
(334) 745-3221 • www.angelsmall.info
450+Dealers!
2918 20th Avenue • Valley, AL 36854Conveniently located off Exit 79 of I-85
334-768-8463 • Fax: 334-768-8464www.timelessantiques.us
Timeless Antiques.8th.H..12.08_SEA.indd
2918 20th Avenue • Valley, AL 36854Conveniently located off Exit 79 of I-85
334-768-8463 • Fax: 334-768-8464www.timelessantiques.us
Timeless Antiques.8th.H..12.08_SEA.indd
The Chairman of the Board was also the CEO of a million-dollar train collection.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. �Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
SINATRA’S TRAIN LAYOUT. Hoboken is one of New Jersey’s premier communities, but that was not the case in the Roaring Twenties when the youngster Frank Sinatra started to take an interest in toy trains. Hoboken was the low-rent district. In later life, Frank would quip, “I was born in Hoboken, but today, I couldn’t afford to live there.” Most folks in his neighborhood could not buy electric trains which have always been costly, but so the story goes, Frank’s mother pawned an old fox fur piece she had acquired and bought him his first set of trains. Another often-heard tale has Frank and various friends jumping aboard a streetcar every now and then and traveling the dozen miles or so to the Lionel Train factory where they would rummage through the trash bins after hours in search of discarded train parts. From the parts, they would cobble together whole trains. Typical of the Sinatra mystique, Frank never confirmed or denied either story. In his glory years, Sinatra would stroll the Lionel factory floors with Joshua Lionel Cowen himself as Frank picked out the latest Lionel offerings to add to his growing collection. Frank collected trains from almost all the major manufactures the world over. The value of his collection eventually exceeded a million dollars. Of course, once the word got out that Sinatra loved toy trains, many came to hitm as gifts, including an antique locomotive courtesy of the Vatican. Tommy Dorsey, one of the first bandleaders Frank worked for, had a huge train layout in the basement of his Bernardsville, New Jersey, mansion which Frank enjoyed visiting and operating. Frank was also quite taken with the 1949 Macy’s holiday display layout in New York. Sinatra’s personal toy train layout not only surpassed both the Dorsey and Macy’s layouts, but it also gave the Lionel Corporation’s New York showroom layout a good run for the money! The Sinatra collection and layout was not about owning the most toys. It was about fun. I never saw him more relaxed than when he was cleaning or oiling a locomotive or at the controls while four or five trains roared around his layout. During the holidays, Frank often had neighborhood kids in to not only look at but to actually operate his layout. The fact that some trains were occasionally damaged by the overly
enthusiastic kids did not upset him. Perhaps he remembered his childhood. Frank’s fabulous layout and collection were housed in a special building at his Rancho Mirage estate in Palm Springs, Calif., known simply as “The Compound.” The two-plus acre, walled compound sat on the seventeenth fairway of the Tamarisk Country Club and as I recall, consisted of about eight buildings, tennis and handball courts, and a swimming pool. Some of the buildings were small houses for guests. One was Frank’s art studio (another hobby). One was a replica of a Santa Fe railroad caboose that was built up from an actual railroad flat car. I think it was used as a barber shop and exercise room. The trains resided in a replica of an actual railroad station that was located in Ramsey, N.J. Lionel also made a reasonable model of this same station. Sinatra crammed his station from the floor to the rafters with wooden display cases and shelves brimming with trains of every type and manufacturer. The huge layout dominated the center of the room. Five trains could be operated simultaneously on the layout while others ran on separate loops or around the ceiling. A prominent area of the layout depicted Frank’s hometown of Hoboken. Another area of the station served as a library nook for Sinatra’s many train books and periodicals. MR.”S” AND ME. In the early ‘60s, I worked in Hollywood as a studio musician and songwriter for several major record labels. On occasion, I would have reason to interact with Sinatra, and we developed a nodding acquaintance. When I opted for the more quiet lifestyle of a piano technician, Frank’s long-time pianist Bill Miller would call upon me for piano work, which eventually led me to occasionally service Frank’s personal pianos. At some point, Sinatra saw my photo in one of the train magazines he regularly read and made the connection. He looked me up in the national directory of the Train Collectors Association, of which we were both members, and the next time he was performing in my area, he called me to ask if he could visit my layout. Since we were both night owls, we agreed that a late-night visit was best for security reasons. Frank arrived
Continued on Page 6
Frank Sinatra’s train layout.
Frank Sinatra at Liederkranz Hall, N.Y.,
ca. 1947. (Photo: Gottlieb Collection, Library
of Congress.)
� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
www.antiquingmagazine.com
July2014
Southeastern Antiquing and Collecting
PO Box 510, Acworth, GA 30101-0510 Phone: 770-974-6495 Toll Free: 1-888-388-7827
Fax: 770-975-7286 Toll Free Fax: 1-877-218-4139 Editorial Email: [email protected] Advertising Email: [email protected]
Published by McElreath Printing and Publishing Inc.
Jim McElreath, Publisher Mike McLeod, Editor
Advertising Sales & Editorial
Ken Hall ...................Advertising & Contributing Writer Mike McLeod ...........Advertising & Contributing Writer
Graphic Design & Art Direction Jessica Nelson ...........Graphic Designer & Art Director
Website
www.antiquingmagazine.com ©2014 by McElreath Printing and Publishing, Inc.,
Publishers of Southeastern Antiquing and Collecting. All rights reserved.
No portion of this publication may be reprinted or reproduced without express permission of the publisher.
This MonTh’s Cover sTory:
Vol.18 www.antiquingmagazine.com No.7
Frank Sinatra: “All Aboard!”by John Aaron ......................................... p. 2 As Another Cast Member Passes, Will The Value of Hogan’s Heroes Collectibles Rise? by Mike McLeod ..................................... p.24
How To Get Where You Are Going, by Pam Avery Printed ............................. p.31
DePArTMenTs
FeATures
Antique Shop and Mall Directory ..................................... 35 Auction Calendar ................................................................ 30 Civil War Collector ............................................................. 22 Classifieds............................................................................. 40 French Flea Market Finds .................................................. 31 Gavels & Paddles .................................................................. 8 Name This Famous Antique................................................ 14 Name This Famous Person ................................................. 19 News ..................................................................................... 32 Show Calendar .................................................................... 25 What's Selling on eBay? ..................................................... 16
Get the point...
for $276K
SoutheAStern Antiquing And ColleCting MAgAzine
Page 14
Page 12
John Aaron is a semi-retired master piano tuner who became friends with the mega-star Frank Sinatra because they shared a
common interest—collecting toy trains. Read his insightful article to see a side of Frank Sinatra that most have never seen before.
You want this seat
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. �Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
southeastern Antiquing & Collecting Display Ad Directory
Also see shop and Mall Directory for other listings
ALABAMAAlexander City
Longleaf Antique Mall .......................8
Gardendale
Gardendale Flea Mall & Antiques ......1
Heflin
Midway Sales .....................................6
Leeds
Bama Flea Mall & Antique Center .....1
Montgomery
Eastbrook Flea Mkt. ...........................7
Oneonta
Nickels’ Place .....................................7
Opelika
Angels Antique & Flea Mall ..............2
Prattville
Memories Flea An’tique Mall ............7
Prattville Pickers .................................8
Valley
Timeless Antiques ...............................2
Wetumpka
Wetumpka Flea Market & Antiques ...7
FLORIDABellaire Bluffs
Collum Antiques ...............................18
Daytona Beach
Shops of Daytona Beach ..................21
DeLand
Shops of DeLand ..............................21
Jacksonville
Avonlea .............................................23
Leesburg
Morning Glori Antique Mall ............23
Manatee County
Shops of Manatee County ................22
Micanopy
Smiley’s Antique Mall .....................18
Punta Gorda
Shops of Punta Gorda .......................20
Sarasota
Shops of Sarasota .............................19
St. Petersburg
Shops of St. Petersburg.....................22
GEORGIA
Austell
4th Time Around ..............................12
Deja-Vous .........................................12
Sweet Pickins ......................................9
Bolingbroke
Antiques at Bolingbroke .....................9
Bowdon
Shops of Carrollton, Bowdon
& Bremen ...........................................9
Bremen
Shops of Carrollton, Bowdon
& Bremen ...........................................9
Canton
Antique Village Mall ........................10
Carrollton
Shops of Carrollton, Bowdon
& Bremen ...........................................9
Clarkesville
Shops of Clarkesville ........................15
Commerce
Shops of Commerce ........................14
Covington
Church Street ....................................14
Greensboro
Pinch of the Past ...............................15
Griffin
Shops of Griffin ................................11
Jasper/Talking Rock
Shops of North Georgia ....................11
Kennesaw
Big Shanty ..........................................9
Lake Park
Farmhouse Antiques .........................14
Madison
Pinch of the Past ...............................15
McDonough
Peachtree Antique Centre .................15
Savannah
Jere’s Antiques .................................10
Pinch of the Past ...............................15
Senoia
Shops of Senoia ................................13
Tryone
Shops of Tyrone ...............................13
Peach State Depression Glass Club ..26
Scott’s Antique Market .....................25
Louisiana
Looking Glass Productions ...............28
Ponchatoula ......................................26
North Carolina
ICA Metrolina Show ........................29
Cashiers Antique Market ..................26
Tennessee
Elegant & Depression Glass Show ...27
Murfreesboro
Antique Show .........Inside Front Cover
Nashville Flea Market ......................28
Virginia
Virginia Beach Antiques Show ........27
Virginia Highlands Festival ..............25
AUCTIONS
Sacramento, CA
American Bottle
Auctions. ................. Inside Back Cover
Boynton Beach, FL
Elite Decorative
Arts. ........................Inside Front Cover
Pensacola, FL
Specialists of
the South. ................Inside Front Cover
Atlanta, GA
Ahlers & Ogletree. .............Back Cover
Commerce, GA
Rockabilly Auction Co. ....................30
Jasper, GA
Jeff Dobson & Assoc. Auctions ......30
SUPPLIERS, INFO& SERVICES
ACNA ...................................................40
Asheford Institute ..................................29
Deborah Abernethy ...............................21
Mark Thompson Coins .........................40
R.S. Goldberg Sterling Flatware ...........40
SE School of Auctioneering ..................30
Silver Queen ..........................................40
Table Settings Shopping Mall ...............40
KENTUCKYGlasgow
Robbin's Nest ....................................40
Russellville
McCormick Place .............................40
MISSISSIPPIBay St. Louis
Antique Maison ..................................7
NORTH CAROLINAFranklin Whistle Stop Antiques Mall ....... 32Sylva
Old School Antique Mall ........... 32
SOUTH CAROLINAGreenwood
Treasures Inn ....................................33
Aiken
Shops of Aiken .................................33
Charleston
Terrace Oaks Antique Mall ..............33
TENNESSEEMount Pleasant, Watertown
Shops of Middle Tennessee ..............17
Bolivar, Jackson
Shops of West Tennessee .................17 Kingsport
Kingsport .........................................16
VIRGINIANorfolk
A Touch of Mystery .........................34
Strasburg
Strasburg Emporium Antiques .........34
Williamsburg
Williamsburg Antique Mall ..............34
SHOWS & EVENTSFlorida
Looking Glass Productions ...............28
Georgia
Atlanta Gun Show ............................27
Lakewood 400 Antiques Market ......27
� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
around midnight along with his driver and a bodyguard, and we wound up playing with trains till around dawn. It is reasonable to ask why Sinatra would take an interest in me. Collecting toy trains has never been a hobby for the faint of wallet, and my income level was upper middle class at best. However, I could write, and so I did for almost all the major publications in the hobby. This led me to becoming a nationally
recognized train “expert” and much in demand as a speaker and clinician at train conventions and shows. This brought many people, who wanted to sell the old trains they found in dad’s attic after he passed away, to my door. Manufactures also mailed me their latest new trains in hopes I would mention them in one of my articles. Technically, these trains were loaned to me for review and would be picked up by a representative of the company sometime in the future. I’m still waiting. I also had many of my own trains from my youth. Trains were the only birthday or Christmas presents I ever asked for. They made a great foundation to build my collection on. During the 1970s and ‘80s, the general public had no interest in old toy trains, and piano-tuning clients often gifted me with boxes of trains they were anxious to rid their homes of. For Sinatra’s part, he had access to me, a knowledgeable train enthusiast with a first-class collection. More than that, however, we shared a lot of common interests. We both collected foreign trains from all over the world. Most collectors stick to American prototypes. Although most collectors prefer freight trains, both Frank and I favored passenger trains, and our collections were heavily weighted in their direction. Sinatra, of course, rode passenger trains frequently in the early years of his career. Many enthusiasts have a lot of trains in their collections for display purposes only that do not work. Frank and I both agreed that every item in a collection should be operable, and we spent a lot of extra time and money restoring our trains to top-running condition. Sinatra and I were also of the mind that no train was too rare or valuable to operate. We both owned the rare and highly coveted 1957 Lionel pink girl’s train sets. Although they were beyond valuable, we both frequently operated them on our layouts. Neither of us was much into the mint, never-opened, boxed train sets so many collectors strive to acquire. We both felt that toy trains were made to be toys and made to be played with. Over the years, we met up at train conventions, shows, swap meets, auctions, etc. We also frequented many hobby shops, after regular hours, of course, and visited numerous layouts of fellow train collectors. Toy trains transported Sinatra light years away from concerts, movies and his legendary Las Vegas Rat Pack. No glitz. No glamour. Just lots of fun! -------------------John Aaron is a semi-retired master piano tuner and technician. He blogs wonderful stories at http://johnaaronstories.blogspot.com.
1TM Books and Videos, www.tmbooks-video.com, a.k.a. Tom McComas Productions offers many videos of celebrities showing off their home layouts. The one on Frank Sinatra is excellent.
Frank Sinatra and Grace Kelly in High Society, 1956.
Frank in the 1940s.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. �Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
When you visit these fine shops, please tell them you saw their ad in Southeastern Antiquing and
Collecting Magazine
Antique Maison LLC111 No. 2nd StreetBay St. Louis, MS
(228)466-4848 • (228)493-6316Come back to the “Good Old Days” at Antique Maison
featuring the finest in all areas of antiques.Furniture • Linens • Jewelry • China • Gifts
Household Items • Collectibles • Art • PhotographyOriginal oil paintings, photography & jewelry from local artists
Open Mon. - Sat. 10-6, Sun. 12-5www.antiquemaison.com • [email protected]
40Dealers!
25,000 square feet of antiques and usedmerchandise of all kinds
5266 Hwy. 231 • Wetumpka, AL 36092(334) 567-2666
Monday-Saturday 10:00-6:00; Sunday 1:00-5:00
WetumpkaFlea Market and Antiques, LLC
Wetumpka.eighth.12.08_SEA.indd
Antiques: Furniture, Glassware, Jewelry, Hats.
Glass Eye Studio: hand blown gifts.
Nickels’ Place aNtiques
3615 County Hwy. 36 • Oneonta, AL 35121Open: Fri. & Sat. 9-5
205-590-1207 • 205-529-6251
Memories Flea Antique Mall.05.11_SEA
MemoriesFlea An’Tique Mall
23,000 Square Feet Over 100 Dealers1724-A E. Main St., Prattville, AL 36066
334-491-5800Mon. - Sat. 9-6 • Sunday 1-5
Only 2 Miles West Of Exit 179, I-65Next To Badcock’s On Left
� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Recent Auction Results From Near & Far
Gavels & Paddles
Pratville Pickers.Third.pg..10.11_SEA
The river region’s newesT and largesT anTique mall
Antique, Flea Market, Auction House
• 100,000 square feet• Heated and Cooled
A cAn’t miss while in AlAbAmAOpen 7 days a week
Less than 10 minutes off I-65 (Exit 179)
616 hwy. 82 w. • Prattville, Al
334-322-6564
Longleaf Antiqueand Flea Mall Inc.
H 45,000 sq. ft. Heated & Air Conditioned Building
H Ample ParkingH 250+ Dealer Spaces
H Easy Access from U.S. Hwy. 280
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 • Sun. 1-6
Vendor Space Available
256-234-3492705 Alex City
Shopping CenterAlexander City, AL
• Furniture • Jewelry• China • Porcelain
• Collectibles • Purses• Home Décor Items• Outdoor Furniture
Longleaf.12.08_SEA
By Ken Hall
Koons Popeye sculpture,$28.2 million, Sotheby’s A sculpture of the cartoon character Popeye by the late sculptor Jeff Koons sold for $28.165 million at a Contemporary Art Evening Sale held May 14 by Sotheby’s in New York City. The sculpture, the first of Popeye by Koons ever to appear at auction, was purchased by Steve Wynn, who said he
will install it at one of his casinos in Las Vegas. Also, Andy Warhol’s Six Self-Portraits soared to $30.125 million. Prices include 20% bp.
Babe Ruth pocket watch,$650,108, SCP Auctions Babe Ruth’s gold pocket watch from the 1948 celebration of the 25th anniversary of the opening of “The House That Ruth Built” sold for $650,108 in an internet Spring Auction held by SCP Auctions (wwwSCPAuctions.com) based in Laguna Niguel, Calif. Also, a 1965 Sandy Koufax autographed L.A. Dodgers game-worn home jersey brought $268,664; Satchel Paige’s 1971 National Baseball Hall of Fame induction ring went for $259,642; and a Jackie Robinson single-signed baseball, graded Mint 9, made $73,409. Prices include 20% bp.
Jefferson-signed document,$118,750, Swann Auction A 1792 printed copy of An Act Establishing a Mint, and Regarding the Coins of the United States, signed by Thomas Jefferson, sold for $118,000 at an auction of Printed & Manuscript Americana held April 8 by Swann Auction Galleries in New York City. Also, an 1820 manuscript book of Mexican recipes, Cuaderno de Guisos, by Ramona Garcia Rico, went for $21,250; and a first-edition copy of The Book of Mormon (Palmyra, N.Y., 1830), naming Joseph Smith as the “author and proprietor,” made $45,000. Prices include 25% bp.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. �Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Sam Doyle folk art,$204,000, Slotin An original folk art painting by Sam Doyle titled, St. Helena’s First Blak (sic) Midwife, sold for $204,000 at an auction named Delta Blues to Visual Blues held April 26-27 by Slotin Folk Art Auction in Buford, Ga. Also, William Hawkins’s Rider on Horseback fetched $43,200; a sugar chest in the shape of a desk realized $36,000; Chris Hipkiss’ Brought Up By The Sea breezed to $19,200; Mattie Lou O’Kelley’s Hurrying Home made $18,600; and Herman Bridgers’ Two Churchmens hammered for $13,200. Prices include a 20% bp.
Apple Barrel Antiques and Gifts II
Approx. 35,000 sq.ft. of antiques, gifts, furniture, glassware, Coke items.
Open 7 days: Mon.-Sat. 10-6;Sun. noon-5:30
1005 Alabama Ave., Bremen, GA770-537-1925
[email protected] us on Facebook
Checker Berry Shoppe
feathers & twigs5 0 6 M A P L E S T . C A R R O L L T O N , G A
VINTAGE MARKET“ G R A N D M A H A D I T , M A M A T H R E W I T O U T ,
& N O W W E ’ V E G O T I T ”O P E N M O N -S AT 1 0 -5 : 3 0
P H O N E : 7 7 0 - 2 1 4 - 9 1 9 1
Round Two Antiques & Décor
Antiques and décor, Webster’s chalk paint powder
15 booths under 1 roof
Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30; Sat. 10-3(770) 214-5599
728 Bankhead Hwy.Carrollton, GA 30117
Find us on Facebook
The Shops of Carrollton,Bowdon & Bremen, Ga.
SWEETPICKINS
AntiquesCollectiblesFurniture
Home DécorBuyers and Sellers
Welcome2749 Veterans Memorial
Highway, Austell, GA678-903-2776
www.sweetpickinsga.comEverything discounted 10%
per month (max 50%)Mon-Fri 12-6
Saturday 10-6
Something for everyone!50,000 sq. ft. of shopping, 100+ Dealers
Mon.-Sat. 10-6 • Sun. noon-61720 N. Roberts Rd., Kennesaw, GA 30144
770-795-1186
Big Shanty_07.14_SEA
www.bigshantyantiques.comwww.bigshantyauction.com
Caille slot machine,$90,000, Morphy’s A superb Caille double-upright floor model slot machine combining a 5-cent Centaur and 25-cent Big Six sold for $90,000 at an Antique Advertising & Coin-Op Auction held April 26-27 by Morphy’s Auctions in Denver, Pa. Also, a Cherri Bon syrup dispenser topped out at $31,200; a Grape Smash syrup dispenser coasted to $20,400; a Beats All syrup dispenser changed hands for $20,400; a 1911 Coca-Cola calendar fetched $17,400; and a Buster
Brown cigar tin went to a determined bidder for $14,400. Prices include 20% bp.
�0 Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Rhead art pottery vase,$570,000, John Moran A masterwork art pottery vase by Frederick H. Rhead and Agnes Rhead sold for $570,000 (a new world auction record for an American art pottery vase) at a Decorative & Fine Art Auction held April 29 by John Moran Auctioneers in Pasadena, Calif. Also, a large oil painting of the Roman countryside by Russian painter Feodor Matveef (1758-1826) brought $420,000 (a record for the artist); and an oil painting by Theodor Von Hormann (1840-1895) hammered for $180,000 (also a record). Prices include a 20 percent buyer’s premium.
Since 1976, Jere’s Antiques has catered to, and sold to, a wholesale trade of antiques dealers, designers and auction houses.We maintain our own warehouse in England and buy throughout all of
Britain and on the continent, in Belgium, Holland and France.We continue to import a 40-foot container of furniture every 10-12 days. We
inventory an incredible range of furniture, in all ages, styles and woods, in our33,000 square foot warehouse in Savannah.
All of our merchandise is truly priced for the wholesale trade. Whether you seek a period linen press or an Art Deco Vanity, we have it all. Looking for a
home or commercial bar? We have it all. Whether you deal in oak, mahogany, walnut or pine,
we have it all.There are very few importers left and even fewer still who can sell at a
true wholesale price. And not many maintain a large inventory of good, clean, saleable merchandise. There are very few that have a large turn-over of merchandise. There are very few that unload on a regular basis.
There is no one like Jere’s Antiques.
JERE’S ANTIQUES9 North Jefferson Street • Savannah, GA 31401
(912) 236-2815
Come see why we set the standard for importers of fine European furniture.www.jeresantiques.com
Fax: (912) 236-0274 • Email: [email protected]
There’sNO PLACE
LikeJErE’s!
since1976
Jeres.Half.10.2009_SEA
www.antiquevillagemall.com2175 Marietta Hwy. • Canton, GA 30114
Antiques, Collectibles & "Uniques".We buy estates. Dealer space available.
All major credit cards welcome.Exit 14 off I-575, Go N. toward Canton, we are 2 miles on the right
Claude Monet painting, $27 million, Christie’s An oil-on-canvas painting by Claude Monet (Fr., 1840-1926) titled, Nympheas (1907), sold for $27 million at an Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale held May 6 by Christie’s in New York City. Also, an oil on panel by Pablo Picasso (Sp./Fr., 1881-1973) titled, Portrait de femme (Dora Maar), painted in Paris in 1942, rose
to $22.565 million; Amedeo Modigliani’s 1919 oil painting Jeune homme roux assis brought $17.637 million; and Wassily Kandinsky’s 1909 oil on board titled, Strandszene went for $17.189 million. Prices include 20% bp.
George Harrison’s guitar,$657,000, Julien’s Auctions
George Harrison’s 1962 Rickenbacker 425 guitar, purchased by the late Beatle in 1963, sold for $657,000 at a Music Icons, Rebels & Legends Auction held May 17 by Julien’s Auctions (of Beverly Hills), in New York City. Also, Lady Gaga’s 1990 red Rolls-Royce Corniche III luxury automobile sped away for $125,000; Elvis Presley’s 1955 contract with his manager, Col. Tom Parker, garnered $93,750; Johnny Cash’s Martin acoustic guitar rose to $12,500; and Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler’s organ garnered $28,125. Prices include 20% bp.
Continued on Page 12
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
515 5
Hours: Mon. - Sat. 10-6Sunday 1-5
Great Treasure Hunting Fun!
The Antiques & Treasures Shop
Jewelry, Gifts, Pottery, Glassware, Collectibles, Primitives, Used Furniture, Nascar
706-253-7467Across from the Jasper Hospital
1227 B. East Church St. • Jasper, GA 30143
Hollyhocks of Talking Rock
19 Talonah St. • Talking Rock, GA 30175706-253-6000
Hours: Thurs.-Sat. 10-5 • Sun 12-5
• Antique Furniture • Glass, Pottery • Tools
• Collectibles • Children’s Items • Timberlake Throws
• Gourmet Foods • Decorative Accessories From Around the World
The Shoppes of North Georgia
Jasper • Talking Rock
N. Ga_Jasper_Group_09.12_SEA
The Shops of
Weekend Treasures125 South Hill St. • Griffin, Ga
Come In and Browse!Something For Everyone!
• Vintage • New• Handcrafted
Open Thurs.-Fri. 11-6; Sat. 11-5; Sun. 1-5
770-233-1559
Tiques & FleasAntiques • Collectibles • Gifts
(Corner of W. McIntosh & Vaughn Rd.)
770-265-1790
Sell • Buy • ConsignOpen
Fri.-Sun. 1-51511 Vaughn Road
Griffin, Ga.
47th Ave Antiques324 E. Broad St. #212
Griffin GA 30223
Wed-Sat 10-5
Located within the
Broad Street Mill
Laurie Stusak, 404-569-4760
We bring the past to your
present-Antiques,Decorative,
Garden Decor & just plain Junk
324 East Broad St., Suite 210Griffin, GA 30224
Located inside Broad Street MillOpen: Wed.-Sat. 11-5
770-233-6777
Holly’s HouseAntiques, Collectibles,
& Furniture900 South Pine Hill Road
Griffin, GA 30224
Open: Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6; Sunday 1-5
Find us on Facebook
Shop@11th AntiquesVoted Best Antique Shop
Antiques, gifts and consignmentBooth rental available
212 South 11th StreetGriffin, GA 30224
770.227.2349Thurs./Fri. 10-6; Sat. 10-5; Sun. 12:30-4:30
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Mason Decoy Factory duck,$690,000, Guyette & Deeter A one-of-a-kind, hollow, premier grade wood duck drake, made by the Mason Decoy Factory, sold for $690,000 (a new world auction record for the maker) at the 29th annual Spring Decoy Auction held April 24-25 by Guyette & Deeter (based in St. Michaels, Md.) at the Pheasant Run Resort in St. Charles, Ill. Also, a “slot neck” goose soared to $632,500; a one-of-a-kind decorative blue jay on a branch realized $59,800; and a redhead drake, made circa 1910 by Harry V. Shourds, flew away for $46,000. Prices include a 15% bp.
Ross Blade flint,$276,000, Morphy’s A Ross Blade, an exotic flint specimen from the Woodland period, Hopewell phase (2000-1500 B.P.), 8.5 inches long, sold for $276,000 at an auction of Prehistoric Stone Artifacts held May 17 by Morphy’s in Denver, Pa. Also, a Grayware headpot (circa 600 B.P.), from the Golden Lake Site in Mississippi County (Ark.), realized $78,000; an early Paleolithic translucent sugar quartz Clovis point (Fulton County, Ill.) reached $69,000; and Earl Townsend’s monumental 7-inch Corner Notch Blade made $64,800. Prices include 20% bp.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Senoia and Tyrone are located near eachother, off I-85 just south of Atlanta
The Historic Town of Tyrone, Ga., located in Fayette County, has become host to a multitude of antique opportunities. As you begin your journey through the downtown district, Tyrone offers three must-see shops within close proximity of each other. Start with Junkology, a quaint antique store featuring a wide variety of French collectibles and goods and home of the best little fabric warehouse south
beautifully displayed with farmhouse and barn pieces, as well as true vintage jewelry, accessories and home décor.
Turn the corner and you’ll be steps away from Spoon Sisters Tiques & Treasures, located in a restored, historic 1906 feed store. Spoon Sisters has an enormous collection of gas and oil advertising memorabilia, a country store carrying many locally made products, a huge garden area and over 20 dealers offering a variety of styles from primitive to mid-century. To get to Tyrone from Atlanta, take I-85 south to Fairburn-Peachtree City exit #61, turn left and drive four miles, then merge right onto the Senoia Road exit ramp. At the end of the ramp turn right. Welcome to Tyrone!
The Shops of Tyrone, Georgia
a vintage markerplace
Must-have merchandise(770) 689-7908
10:00 A.M - 6:00 P.M
770-487-0052spoonsistersantiquestreasures
The Shops of Historic Senoia, GeorgiaSenoia, Georgia was honored to host the Southern Living Idea
House in 2010 and is excited to announce Senoia will be the site of the 2012 Southern Living Idea House beginning in June. Senoia is also the backdrop for over 25 feature films, including Fried Green Tomatoes and Driving Miss Daisy, as well as popular television series such as Drop Dead Diva and the second season of Walking Dead. Named for Princess Senoyah, mother of the Chief of the Creek Indian Nation (William McIntosh), Senoia is home to a historic district filled with over 110 historic homes and churches. Main Street features well established antique shops, two bed-and-breakfast inns and an eclectic selection of one-of-a-kind gift shops.
Conveniently located 35 miles south of Atlanta, Senoia features restaurants that offer casual to fine dining. Take I-85 South to exit #61(Fairburn/Peachtree City) and turn left onto Hwy 74. Stay on Hwy. 74 for about 18 miles, crossing over Hwy. 54, passing The Avenue shops on your right. Continue several miles on Hwy. 74, passing a Publix and a Chick-fil-A on your left. Turn right at the traffic light onto Rockaway Rd., which becomes Main Street as one comes upon the historic district. Shop, stay and dine in this unique historic town. To learn more about Senoia, become a fan on Facebook at “enjoy Senoia, Georgia”.
Senoia is conveniently located 35 miles south of Atlanta, not far off Exit 61 (Hwy. 74) off I-85
Gail's Antiques22 Main Street
Senoia, GA 30276GWTW Collectibles • China • Furniture
• Antique Dolls • Glassware • QuiltsHand-made clothes for American Girl dolls!
Open Mon.-Sat. 11-5:30, Sun. 1-5770-599-9155 • 770-378-6627
Carriage Hou#e Antique# & Cu#tom FramingAntiques, Collectibles & Custom Frames in an
Authentic Carriage House
7412 E. Hwy. 16 • Senoia, Georgia 30276
770-599-6321Hours: Fri. & Sat.10-5 • Sun.1-5
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Name This Famous Antique: The Coronation Chair By Mike McLeod
Multiple dealers, located in the Old Harper’s Five & Dime Store in historic downtown.
Sports Collectables • Antique Toys/Tools Coke Collectables • China • Jewelry
Furniture • Collectables Consignments/Lay-aways Accepted
Open Tues.-Sat. 10-5, Sun 1-5, Closed Mon(706) 335-6268 • (770) 757-3078
1759 North Elm St.Commerce, GA 30529
Shops of Historic Commerce, Georgia
• Quality Antique Furniture • China and Collectible Glassware • Primitives •
Large Selection of NE Georgia folk art and pottery
Mon-Sat 10-5, Sun 1-5 • Email: [email protected]. ourtownantiques.com.
Conveniently located north and east of Atlanta, off I-85 (Exit 147)
Like us on Facebook!
Like us on Facebook!
The Hen’s Nest193 Pottery Factory Dr.Commerce, GA 30529
Furniture • Home Décor • Antiques Women’s Clothing • Handbags
Jewelry • New inventory arriving daily!
“Shop where the smart chicks shop!”Mon.-Wed. 10-6 • Thurs. - Sat. 10-7
Sun 1-6(706) 336-8239
Church Street Antique MarketA New Antique Market on the Historic Covington Square
Antique & Collectibles Market • Antiques & FurnishingsAlways Looking for Quality Dealers
Mon.-Thurs. 10-6, Fri. & Sat. 10-7
1115 Church St. • Covington, GA770-385-0452
email: [email protected]
Church St. Ants.8th.10.2009_SEA
Farmhouse AntiquesMulti-Dealer Mall
With a wide variety of vintage pottery, antiquarian books& ephemera, fishing collectibles, estate jewelry & more.
Open Sunday-Saturday 10-6
Lake Park, Georgia, I-75, Exit 5E, Behind Hardee’s
229-559-0199
Farmhouse.12.2013_SEA
Lake Park, Georgia, I-75, Exit 5
With a wide variety of glass, furniture, vintage pottery, old books, fishing collectibles, estate jewelry & more.
Open 7 days, 10-6
Ted Carlton of Utah and Sherron Lawson of Roswell, Ga., correctly identified the Coronation Chair. Residing in Westminster Abbey in London, the Coronation Chair has been used for the coronations of all English monarchs since 1308 who were actually crowned. (Two were not1.) It is also called King Edward’s Chair because he ordered it created to hold the Stone of Scone, which he had taken from Scotland. King Edward I ruled from 1272 to 1307. The Stone of Scone is shrouded in myths which say it was the stone Jacob used as a pillow in Bethel the night of his vision of Jacob’s Ladder. It is also said to have been originally used by the Irish for crowning their kings. However, geological research matches this red sandstone block with a quarry in Scotland. Putting the myths aside, the Stone of Scone was used for the coronation of Scottish kings at least as far back as the 800s A.D. Edward I captured the Stone of Scone in 1296 while fighting against the Scots. Edward sent the Stone of Scone to Westminster Abbey. (A historical connection here: two years later, King Edward I and his army defeated the army of William “Braveheart” Wallace in 1298. He did not capture Wallace in this battle; a traitor turned him over to the English in 1305.)
A drawing showing the Stone of Scone in King Edward’s chair. (Photo: U.S. public domain.) A replica of the Stone of
Scone. (Photo: bubobubo2.)
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
The Stone remained at Westminster Abbey until 1950 when Scottish nationals “re-appropriated” it but only for a brief amount of time. In 1996, Prime Minister John Major sent it home to Scotland permanently—on the condition that the Stone of Scone returns to Westminster Abbey for future coronations. The Coronation Chair has two lions carved at its feet, and it has a slot for the Stone of Scone under the seat2. Its last use was in the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. ---------------1Edward V and Edward VIII were not crowned. Henry V was 12 when his father died in 1483, but he was never officially crowned. His uncle Richard III, who was also his Lord Protector, delayed the coronation until Parliament declared him king instead. Edward V was king for 86 days. Not long after his “removal from office,” he and a slightly older brother disappeared and were presumed murdered at the orders of Richard III. Edward VIII abdicated the throne in 1936 due to his future plans to marry Wallis Simpson, an American divorcee. As king, Edward VIII was also considered head of the Church of England which was against a divorcee marrying again before the spouse passed away. 2Westminster-abbey.org
Can you name this famous antique?
Everyone knows this famous antique, American Gothic, by Grant Wood, but
do you know who were his two models in the painting? If so, call 888-388-7827 or email [email protected] and win
15 seconds of fame with your name in the next issue.
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11
For BoothAvailability Call
(770) 914-2269, ext. 108
.
155 Mill RoadMcDonough, GA 30253
(Exit 221 off I-75)Ph: (770) 914-2269Fax: (770) 914-0911
HOURSMon.-Fri. 11-6
Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-6
PeachtreeAntiqueCentre"South Atlanta's
Finest Antiques Facility"100+ dealers in a modern, air
conditioned facility.12,000 sq. ft. of pre-1980s
treasures (phase I) and 10,000 sq.ft. of antiques and newer
collectibles (phase II).Specializing in everything
from fine china and porcelain to country primitives, vintage
jewelry, clothing and much more.
Also visit the adjacentflea market with over
400 dealers!Saturday and Sunday Only
HOURSMon.-Tues. 11-6Thurs.-Fri. 11-6
Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-6Closed Wednesdays
Clarkesville Grp.12.11_SEA
HOUSE
Early American • Home FurnishingsAntiques • Homespun Textiles
Johnston Benchworks
511 Grant StreetClarkesville, GA 30523
706-754-0789
homesteadhouseprimitives.com
100+ vendors in a 1/2 acre of a 7 acre, former textile mill - filled with:art • antiques • vintage furniture
books • old farm equipment & more.706-839-7500
583 Grant St. • Clarkesville, GAwww.oldclarkesvillemill.com
Architectural Antiques, Salvage, and Restoration. 25 years in
the business. We buy, sell, and consult on quality Antiques,
Hardware, Lighting, Ironwork, Glass, Mantles, Plumbing
Fixtures, Plaster, Statuary & Garden Pieces.
Stores in Savannah/ Greensboro/Madison, Georgia
We post new items there every day.
Savannah (912) 232-55632603 Whitaker St.
Greensboro, GA (912) 656-42901270 North East St.
Madison, GA (912) 656-4290At Madison Market
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Experience antique shopping like never before. Downtown Kingsport boasts the largest square footage of fine antiques within walking distance in the southeast. Whatever your collection may need, you’re sure to find it in Kingsport. We offer a variety of lodging accommodations, and there’s a perfect place for you.
50 Years of Service
Congratulationsto the Haggle Shop!
FREE Tennessee Vacation Guide - www.TNvacation.com or 1-800-GO-2-TENN
For more information, contact: Kingsport Convention and Visitors BureauSM
By Deborah Abernethy and Mike McLeod
$5,885 (39 bids) Earnest Mignon RC2 Crystal Set Loose Coupler Radio, 1914, Marconi Era. One of the first crystal sets ever manufactured by Ernest C. Mignon, the pre-World War I Mignon RC-2, serial number 35 from 1914! Ernest C. Mignon immigrated to the USA and arrived on August 4, 1907 on Ellis Island. Ernest Mignon was of German decent and sailed on the Caledonia from Glasgow, England to the United States. In 1914, he founded the Mignon Wireless Corporation located in Elmira, N.Y. The company became later Universal Radio Mfg. Co. Ernest Mignon was a pioneer in the field of wireless and had a great future. However, he was robbed of his opportunity to show his true potential. The same way the U.S. Government rounded up Japanese immigrants after the attack on Pearl Harbor to keep them locked up in detention camps in the desert of Nevada during World War II, the U.S. Government interned immigrants of German decent at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Among the detainees rounded up at the outset of World War I was Ernest Mignon. He was held against his will in the detention center until the end of WWI. It can only be imagined what else he would have contributed to the development and improvement of early wireless technology. This exceedingly rare and early radio, one of the first radios he ever produced, is in as-found condition. It was found in an attic in northern Pennsylvania. The case measures 12 inches
wide, 8 7/8 inches deep and 6 inches high. The knobs on top add another 1 1/4 inches. The weight is 9 lbs and 5 ounces. The case is made of heavy oak; the top panel is somewhat warped. On the panel are two brass labels with the following writing: MIGNON WIRELESS CORPORATION, MANUFACTURERS OF RADIO APPARATUS, RC-2 35, PATENT APPLIED FOR. The second brass label reads:
SUPERIOR MIGNON SYSTEM RADIO APPARATUS. The terminals are from left to right: Antenna & Ground; Telephones; Detector. This museum-quality piece is complete and in all original condition. (Photo: eBay seller technogallery.)
DBA: Marconi built the first commercially successful wireless system based on radio transmission around 1894. The first “radio station” for broadcasting began in 1909 in San Jose, Calif. The first continuous broadcast in the world began in 1916. In 1917, when the U.S. entered WWI, all civilian use of radio transmissions ceased. All radio stations came under government control. Little improvements other than military uses were made in that time period. This radio is a very early crystal radio (rather than vacuum tube operation). The amount of money paid for this early radio is based on the rarity of the item. While I could find similar type and age radios, this one is rare.
What's Selling on eBay?
Continued on Page 18
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
205 North Main StreetMount Pleasant, Tennessee
Hours: Thurs. through Saturday10 A.M. to 5 P.M. and by appointment
Cell: 931-619-0784
The Shops of Middle Tennessee
H WatertownH Cookeville
H Mount Pleasant
Middle Tennessee is a veritable haven for antiques shoppers.Watertown is home to Jim’sAntiques, at 312 Public Square, plus sixother antiques shops. Jim’s shop now features a retired Santa sleigh,old lunch boxes from the ‘50s and ‘60s, crocks, toys, advertisingboxes and much more. Come visit! Antiques Unlimited, at 2303 South Church Street in nearbyMurfeesboro is packed with period furniture, sterling silver, RSPrussia, primitives, fine art glass, early pattern glass and Depression glass.
GasLamp Antiques in Nashville is expanding! The city’sbest mall for antiques and unique furnishings recently opened asecond shop: GasLamp Too. Breckenridge House Antiques, at 205 North Main Streetin Mount Pleasant, is located inside a lovely circa-1815 home.Store hours are Thursday thru Saturday from 10-5, or byappointment. And Homespun Antiques, at 14 South Cedarin Cookeville, is the place to visit for furniture, quilts andcollectibles. You can reach them via e-mail at [email protected].
H MurfreesboroNashville H
2213Highway 70
EastJackson,
Tennessee38305
731-421-8128
The Shops of West Tennessee
Old County Store Restaurant - buffet served daily
• 1890’s Ice Cream Parlor & Fudge Shop • Gift and Confectionery Shop • Old County Store
56 Casey Jones Lane, Jackson, TN 38305800-748-9588.
www.caseyjones.com
Over 15,000 Southern antiques on display
Discover the life, legend and song of Casey Jones Home& Railroad Museum
H JacksonH Bolivar
The antique shops of West Tennesseeare a must for serious collectors on theantique trail. Jackson alone is a virtualmecca for antique shoppers. While you’rein town, be sure to pay a visit to Butler’sAntique Mall, at 2213 Highway 70 East.It’s loaded with quality antiques andcollectibles.
On The Square Gallery and Gifts109 North Main - Bolivar, TN 38008
Phone: 731-403-0002Email: [email protected]: Tuesday-Sat. 10am-5pm
Antiques, art from local and regional artists, pottery, glassware, painted
furniture, and hand-turnedwooden bowls
Visit our 100+ year old building on the historic courthouse square in
Bolivar, TN.
And don’t forget Casey Jones Village,one of Tennessee’s top capital 10 travelattractions, where you’ll discover the life,legend and song of Casey Jones at hisHome and Railroad Museum Over 15,000Southern antiques are also on display. InBolivar, not far away, is On the Square
Gallery and Gifts, at 109 North Main.Their 100+ year old building on thehistoric courthouse square is filled with antiques, art from local and regionalartists, pottery, glassware and muchmore.
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
$2,818 (38 bids): Rockola Sweepstakes Horse Race Penny Coin Op Trade Stimulator. This is a circa 1934 Rock Ola Sweepstakes Horse Racing Penny Gumball Trade Stimulator. These are some of the neatest trade stimulators, and this one is in very good working condition. It has nice color, and it appears to be in original condition. Measures 15 inches wide by 12 inches tall and 12 1/2 inches deep. Includes rear door key. Aside from a few small scrapes, it is really in excellent example. (Photo: eBay seller gypsiegirlz.)
DBA: This is not the highest price recently paid for a Rockola Horse Race Trade Stimulator. Apparently another one sold on eBay in 2011 for $3,800. There have been some for lower prices as well. This is “the going rate” for similar objects. This was a fair price for this type object.
Over 200 Shops
(352) 466-0707
HUGE!
www.smileysantiques.com
Open Daily 10-6
Voted Florida’s Finest...Larger Than a Football Field
Call or Visit us Today!
Over 200 Shops
ANTIQUE MALLMicanopy, Florida
• I-75, Exit 374• 8 Mi. S. of Gainesville, FL
• Clean Restrooms• Friendly Staff• RV & Bus Parking
ANTIQUE MALL
CIVIL WARGUNS, SWORDS
AND BOWIEKNIVES, MEDICAL,
NAUTICAL AND SCIENTIFIC
INSTRUMENTS,AMERICAN
FURNITURE,DECOYS, QUILTS
COLLUMANTIQUES
Located at580A Indian Rocks Rd.
Belleair BluffsFlorida 33770
(727) 581-6585or Eve. 442-9969E-mail: [email protected]
Collum Ants.10.2009_SEA
$8,500 (27 bids): Large German Hand-blown 4-Panel Onionskin Blizzard Mica Marble Antique Toy Marble. Measures 1 5/8 inches, weight 3.5 oz., of German origin, circa 1890-1920. This antique glass toy marble is in untouched, as-found condition. Hand blown with ground pontil in the Onionskin Blizzard form. Having two panels of cherry red on white base and two panels of emerald green on a white base. Above these base colors floats blizzards of suspended mica chips. Overall condition is good, some light play-use surface scratches. Of note, there is a smooth, one-quarter inch, shallow divot next to one pontil that is very hard to see. (Photo: eBay seller oldwellantiques.)
DBA: Antique glass marbles are very collectible, especially the handmade marbles by German glassmakers. The pontil mark identifies the marble as being handmade. America stopped importing German marbles during WWI, and machine-made marbles became popular. Handmade marbles were dangerous to make from handling the glass material to grinding the pontil mark where the glass particles could be inhaled. Many glassmakers died from tuberculosis. Size matters with marbles with larger being more expensive. This marble is very large and has four panels of color. All of these are factors in the very high price paid for it. Handmade glass marbles have not been made in about a hundred years. This marble was sold for much more than similar marbles on eBay and other places. I did find a similar marbles selling for $3,500 and for $1,500. The seller did very well.-----------------------Deborah Abernethy is a certified appraiser with the International Association of Appraisers. She can be contacted at 404-262-2131 or [email protected]. Her website is www.expert-appraisers.com.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Sarasota Shope_GRP_4.14_SEA
SarasotaSarasota just may be the ulti-
mate beach town, with its sun-kissed location on the Gulf of Mexico, more than 200 sunny days a year and an average year-round tem-perature of 71 degrees. But there are other reasons why Sarasota was named Best Small City to Live by Money Magazine. Sarasota County -- which includes Venice, Northport, Longboat and Siesta Keys -- is alive with culture, sports, affordable homes, a brisk job market and great schools.
Oh,anddidwementionit’sahaven for antique lovers? There are 44 shops, and all of them are conve-nient to one another. Clustered along streets with names like Coconut, Pineapple and Palm, these stores make Sarasota a must-visit destina-tion for antiquers just looking for thatnextgreat“find.”The Fruitville district is especially worth checking out.
The Shops Of
Sarasota’s Most Unique Antique MallSavantiques
SPARCC’sTreasure
Chest1426 Fruitville Rd.
Sarasota, FL 34236
941-953-7800Best buys on fine consignment fur-
niture, antiques & collectibles, plus a treasure chest of browser goodies!
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10 am-4 pmSales support the Safe Place & Rape Crisis
Center (SPARCC).
SARASOTAARCHITECTURAL SALVAGE
1093 CENTRAL AVESarasota, Fl 34236
"Florida Retail federation's Florida Retailer of the Year"
Store hours: Mon. -Fri. 9-5Jesse White, Owner
(941) 362-0803www.sarasotasalvage.com
30Dealers•8,500sq.ft.Antiques•Collectibles113 Tamiami Trail
Osprey, Florida1 Block South of Spanish Point
Look for the orange and green buildings!
941-966-9800Hours:Mon.-Sat.10-5,Sun.11-5
WHY PAY MORE?
SHOP AT
RAYMOND’SSECOND HAND WORLD inc.
(941) 925-7253 5624 Swift Rd • Sarasota, FL 34231
FURNITURE & ANTIQUES BUY and SELL ESTATES
ONE OF SARASOTA'S LARGEST ~ 7800 sq. ft.
Name This Famous PersonBy Mike McLeod Sherri Hardrick Sutton and Ted
Carlton of Utah correctly identified a young Mother Teresa. Everyone recognizes the name of Mother Teresa, and all know of her lifelong service to the poorest of the poor in India and to many throughout the world. Born on Aug. 26, 1910 in Skopje, Macedonia, Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu was of Albanian descent. Her father Nikola died mysteriously when she was about eight. Her mother Drana instilled in Agnes the principle of charity from an early age. She always invited people to eat with them—family members and strangers. “My child, never eat a single mouthful unless you are sharing it with others,” Drana taught her daughter.1
“If you can’t feed a hundred people, then feed just one.”
Mother Teresa. (Photo courtesy of and © 1986 Túrelio, Wikimedia-Commons
/ CC-BY-SA licensed.)
�0 Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Early in her life, Agnes decided to dedicate herself to serving the needy. At the age of 18, she joined the order of the Sisters of Loreto in Ireland and took her name to be Mother Teresa. She was soon sent to India to teach in a Catholic high school for girls from very poor families. In 1946, while traveling on a train, Mother Teresa reported hearing the voice of Jesus Christ saying, “I want Indian Nuns, Missionaries of Charity, who would be my fire of love amongst the poor, the sick, the dying and the little children.”2 She followed this direction after being released from her order and walked into the slums of Calcutta. Mother Teresa began by teaching the children of the poorest by drawing letters in the dirt. This grew into a school. She also created a hospice for the dying poor, no matter their religious affiliation, so they could die with dignity in the care and love of a concerned fellow human being. When reading this, don’t imagine new red brick school buildings and hospital facilities with clean sheets. Out of necessity, Mother Teresa often used dilapidated, rundown, and/or abandoned buildings when she began her work in Calcutta. She and those of her order also lived in abject poverty.
“We think sometimes that poverty is only being hungry, naked and homeless. The poverty of being unwanted, unloved and uncared for is the greatest poverty. We must start in our own homes to remedy this kind of poverty.”
From her humble beginning in the slums of Calcutta, Mother Teresa gathered followers and donors from throughout the world. She refused steady government help, but she had no problem seeking it—in her own way—when it was needed.
The ORIGINAL!
Galleria MallAntiques & CollectiblesFurniture - Jewelry - China
Books - Crystal - LampsLinens - Fine Art
9,000 sq. feet50 dealers
OPEN DAILY 10-5SUNDAY 11-5
941-347-80445260 Duncan Rd. (U.S. 17)
Punta Gorda, FL 33982Exit 164 off I-75 1.5 miles
north on U.S. 17www.galleriamallantiques.com
Voted Best Antique and Best Collectibles in the Readers’ Choice
Awards, 2011-2013.
The Shops of Punta Gorda, Fla.The lovely town of Punta Gorda, Fla., is situated on Florida’s west coast, south of Bradenton and Sarasota and north of Cape Coral and Fort Myers. It was founded in 1887 and became for awhile the pineapple capital of the U.S. It was also a port for shipping cattle to Cuba
941 468-3344❤ Repairs on all jewelry ❤
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Maria Dicicco1205 Elizabeth St. Ste. B
Punta Gorda, Florida 33950
PUNTA GORDA DEPOTAntique Mall &
Museum1009 Taylor Ave.
Punta Gorda
Corner of Carmalita & TaylorTues. thru Sat. 10-4
941-639-67743rd Saturday “Dock Sale”
Step into the past...Last of its kind Restored Depot
Spanish mackerel and channel bass. Punta Gorda’s downtown was
city was damaged extensively by
it bounced back nicely both times and today is a mecca
living. Come visit us!
This instance of her receiving government assistance was reported in USA Today: “Former San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos recalls how stunned and surprised he was when Mother Teresa and two nuns showed up at his home, without an appointment, at about 9 p.m. on a Sunday evening in February 1989. Mother Teresa wanted to convert a particular vacant building into a homeless center. “‘I’ve come to talk to you about the work of God,’ Mother Teresa told him. Agnos promised to investigate the building first thing in the morning. She said, ‘The work of God cannot wait until tomorrow morning.’ “So they traipsed off into the wintry darkness to inspect the building right then and confirm that yes, it was city-owned and available. “‘She is the only person that I have ever been around where I have sensed I have been in a holy presence,’ Agnos said.”3 This diminutive woman clad in a blue-and-white sari changed the world with simple acts of service that grew into orphanages, refugee centers, clinics, soup kitchens, and maternity, hospice and HIV/AIDS homes scattered among more than 130 countries in the world. This required a great talent for organization and logistics, which are talents not often considered when Mother Teresa comes to mind. Through her selfless acts of charity, Mother Teresa became a legend without seeking glory. When told that she won the Nobel Prize in 1979, she responded that she was not worthy. Then she requested the money for the Nobel Prize banquet be donated to feed the poor Christmas dinner. When the Pope gave her the limousine he used during a trip to India, she raffled it off to help the needy.4
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Our Old StuffAntique MAll
Twenty plus dealers in 8,000 sq. ft. of unique antiques and collectibles, including 50s and 60s mid-century
modern, furniture and loads of Florida art plus a courtyard full of patio stuff.Open 10-5, Closed SundayPlenty of parking on 10th Street
1005 Ridgewood Ave. • Holly Hill, FL386-238-7207
CarouselAntiques
386-255-11326,000 sq. ft. • Fine Antique Furniture
• Glassware • Primitives • Persian Rugs• Old Clocks • Watches • Depression Pieces
• Carnival Glass • Open Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6, Sun. 12-5
110 North Beach StreetDaytona Beach, Florida
BACHMAN’SAntiques • Used Furniture
• CollectiblesBuy • Sell • Trade
Consignments, Single Items or Complete Estates • Furniture Restoration
& Lamp Repair
2360 E. Moody Blvd.Bunnell, FL 32110
(4 miles west of I-95 on Rt. 100)
386-437-6206
J
Located just East & North of DeLand, on the Beautiful Atlantic Ocean
JTHE SHOPS OF DAYTONA BEACH, BUNNELL & HOLLY HILL, FLOrIDA
Daytona Shops_Grp.01.10_SEA
“Let no one ever come to you without leaving better and happier. Be the living expression of God’s kindness: kindness in your face, kindness in your eyes, kindness in your smile.” On Sept. 5, 1997, Mother Teresa passed away after suffering from heart and lung problems for many years. The world mourned. Her work continues today, and those wishing to assist in her legacy may visit www.motherteresa.org. “The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread.” ----------------------1, 2 Biography.com. 3, 4Lori Sharn, USA TODAY. “Mother Teresa dies at 87,” Sept. 1997.
Can you name this
famous person?If so, send your response to [email protected] or call 888-388-7827 and
win 15 seconds of fame with your name listed in the next
issue.
Deborah Abernethy Appraisers
www.expert-appraisers.comCall us today! 404-262-2131
ISA-CAPP (Certified Appraiser of Personal Property, International Society of appraisers)
[email protected] Metro Atlanta & Hilton Head
Our Condolences for Robert Reed Robert Reed, the prolific author of articles and books, passed away recently after an illness. He was born on August 19, 1940 in Columbus, Ind., and he died on June 10, 2014. He lived in Knightstown, Ind. Robert’s articles on antiques and collectibles were published by newspapers and magazines across the United States and in Canada and Australia. He authored 17 books, and his final work, Lincoln Funeral Train: The Epic Journey from Washington to Springfield, is available now on Amazon.com.
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
By John Sexton
Civil WarThe
COLLECTOR
Shops of St. Petersburg...“The Jewel of Florida’s Gulf Coast”
•We buy and sell• Over 4,000 sq. ft.
• 35 of the best dealers2400 Dr. MLK St. No.
(9th Street No.)st. Petersburg, fl 33704
(727) 821-2206 • (727) 560-8568OPen 7 days 10-5
visit us on facebook!
andrea & friendsantIque Mall
MultI-dealer shOPWith wide variety and great reviews!
There's an old saying about St. Petersburg, Fla.; People who live there love it; businesses that located there stay; and visitors who go there to shop and play want to come back again and again. How true! St. Petersburg and Pinellas Coun-ty offer an unequaled environment for work and play. Wonderful weather and miles of sandy beaches make it a magnet for people worldwide.
St. Petersburg's two strongest selling points are sunshine and shopping. The former can be enjoyed virtually year-round; the latter comes in the form of malls, factory outlet stores, discount chains, specialty shops, membership warehouses, and —oh, yes— a cavalcade of wonderful antiques and collectibles stores. The advertisers on this page offer a taste of what we mean.
Getting to St. Petersburg isn't hard to do. The city's major thoroughfare is I-275, which runs north and south and connects to the Sunshine Skyway Bridge and Man-atee County (another mecca for shoppers on the antique trail). I-275 also connects with 1-4 going east to Orlando from Tampa and I-75 heading north. U.S. 19 is an important north-south link that runs the length of the county.
A visit to St. Petersburg will leave you wanting more, no matter how long you stay. And it's easy to fan out and explore. Tampa — a city with it's own identity, cultural pulse and antiques and collectibles shops—is right next door. And Orlando, with its many theme parks, is a short drive away. Don't you think it's time to visit, vacation and shop in St. Petersburg? It's truly the Jewel of Florida's Gulf Coast!
Jan 25/26Feb 22/23Mar 22/23Apr 26/27May 17/18June 21/22
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AuctionSchedule2014
July 19/20Aug 23/24Sept 20/21Oct 18/19Nov 15/16Dec 6/7
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FEED STOREAntique Mall, Inc.
Antiques • Collectibles50 Quality Dealers • We Buy
941-729-13794407 Hwy. 301 • Ellenton, FL 34222
Exit 224 ~ 1 Mile West of I-75Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5
3411 U.S. Hwy. 301 N. • Ellenton, Florida2 miles W. of I-75 exit #224 • 941-722-5255
Quality Dealer Space Still Available
Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5
Manatee County_Grp.07.14_SEA
2006-2014
The Shops of Manatee County, Florida
I live in Syracuse, N.Y., and have these old Civil War invitations to military balls and receptions. I even have a pre-19th century check dated 1799 from the bank of Alexandria. I want to know if you could let me know if they are worth anything or at least direct me to someone who could. JS: Your frame of invitations to military balls and band events in the late 1860s and early 1870s just after the Civil War are interesting ephemera with a couple of nice color lithograph vignettes, but they will probably not sell for more than $100-
$200 in the general antique market. Similar invitations are quite common in scrapbooks of this era. The most interest would probably be to a local collector in Syracuse where most of the events listed were held. The most interesting item in this frame amongst the 14 invitations is a facsimile of a 1799-dated bank check of George Washington’s. The check appears to be printed about the same time as these invitations and makes a nice conversation piece; as an original George Washington-signed check, it would be
quite valuable. Even in the 1870s, it was an interesting conversation piece. The check was made to William Thornton six months before Washington’s death. Thornton was best known as the designer of the U.S. Capital. Post-Civil War invitations to balls and musical events, $100-$200.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Avonlea Ant Mall.BC.10.2009_SEA
The Region’s Largest and Busiest Antique Mall8101 Philips Highway • Jacksonville, FL 32256
904-636-8785www.avonleamall.com
Exit 341 at Baymeadows, west one mile to Philips - northeast corner of Philips and Baymeadows
Avonlea Antique Mall
Mall Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Sunday 12-6Visit Our Olde Florida Cafe for Lunch Mon.-Sat. 11:00-2:30
40,000 SQUARE FEET
Over 200 Dealers
Morning Glory.Qrt. 6.14_SEA
Over 60 Dealers!
Antique Mall
8000 sq. ft. ofNostalgic Comfort
WE BUY ONE ITEM OR ENTIRE ESTATESHours: Mon. - Sat. 10 am - 5:00 pm - Closed Sundays
www.morninggloryantiquemall.com
1111 So. 14th St., Hwy. 27 • Leesburg, FL
(352) 365-997720 min. from Mt. Dora; 25 min. from I-75; 45 min. from Orlando
Big Summer Sale!Storewide Discounts!
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The Internet has a lot of different ideas about what this saber is. The blade says, “W.Walscheid Solingen.” I know they were in Prussia and made blades for the Civil War, not sure if Union or Confederate. JS: Your sword is no doubt Civil War Era and could have been used by either the North or the South. The pattern of sword is US model 1840 enlisted cavalry saber. This pattern was exported by several Solingen makers to American retailers such as Horstmann & Sons in Philadelphia prior to and during the Civil War. The first American contract 1840 cavalry sabers actually came from Schnitzler & Kirschbaum (S&K), also of Solingen, for trials of the new pattern in 1842. After those initial few hundred imports, Ames Manufacturing Company in Massachusetts made all the swords of this pattern for the U.S. Army. They were the only government contractor until the Civil War when many more swords were needed, and many firms imported German sabers. The German Solingen swords had the reputation for being the best in the world and were sold worldwide to many countries. Wilhelm Walscheid’s name shows up occasionally on cavalry sabers identified to Civil War soldiers, though I know of no one in particular who was selling them. The configuration of your scabbard with the two carrying rings spaced about a foot apart is typical of how American cavalrymen carried swords; often, Europeans would only use one sword ring, and scabbards would vary in the shape of the drag. Your sword appears in nice, “as found” condition with good patina in a well-preserved grip. Often, grips on swords are missing the leather-and-wire wrap which is wound over a cord-wrapped wood base. The rust and pitting on the scabbard, especially near the drag, is typical, and this scabbard has protected the blade for over 150 years. Dealers typically price well preserved, “uncleaned” specimens like this between $400 and $600.
An 1840 pattern enlisted cavalry Solingen sword, $400-$600.
I have a set of two straight razors with their embossed leather cases and I believe the leather honing strap. My grandmother told me that if I was ever in a bind that I should sell them. I’ve been holding onto them for many years, but that time has come. Like she says, it’s just stuff; you can’t take it with you. They are Wade & Butchery and do say, “Sheffield.” I’m hoping that you’ll be able to give me an idea about their worth. They were probably last honed around 35 years ago when they were framed in a shadow box in New York at Sam Flax. JS: Sam, Wade & Butcher were well-known Sheffield cutlers, circa 1840-1860. Their knives are very valuable, but razors,
even the best ones, generally have low values in the antique world as they are not rare and many remain. You can find similar pairs of razors with ivory handles in excellent condition priced by dealers at about $150-$250.
Civil War Era razors are relatively common and valued at $150-$250. ------------------
John Sexton is an independent appraiser and expert of Civil War memorabilia. He is an accredited member of various appraiser organizations. He can be contacted at 770-329-4984 or www.CivilWarDealer.com. For a free appraisal of a Civil War item, email a photo and a description to [email protected].
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
“Helga” from Hogan’s Heroes passed away on March 11th of this year from organ failure after having hepatitis. She was 76. Of the show’s regular cast members, only one has not passed away—“LeBeau,” Robert Clary.1 Helga was played by Cynthia Lynn (birth name: Zinta Valda Zimilis) who was born on April 2, 1937 in Riga, Latvia. She acted in the first season of the groundbreaking series in 1965-1966, playing Colonel Klink’s secretary. She was followed by Sigrid “Hilda” Valdis for the last five seasons of the show. Hogan’s Heroes was the first television series to treat World War II in a humorous manner, and surprisingly, it worked. Even though it was based on the outrageous premise of prisoners of war remaining in a German concentration camp to aid the war effort, the American audience watched it and laughed each week as the prisoners outsmarted Col. Klink and Sgt. Schultz. As silly as the premise of the show seemed, Werner “Col. Klink” Klemperer received five Emmy nominations for his role, and he won not once, but twice, for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series. (His last job in 1993 before passing away in 2000 was on The Simpsons as Bart’s guardian angel, in the voice of Col. Klink, of course.2) Bob Crane received two nominations but was never awarded an Emmy. As most know, Bob Crane was murdered. On June 29, 1978, his body was found bludgeoned to death with an electrical cord wrapped around the neck. An arrest was finally made in 1992, but the suspect was found not guilty. At the time of his death, Crane was married to one of his co-stars from the show, Sigrid “Hilda” Valdis (birth name: Patricia Annette Olson). They were married on the set of Hogan’s Heroes in 1970. The other members of Hogan’s Heroes who have passed away are: Richard Dawson on June 2, 2012 at the age of 79; Werner Klemperer on Dec. 6, 2000 at the age of 80; John “Sgt. Schultz” Banner (“I see nothing!”) at the age of 63 on Jan. 28, 1973; Larry “Sgt. Carter” Hovis, 67, on Sept. 9, 2003; and Ivan “Sgt. Kinchloe” Dixon, 67, on March 16, 2008. In addition to Hogan’s Heroes, Cynthia Lynn also acted in many TV series: Mission Impossible, The Odd Couple, Love, American Style, Harry O, The Six Million Dollar Man, Gidget Grows Up, Dr. Kildare, Surfside 6, and others. Her autobiography, Escape To Freedom, describes her flight at the
As Another Cast Member Passes, Will The Value of Hogan’s Heroes Collectibles Rise? by Mike McLeod
age of three with her mother and grandmother from the approaching Russian army as it invaded Latvia during World War II. On her first day on the set of Hogan’s Heroes, Cynthia became physically sick at the sight of the German uniforms.3
Collectibles abound for fans of Hogan’s Heroes. The most sought-after collectibles are the HH lunchbox and thermos. Although they sell for a variety of prices depending on condition, those that are near-mint can go for close to $300. One pristine 1966 HH thermos sold for $317 on eBay recently. Other Hogan’s Heroes collectibles include comic books, record albums (it seems most of the cast could sing), a game, trading cards, autographed photos, notepads, videos and TV Guide covers featuring the cast. The cast of Hogan’s Heroes were very popular, and in 1965, they even showed up in costume on a Bing Crosby Christmas special, including Col. Klink (who sings briefly) and Sgt. Schultz. For a kick, watch it on YouTube. --------------------- 1 Robert Clary is 88 years old, and he was the only cast member who actually served time in Nazi concentration camps. At the age of 16, he was sent to one camp and then to Buchenwald; he survived a total of three years before being liberated. Twelve members of his family were sent to Auschwitz and did not return. 2Imdb.com 3 Corporateeventchannel.com
Cynthia Lynn, “Helga” on Hogan’s Heroes, passed
away on March 11.
Bob Crane and his future wife Sigrid “Hilda” Valdis, in 1969.
This pristine thermos sold for $317 on eBay. (Photo: eBay seller stingerboy.)
A1967 Hogan’s Heroes #7 comic book by Dell, rated NM 9.4, sold for $55.97 on eBay. (Photo: eBay seller
jscomics.)
As Another Cast Member Passes, Will The Value of Hogan’s Heroes Collectibles Rise? by Mike McLeod
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
JULYMetrolina Expo MarketplaceJuly 3-6 • Charlotte, NCThe biggest shows in the Carolinas, held the first weekend of every month. Located at 7100 Statesville Rd. Free Wi-Fi, high-tech security, free parking, great food, dog-friendly. Best booth prices in the Southeast. Call to reserve space: 704-714-7909. Info: www.ICAshows.com.
Central Park Antique ShowsJuly 8-13 • Brimfield, MATuesday thru Sunday, opening at 6 a.m. Free admission. Info: (413) 596-9257, www.brimfieldcentralpark.com.
Shelton Antique ShowsJuly 8-13 • Brimfield, MAOpen daybreak Tuesday! Showers, free admission, pet-friendly, 6 days of action. Since 1975. Info: (413) 245-3591, www.brimfieldsheltonshows.com, [email protected].
As Another Cast Member Passes, Will The Value of Hogan’s Heroes Collectibles Rise? by Mike McLeod
SCOTT ANTIQUE MARKETSAmerica’s Favorite Treasure Hunt!
For more information, visit us at: www.scottantiquemarkets.com Scott Antique Markets P.O. Box 60, Bremen, OH 43107 ~ Fax: 740.569.7595
TM
Ohio Expo Center - Columbus, OH
Thurs. 12:45pm-6pm, Fri. & Sat. 9am-6pm, Sun. 10am-4pm
3 miles East of Atlanta Airport, I-285 at Exit 55 (3650 & 3850 Jonesboro Rd.)
Sat. 9am-6pm, Sun. 10am-4pm
I-71 Exit 111 (17th Ave.) to Ohio Expo Center
Atlanta Expo Centers - Atlanta, GA
Monthly, Nov. thru March!
UPCOMING SHOWS:
UPCOMING SHOWS:JULY 10, 11, 12 & 13AUGUST 7, 8, 9 & 10SEPTEMBER 11, 12, 13 & 14OCTOBER 9, 10, 11 & 12
NOVEMBER 29 & 30DECEMBER 20 & 21
3,500 Booths!
ABINGDON, VIRGINIA66th Annual
August 2 - August 10, 201310 a.m. - 6 p.m. • Interstate 81, Exit 14
Early Bird ShoppingSat., August 2, 8-10 a.m.
$20 admissionwww.vahighlandsfestival.org
Admission:$5 daily' 9-day pass $20
Concessions, Free Parking,No Pets, Service Animals Allowed.
The Meadows Antique ShowsJuly 8-13 • Brimfield, MAThe first major show to open! Open 6 a.m. For reservations or info, call (413) 245-3215 or (413) 245-9427, [email protected], Fax: (413) 736-0362.
Hertan’s Antique ShowsJuly 9-13 • Brimfield, MAOpen Wed. from noon to sunset, Thurs.-Sun., sunrise to sunset. Over 150
outstanding dealers exhibiting in our shaded groves. Free admission. No pre-selling. On-site JB’s Outdoor Cafe. Info: (860) 763-3760, during show (413) 626-0927, www.hertansbrimfield.com.
New England Motel Antique ShowsJuly 9-13 • Brimfield, MAThe shopping starts here! Opens Wed. at 6 a.m. 3 dealer pavilions and over 400 dealers! Look for the green and
As Another Cast Member Passes, Will The Value of Hogan’s Heroes Collectibles Rise? by Mike McLeod Poor Jim's Almanac of Shows
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
gold umbrellas at our food court and you will find our field. Info: (508) 347-2179, during the show: (413) 245-3348, [email protected], www.antiques-brimfield.com.
May’s Antique Market, Inc.July 10-12 • Brimfield, MAOne of Brimfield’s biggest and best shows. At May’s, everyone’s an early buyer! Opening Thurs. at 9 a.m. Admission $5. Rain or shine. Info: (413) 245-9271, www.maysbrimfield.com.
Scott Antique Markets July 10-13 • Atlanta, GA Now open Thursday 12:45 pm-6 pm. At the Atlanta Expo Center, 3,300+ booths. Two buildings filled with exquisite antiques, collectibles and treasures from
PLEASE REPLY IN 24 HOURS
FIRST PROOF – JULY 2014Approved Approved w/ corrections - #of corrections_____ Please resubmit
PONCHATOULAA M E R I C A ’ S A N T I Q U E C I T Y
Christmas in July!
Ponchatoula, America’s Antique Cityinvites you to our
JULY 12TH & 13TH
C I T Y W I D E S A L E
Come see us decked out in red, white and blue! 153 shopping
days left ‘til Christmas...
Call 1-800-617-4502 or visitwww.ponchatoulachamber.com
Glass DisplaysDoor PrizesGlass Repair
Children’s ProgramFree SeminarsFree Parking
Free GlassIdentification*
No Reproductions*Limit 3, please
38th Annual Collectible GlassShow & Sale 2014Cobb County Civic Center548 South Marietta Parkway, Marietta, GA
Saturday, July 26 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.Sunday, July 27 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.Featuring nationally recognized dealers and a large selection of antique and vintage glass, pottery, kitchenware, and dinnerware
ADMISSION: $8.00 per person - good for both days$15 Saturday Early Shopping 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.
For discount and more information, visit www.psdgc.com“Like” Peach State Depression Glass Club on Facebook
around the world. Located on Jonesboro Road, just off I-285 at Exit 55. Open: Thurs., 12:45-6; Fri. and Sat., 9-6; and Sun., 10-4.
Swanky Plank Vintage MarketplaceJuly 10-12 • Spring Hill, TNTo be held at Rippavilla Plantation, 5700 Main Street in Spring Hill. Shop the area’s best antique and vintage dealers while enjoying the majestic grounds at Rippaville Plantation. Friday: Sneak Peek Party, 4-8 p.m. ($25, includes 3-day admission); Sat.-Sun. 9-6. Info: (931) 486-9037, www.rippavilla.org.
Atlanta Antique Gun & Int’l Military ShowJuly 11-12 • Marietta, GATo be held at the Cobb County Civic Center, 548 South Marietta Parkway (just outside Atlanta). Civil War, WWI & II, Indian Wars, antique arms, memorabilia. U.S. and foreign military arms and memorabilia shown, bought, sold, traded. Info: (770) 282-1339, [email protected].
Ants 37th_Benefit Show.07.14_SEA
38THCashiers Annual
ANTIQUES BENEFIT SHOWFriday, July 25th, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. • Saturday, July 26th, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sunday, July 27th, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.To Benefit The Blue Ridge School • Highway 107 North • Cashiers, NC
For more information call Hazel Giles at 828-743-9270Visit with 60 Outstanding Exhibitors • Grand Prize Drawing • Glass & Crystal Repair
On site hand engraving, gold, silver, etc.Garden Dining with Sumptuous Lunches & Refreshments
Catered by Fressers Eatery of HighlandsDonation $8.50 - $8.00 with the presentation of this ad - one person only
J & J Antiques & Collectibles ShowsJuly 11-12 • Brimfield, MAOpen 8-4 on Friday, 9-3 on Saturday. Rain or shine. Admission $5. On-site parking $8. No pets, please. Info: (413) 245-3436 or (978) 597-8155, [email protected], www.jandj-brimfield.com.
Citywide Yard Sale and Christmas in JulyJuly 12-13 • Ponchatoula, LACome to Ponchatoula – America’s Antique City! Spend the day or the weekend browsing our antique, specialty shops and art galleries. Info: (800) 617-4502, www.ponchatoulachamber.com.
Antique & Collectible ShowJuly 12-13 • Portland, ORVisit the beautiful Pacific Northwest and take in a really big all vintage show! At the Portland Expo Center. Early admission during set-up on Friday, July 11 is $20 (8 am-6 pm). Adult admission on Sat. and Sun.: $7. Info: (503)
282-0877, www.christinepalmer.net.
National Depression Glass Show & SaleJuly 12-13 • Wellington, KS The 40th anniversary convention, glass show and sale, to be held at Wellington
Continued on Page 28
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
ATLANTAATLANTA ANTIQUE GUN AND
INTERNATIONAL MILITARY SHOW
FRIDAY 12pm - 5pm SATURDAY 9am - 4pm
July 11-12, 2014DAILY ADMISSION $7.00 AGE 7-12 $1.00
ATLANTA, GACOBB COUNTY CIVIC CENTER
548 South Marietta ParkwayMarietta, GA
CIVIL WAR, WWI, WWII, INDIAN WARSANTIQUE ARMS & MEMORABILIA
U.S. AND FOREIGNMILITARY ARMS AND MEMORABILIAEXHIBITED, BOUGHT, SOLD, AND TRADED
****************************************************Carolina Tader Promotions P.O Box 769, Monroe, N.C. 28111-0769 770-282-1339
email: [email protected]
LAKEWOO D400
ANTIQUES MARKET3rd weekend Of every mOnth
Over 500 dealer spaces
July 18-20august 15-17 • september 19-21
• New 75,000 sq. ft. climate-controlled building• Located in the heart of Atlanta’s most affluent region on GA 400
• Full service restaurant • Inside Booths 8 x 10...$125• Permanent Inside Spaces $2 per sq. ft.
• Outside covered shed spaces 10 x 20...$90HOURS: Fri. 9-5; Sat. 9-6; Sun.10-5
fOr bOOkIng:ph: (770) 889-3400 • fax: (770) 889-2985Mailing Address: 1321 Atlanta Hwy., Cumming, GA 30040
www.lakewoodantiques.com
Directions: Take Ga. 400, exit 13 west, next right on Highway 9.Located @ 1321 Atlanta Highway, Cumming, GA 30040
Lakewood 400.Qrt.7.14_SEA
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
High School, 1700 East 16th Street; 32 nationally known dealers, educational seminars, hourly door prizes and displays. Admission $8, good both days. Info: Call Pam Meyer: (972) 672-6213, www.NDGA.net.
Coca-Cola Collectors ClubJuly 15-19 • Springfield, IL40th Annual Meeting with a Coca-Cola Memorabilia Show & Sale, open to the public on July 19, 10-2. The meeting will include regular and silent auctions, a trading center and seminars. Held at the Crowne Plaza Springfield, 3000 S. Dirksen Pkwy. Info: 909-882-2240 or www.CocaColaClub.org.
Heart-o-the-Martstarts July 16 • Brimfield, MABe at out gates at 8:45 a.m. on Wednesday, where “shoppers rush in as the gates open to the Heart-o-the-Mart” (USA Today). Don’t miss this hi-quality early Brimfield show! Info: (413) 245-9556, [email protected], www.brimfield-hotm.com. Show is just past Francesco’s Restaurant.
Lakewood 400 Antiques Mkt.July 18-20 • Cumming GA
2014Flea Market Schedule
July ............................Hot Swaps.................25-27August ....................Back To School.............22-24September................... Fall Fest ..................26-28October .................... The Big One ...............24-26November..............Holiday Preview............21-23December................. Last Chance ...............19-21
Still at theNashville Fairgrounds. Now accepting applications for quality vendors.
Nashville Expo Center.org (615) 862-5016
Nearly 1900 booths to browse and show. You’ll find hardware and antiques and almost anything in-between.
I-65 & Wedgewood Ave. • Nashville, TNP.O. Box 40208 Nashville, TN 37204
Pensacola, FLAugust 2nd-3rd
Slidell, LAAugust 9th-10th
Looking Glass_07.14
More than 500 spaces. Located at 1321 Atlanta Hwy See our ad for directions. Hours: Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-5. Info: 770-889-3400 or www.lakewoodantiques.com. Info: 770-279-9899.
Murfreesboro Antiques ShowJuly 18-20 • Murfreesboro, TNThe 47th annual show, held at the Middle Tennessee Expo Center, 1209 Park Ave. Hours: Fri.-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 11-4. Admission: $7 for all 3 days. Free parking. Silver repair available. Contact Virginia Hallett, H: (270) 237-5205, C: (270) 991-0907, www.murfreesboroantiqueshow.com.
DC Big Flea MarketJuly 19-20 • Chantilly, VAThe Mid-Atlantic’s largest antique event. An amazing treasure hunt, millions of decorative antiques and collectibles. Hours: Sat. 9-6, Sun. 11-5. Free parking. Admission: $8, shop all weekend; at the Dulles Expo Center, 4320 Chantilly Shopping Center. Info: www.damorepromotions.com or 757-961-3988.
Elegant & Depression Glass Show & SaleJuly 19-20 • Nashville, TN
15th annual event, held at the Tennessee State Fairgrounds. 625 Smith Ave., Nashville. Vintage elegant and Depression glass, glass repair, glassware ID, cash door prizes. Sat. 10-5, Sun. 11-3. Admission $6, good both days. Free parking w/ this ad. Info: call (615) 856-4259, www.fostoria-tennessee.com.
Michigan Antique FestivalsJuly 19-20 • Midland, MIHeld at the Midland County Fairgrounds, at 6905 Eastman Ave. Michigan’s largest antique and vintage market. Home décor and eclectic furniture, jewelry, Americana, primitives, shabby chic, classic car show. Admission: $6 per person. Info: 989-687-9001, www.MiAntiqueFestival.com.
Cashiers Antiques Benefit ShowJuly 25-27 • Cashiers, NCThe 38th annual event, at Hwy. 107 North in Cashiers. Proceeds benefit the Blue Ridge School. 60 outstanding exhibitors, grand prize drawing, glass and crystal repair, on-site hand engraving (gold, silver, etc.), garden dining. Donation: $8.50 (8$ w/ad). Info: call Hazel Giles at (828) 743-9270.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Nashville Flea MarketJuly 25-27 • Nashville, TNJuly is Hot Swaps month at the Nashville Flea Market, the place to show and sell. Nearly 1,900 booths to browse and show. You’ll find hardware and antiques and everything in between, at the Nashville Fairgrounds (I-65 & Wedgewood Ave.). Info: (615) 862-5016, www.NashvilleExpoCenter.org.
Peach State Collectible Glass Show & SaleJuly 26-27 • Marietta, GAPeach State Depression Glass Club’s 38th annual event with nationally recognized dealers and special guests at Cobb Civic Center, 548 S. Marietta Pkwy. Large selection of antique, vintage and Depression glass, pottery, kitchenware and dinnerware. Hours: Sat. 10-5, Sun. 10-4. Admission: $8 (good for both days); early shopping Sat. 8:30- 10 a.m., $15. For a discount and info: www.psdgc.com.
Metrolina Expo MarketplaceJuly 31-Aug. 3 • Charlotte, NCThe biggest shows in the Carolinas, held the first weekend of every month. Located at 7100 Statesville Road. Free Wi-Fi, hi-tech security, free parking, great food, dog-friendly. Best booth prices in the Southeast. Call to reserve space: (704) 714-7909. Info: www.ICAshows.com.
AUGUSTLooking Glass ProductionsAug. 2-3 • Pensacola, FLDepression glass, china pottery and more, at the Pensacola Interstate Fairgrounds, 6555 W. Mobile Highway (take exit 7 off I-10/south 3 miles). Info: call Pam or Fred Meyer at (972) 672-6213, e-mail them at [email protected], or visit www.meyershows.com.
Virginia Highlands FestivalAug. 2-10 • Abingdon, VAThe 66th annual Antiques
Market event, located just off exit 14 of I-81. Early bird shopping Sat., Aug. 2, from 8-10 a.m. ($20 admission). Regular admission: $5 daily (9-day pass $20). Concessions, free parking, no pets (service animals OK). Info: www.vahighlandsfestival.org.
Scott Antique Markets Aug. 7-10 • Atlanta, GA Now open Thursday 12:45 pm-6 pm. At the Atlanta Expo Center, 3,300+ booths. Two buildings filled with exquisite antiques, collectibles and treasures from around the world. Located on Jonesboro Road, just off I-285 at Exit 55. Open: Thurs., 12:45-6; Fri. and Sat., 9-6; and Sun., 10-4.
For complete show listings for the next months, visit www.antiquingmagazine.com; click on “Poor Jim’s
Show & Auction Almanac.”
�0 Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.SE.Schoolofauction.eighth_bc.6.14_SEA
SOUTHEASTERN SCHOOL OF AUCTIONEERING“A Professional Auctioneering School of Distinction”•Fourexciting,motivationaltermsper year–taughtbytheexperts!•Dynamicauctioneer trainingatitsbest!•Approvedinmoststates!
1-800-689-5654 www.SSAuctioneering.info
Email: [email protected] Eastview Rd. • Pelzer, SC 29669
2014AuctionClasses:
Aug.2-9(GA students July 31-Aug 9)Nov.8-15(GA Students Nov 6-Nov 15)
Every 4th Saturdayat 5 pm
700+ lots of Antique Furniture, Glassware, Smalls & So Much More!
796 Canton Rd. (Old Hwy. 5) • Jasper, GA770-735-7653 • www.jeffdobson.com
I-575, exit onto GA372 then left, 2.5 mi. to our 10,000 sq. ft. building.10% BP, cash, check, major credit cards. GAL#2290
Jeff Dobson & Associates Auction
Jeff Dobson.8th.10.2009_SEA
JULYTroy University Auctioneer SchoolJuly 10-18 • Dothan, AL Alabama’s oldest and only approved auctioneer school, approved in Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas. Learn from professionals! Held on Dothan campus at 501 University Drive. Info: 334-983-0005, www.troy.edu/ce or [email protected].
American Bottle AuctionsJuly 11-20 • (online only)Online and catalog sale (www.americanbottle.com) with nearly 200 lots of rare and highly collectible bottles (sodas, bitters, back bars, medicines, whiskey fifths and flasks, more), plus advertising items and other spirits and potions. The auction will go online Friday, July 11th, and end Sunday, July 20th.
Elite Decorative Arts July 12 • Boynton Beach, FLHundreds of lots of quality fine decorative arts, to be sold in Elite’s gallery at 1034 Gateway Blvd. (Ste. 106-108). Previews: Friday from 11-5, Saturday from 11-1. Bid live, by phone or online through LiveAuctioneers.com. Info: (561) 200-0893, www.eliteauction.com.
Rockabilly AuctionsJuly 12 • Commerce, GAAuctions every 2nd and 4th Saturday of the month, at 409 Pottery Factory Drive in Commerce, just north of Atlanta. Info: (770) 652-8075, [email protected], www.RockabillyAuction.com.
Elite Decorative Arts July 26 • Boynton Beach, FLHundreds of lots of quality fine decorative arts, to be sold in Elite’s gallery at 1034 Gateway Blvd. (Ste. 106-108). Previews: Friday from 11-5, Saturday from 11-1. Bid live, by phone or online through LiveAuctioneers.com. Info: (561) 200-0893, www.eliteauction.com.
Rockabilly AuctionsJuly 26 • Commerce, GAAuctions every 2nd and 4th Saturday of the month, at 409 Pottery Factory Drive in Commerce, just north of Atlanta. Info: (770) 652-8075, [email protected], www.RockabillyAuction.com.
Burchard GalleriesJuly 19-20 • St. Petersburg, FLFlorida’s foremost estate auction sale room, with quality auctions held each month throughout the year. Burchard Galleries buys, sells, auctions and appraises antiques and fine art. Located at 2528 30th Ave. North in St. Petersburg. Info: (727) 821-1167, www.burchardgalleries.com.
The Specialists of the SouthJuly 26 • Panama City, FLThe on-site auction of items from the estate of Paul H. (“Billy”) Eubanks, to be held at 1219 Marie Ann Boulevard, starting at 8 a.m. Central time. A treasure trove of antiques and collectibles. Online bidding via LiveAuctioneers.com. Info: (850) 785-2577, www.specialistsofthesouth.com.
AUGUSTSoutheastern School of Auctioneering Aug. 2-9 • Pelzer, SCDynamic auctioneer training at its best. Approved in most states. Four exciting, motivational terms per year taught by experts. Join our next session. (Georgia students attend July 31-Aug. 9.) Info: 800-689-5654, www.SSAuctioneering.info or [email protected].
Ahlers & OgletreeAug. 9-10 • Atlanta, GAMore than 1,000 lots of fresh estate merchandise, in a wide array of categories, in a Summer Estates Auction. The event will be held At 715 Miami Circle (Suite 210) in Atlanta, starting promptly at 11 a.m. Eastern time. Previews Aug. 6-8, 6 p.m. daily. Info: (404) 869-2478, www.aandoauctions.com.
Poor Jim's Almanac of Auctions
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
How To Get Where You Are Going By Pam Avery Printed
The traffic has really been picking up out here at Jones Crossroads. That’s a good sign. The more folks who are out and about, the better it is for business here and in town. With this increase in traffic, we have more visitors in the store but also more lost souls looking for Warm Springs, Ga. Mr. Ralph and I can always tell when someone is misplaced. Some confused travelers pull up to the front of the store, jump out of their car without turning off the engine, and hurry inside. Others sit in front of the store looking at a MapQuest printout, arguing with the GPS, looking at the road signs, and looking at the store. Finally the misplaced traveler gives up, walks into the store, looking confused and frustrated and asks, “Where am I?” Having spent hours giving directions and listening to Mr. Ralph give directions to places everywhere between Lickskillet and Panama City, I decided that compiling some information for lost travelers might be helpful. So here is our guide for “How to Get Where You Are Going:”
1. If you are a woman traveling with your significant other of the opposite sex and your partner is driving, some kind of ploy must be used to get him to stop. Try this: “Honey … quick … stop at that store …. I think I am going to be sick.” As soon as he stops, and he will, make your move, go in that store, and get directions. 2. If you are traveling with a group of ladies, decide who is going to be the line leader before you go into a store. Designate who will ask questions, who needs to write down the information, and who needs to keep quiet. 3. If you are traveling with a group of men, you might not ever come back from your journey. We once had a carload of GI’s from Fort Benning come through the intersection three times in one day. Each time, they were lost and looking for someplace different.
4. If you ask someone for directions and they begin by scratching their head and saying, “Let me think,” — hear what they have to say, tell them “Thank you,” and go someplace else for a second opinion. 5. If you are a man traveling alone, I will pray that you have a guardian angel. 6. If you are a woman traveling alone, remember why you stopped at a store in the first place. Although we love it when you load up the trunk of your car with treasures, your original intent was to get directions. 7. When you ask for directions, listen very carefully until the person finishes giving them. Do not interrupt. Do not argue. If you anger the person giving you directions, there is no telling where you might end up. Remember: if you knew how to get where you were going, you would not be asking for directions in the first place. 8. Buy a map—a real one. So hit the road. Discover America’s treasures. And if you get lost, ask for directions. --------------------- Pam Avery was graduated from the University of Georgia in 1972 with a major in journalism. She is a freelance writer and has been a publisher of two children’s books, a ghost writer and a reporter, photographer, and columnist for five weekly community newspapers. She received her master’s in journalism from the University of Memphis and currently teaches at Columbus State University in Columbus, Ga. She and her partner Mr. Ralph can be found at Jones Crossroads Antiques and Vintage Store, 6926 Whitesville Road, West Point, Ga.
Her article was reprinted from www.thecrossroadsstore.com.
French Flea Market Finds by Corey Amaro
1700s Broken French Platter
Broken long ago, story unknown. Repair evident. Keepsake. Found at the brocante (flea market) at 10:35 a.m., late in the hunt. 15 Euros. French Husband pulled the broken, wired platter out of a pile. “Hey, Corey, don’t you love this kind of broken?” he asked. He is good. Real good. Who knew he would find my kind of diamond? From Andrew Baseman’s blog, Past Imperfect (http://andrewbaseman.com/blog): “Antiques with inventive repairs (also known as ‘make-do’ repairs) are unique examples of necessity and thrift, made during a time before Krazy Glue was invented. Unlike today where we discard anything chipped or cracked, broken household items were repaired at home or taken to a metalsmith to be brought back to life, often with
whimsical results. Once regarded merely as damaged goods by antiques dealers and collectors alike, antiques with inventive repairs are justly receiving the respect they deserve.” ---------------- Corey Amaro is an American living in the south of France. Her blog (Tongue in Cheek, Living in France & French Antiques, The way I see it) can be read at http://willows95988.typepad.com/. Her email address is [email protected]. (Photo, courtesy of Corey Amaro.)
Poor Jim's Almanac of Auctions
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
American Bottle Auctions’ Auction #60 July 11-20 at www.americanbottle.com
Nearly 200 lots – many of them rare and highly collectible bottles, to include sodas, bitters, back bars, medicines, whiskey fifths and flasks, plus advertising items and other spirits and poisons – will all come up for bid in American Bottle Auctions’ next big online and catalog sale (Auction #60). The sale will begin Friday, July 11, and end Sunday, July 20, at www.americanbottle.com. “We have many highlights and these include some rare colored historical flasks, in particular a series of Washington/Taylor quarts exhibiting incredible colors and other beautiful examples,” said Jeff Wichmann of American Bottle Auctions. “We also have the Weimer collection of over 35 rare and desirable bitters bottles, plus a great selection of equally scarce advertising pieces.” Wichmann added, “We have over 35 western whiskey fifths and another 20 western whiskey flasks. These, too, are quite hard to find and will be very appealing to collectors. The cathedral pickles in this auction are probably the finest collection we’ve had in years, with some terrific true colored pickles and pepper sauces. We also have some items never before seen at auction.” The standard American Bottle Auction rules will apply to this Auction #60 (for details, logon to www.americanbottle.com). To order a catalog (available in early July) call (800) 806-7722 or send an e-mail request to [email protected]. Those interested in registering to bid for Auction #60 may go to the American Bottle Auctions website now, at www.americanbottle.com.
Whistle Stop.11.12_SEA
SpacesNow
Available for Quality
Dealers
Located Near Asheville
& Knoxville, Just South of the Smokies
60,000 Sq. Ft. of Antiques and Over 400 DealersCome See the Full-Sized Caboose, Vintage Antique Cars and Train Engine
1281 Georgia Rd. • Franklin, NC 28734 • 828-349-1600 • Fax 828-369-0981
ANTIQUES
Major on-site estate auctionslated for July 26 in Florida
Items from the estate of Paul H. (“Billy”) Eubanks – a prominent banker and accomplished woodworking craftsman – and his surviving wife Maedelle, will be sold at an on-site auction planned for Saturday, July 26, at 1219 Marie Ann Boulevard in Panama City. Mr. Eubanks was born on Aug. 12, 1932 in Altha, Fla., not far from Marianna. He passed away on Sept. 12, 2012. The sale will be conducted by The Specialists of the South, Inc., based in Panama City, with internet bidding provided by LiveAuctioneers.com and Invaluable.com. Phone and absentee bids will also be accepted. The auction will feature antique and vintage furniture, entertainment and hostess items, carpentry and hobby supplies, custom-built items and fine decorative accessories. The furniture items will include an Italian rococo-style couch with two side chairs, previously owned by the Burdine family (of Burdines Department Store fame) in Miami and acquired out of their mansion home there; an Italian rococo-style glass-top table; a Drexel French-style dining room table with two leaves, chairs and a buffet (circa 1970); and a fall-front upright secretary. The sale will get underway at 8 a.m. (CST), with a preview from 7-8 a.m. Previews will also be held the day or two prior to sale by appointment (to schedule, call The Specialists of the South at 850-785-2577). A 14 percent buyer’s premium will be applied to all purchases; all sales are final.
Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends. ��Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
ICA Metrolina Show Does Well in June, Looks Forward to July
Aiken, South Carolina....“It’s good to be here.”
Aiken Antique MallLarge Selection of English & American
Antiques, Collectibles & GiftsHours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 1:30-6
112 Laurens St • Aiken, SC
(803) 648-6700
York CottageAntiques
OpenMon.-Sat. 10-5
Antiques & AccessoriesSterling Silver & Old Plate
409 Hayne Ave. • Aiken, SC(803) 642-9524
Aiken.SC_grp.10.12_SEA
HUGE VARIETY • REAsonAblE PRIcEsPrimitives • Victorian • Country • Shabby Chic
Custom Children's Clothing • Glass • Pottery • BooksoPEn 7 DAYs...WE Do EsTATE sAlEs!
640 E. Pine Log • Aiken, SC
www.antiquesandmoreaiken.com
36Dealers
6,000Sq. F.t.(803) 644-1060
Terrace Oaks Ant Mall. 06.10_SEA
• First and finest antique mall in the Charleston areaEst. 1988.
• 90+ booths operating under one roof in an 11,000 sq. ft. climate-controlled mall.
• Featuring American, European, country & formal furniture, sterling, old bronzes, glassware, china, old prints, jewelry, old books and Indian artifacts.
www.terraceoaksantiques.com
Treasures InnAntiques, Furniture, Glassware,
Cast Iron, Books & MoreBuy, Sell or Trade
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 • Sat. 10-32002 Hwy. 72-221 EastGreenwood, SC 29649
864-223-8931
Gorgeous Mahogany Queen Anne Highboy Hammers for $32,500 at
Ahlers & Ogletree
A mahogany carved and figured Queen Anne highboy (high chest of drawers raised on cabriole legs), likely originating from Massachusetts and dating between 1730 and 1750, sold for $32,500 at a huge, high-end, multi-estate auction held June 6-8 by Ahlers & Ogletree, in the firm’s gallery located at 715 Miami Circle (Suite 210) in Atlanta, Ga. Ahlers & Ogletree has a Summer Estates Auction slated for Aug. 9-10, also in the Atlanta gallery. Over 1,000 lots in a wide range of antique and high-end categories will be sold. The auction will be open for previewing Aug. 6-8, from 10-6 p.m., and on sale days from 10 a.m. until the start of sale at 11 a.m. For more info, visit www.AandOauctions.
June bloomed the first weekend at the ICA Metrolina show in Charlotte, N.C., a little on the quiet side. But just like a motor that cracks and pops and finally bursts into a roar, the show eventually ended on a high note. Many dealers were satisfied, and some were ecstatic, as unsold items were being repacked in preparation for the next show on the circuit. July at ICA Metrolina is just as promising. It is being billed as a mini-extravaganza. Falling as it does on July 3-6, a patriotic theme is planned. Extra advertising should result in increased customers/buyers. To book a space, speak with jolly Jennifer at 704-714-7909. For more information about the ICA Metrolina show, log on to www.ICAShows.com.
�� Read the Southeastern Antiquing Magazine at www.antiquingmagazine.com --and tell your friends.
Annual Elegant & Depression Glass Show & Sale July 19th and 20th in Nashville
The 15th Annual Elegant and Depression Glass Show and Sale will be held July 19-20 in Nashville, Tenn., again providing glassware collectors and enthusiasts the opportunity to buy American-made glassware and pottery from nationally-known dealers. As in the past, the show will offer seminars on glass topics and a display of one of the Fostoria Glass Company’s most popular patterns. On Sunday, members of the Fostoria Glass Society of Tennessee (FGST) will provide a glass identification service.
The event will be held in the Exhibitor Building at the Tennessee State Fairgrounds. Parking is free if a show card or ad is presented at the entrance gate. Admission is $6 per person, good for both days. Show hours are 10-5 on Saturday and 11-3 on Sunday. The featured display will be Fostoria’s Coin Pattern, made from 1958-1982. A coin pattern was originally produced by Central Glass Works in 1892, but its production was stopped because the coins were considered to be counterfeits. The coins on the Fostoria pieces are not depictions of actual coins, so production continued for many years. New to the show this year will be glass repair by Angela Boudreaux. She will be available throughout the show to smooth chipped glass and make minor repairs. The show is hosted by the Fostoria Glass Society of Tennessee, a chapter of the Fostoria Glass Society of America. Proceeds support the Fostoria Glass Museum in Moundsville, W.Va., and other venues devoted to the history and preservation of American-made glassware. Additional information about the show is available at www.fostoria-tennessee.com and www.facebook.com/fostoriaglass.tn.
• 45,000 sq. ft. one-story facility • 300+ dealers • La Petite Tearoom• Located near the Pottery Factory and the outlet centers
500 Lightfoot Road • Williamsburg, VA 23188From I-64 take exit 234 east onto 199, exit at Mooretown Road West. Turn left at stop light onto Lightfoot Road,
500 feet to mall on left. (From Route 60, turn at Casey Toyota onto Lightfoot Road, 1/2 mile to mall on right). Look for our white picket fences Open 7 days a week (closed
Christmas, Thanksgiving & Easter) Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 12-5
Spend an hour or a day at one of the Best Antique Malls in the Country
www.antiqueswilliamsburg.com757-565-3422
Williamsburg.06.11_SEA
The Strasburg Emporium160 No. Massanutten. St • Strasburg, VA 22657
(540) 465-3711Open Sun. - Thurs. 10-5 • Fri. & Sat. 10-6
*Like Us on Facebook!*Exciting dealers, old and new!
Mr. B’s Room Now Open!Free parking in back
Exit 298 off I-81, 2 miles to downtown Strasburg.www.thestrasburgemporium.com
Strasburg Emporium_10.13_SEA
The Murfreesboro Antique Show & Sale is July 18-20 in Murfreesboro, Tenn.
The 47th Annual Murfreesboro Antique Show & Sale will be held at the Middle Tennessee Expo Center in Murfreesboro, Tenn., July 18-20. Hours for the show are Friday and Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m. and Sunday 11 a.m.-4 p.m. The Murfreesboro Antique Show is the longest-running antique show in Tennessee and was recently voted the Best Antique Show by readers of the Busy Bee Trader, a trade publication. The show will feature 70 quality antique dealers from more than 20 states, displaying and selling high-quality antique items at reasonable prices, including Dresden, Meissen, porcelain, jewelry, Nippon, knives, Orientalia, art glass, art pottery, bronzes, Art Deco, Art Nouveau, paintings, furniture, silver, china, country store, quilts, clocks, French
Cameo glass, lamps, photographs, Civil War, coins, dolls, toys, signs, sports, advertising, paper, glassware, prints, statuary, majolica, paperweights, Victoriana and more. Many of the dealers are Associated Antiques Dealers of America members. New merchandise and reproductions are not permitted at the show. The Middle Tennessee Expo Center is a climate-controlled building located at 1209 Park Avenue in Murfreesboro, Tenn., with plenty of free parking. The show is under new management, and the admission price for adults is $7, good for all 3 days. For further information, visit www.murfreesboroantiqueshow.com, or contact Virginia Hallett at (270) 237-5205 or [email protected].
49 These LisTings Are On The inTerneT: www.antiquingmagazine.com 35
1. BrundidgeMemories Present & Past
127 South Main Street, Brundidge, AL 36010, is one of several antique and collectibles shops located in Brundidge. Specializing in glassware, collectibles, lamps and more. Located about 55 miles from Montgomery on Hwy. 231 South, Brundidge is 8 miles south of Troy. To get to Main Street in Brundidge, turn at Hardee’s, into downtown, right at light onto Main Street. Open Fri. & Sat. 10-2, Tues. & Wed. 10-4. Closed Sunday. 334-300-8282. (P/M-M)
2. Birmingham/IrondaleOne Man’s Trash
2520 Crestwood Blvd/Hwy 78, Irondale/Birmingham, 35210, just off I-20 on the eastern edge of Birmingham, near Golden Rule BBQ. Antiques, collectibles, architectural salvage and custom home décor.Something for everyone including furniture, antique mantles and doors, glassware and sterling, vintage linens, collectibles, local artist original works, cus-tom furnishings made from reclaimed architectural pieces and much, much more. Great new items added weekly. Open Tues-Sat 10-6 and Sun 11-5. Cash, check or credit cards accepted. Like us on Facebook at “One man’s Trash”. Info: [email protected], 205-209-0480. Come by and see us soon! (P/M-M)
3. DecaturMemories Antiques and Gifts
2406 Old Moulton Rd., SW, Decatur, AL 35603. Located 2/10 of a mile west of the Beltline on Old Moulton Road, Memories carries a variety of antiques, gift lines and collectibles. We are a Fenton Showcase Dealer. Open Thursday, Friday and Saturday 10am to 4pm. Phone (256) 355-
6805 or (256) 350-5351. Email dotn2406 @charter.net. (P5/13-K)
4. DothanVintage Chic
140 N. Foster St., Dothan, AL 36303. Located in historic downtown Do-than. Vintage shopping the way it used to be. Small local shop where we get to know our customers. You never know what you’ll find here be-cause every day provides a different experience. Open Tuesday-Friday from 10 to 4 and Saturday from 10:30 to 2:30. Info: 334-792-0280, [email protected], www.VintageChicOfDothan.com. (P 7/14-PA)
5. OpelikaAngel’s Antique and Flea Mall
900 Columbus Pkwy., Opelika, Al. 36801. Located 1 block off I-85 (exit 62) between Atlanta and Montgomery, in Historic Opelika. At 68,000 sq. ft. and over 400 dealers, Angel’s is HUGE! We’ve separated the antiques alley (old stuff) from tag sale heaven (old & new). Prices are low because dealers pay low rent and no commissions. Come buy where the Pickers Pick! Open every day, 10-7 (CST) and Sun. 1-5 CST. Call 334-745-3221, or visit www.angelsantiquemall.com or “Angels” on Facebook. (P/M-K)
6. PrattvilleMemories Flea An’Tique Mall
1724-A E. Main St., 2.3 miles off I-65 (Exit 179), located between Bad-cocks Furniture and Big Lots. 23,000 sq. ft. of shopping for antiques, col-lectibles, glassware, books, records, coins, jewelry, furniture and more. Open 9-6 Mon.- Sat. and 1-5 Sun. Phone 334-491-5800. (P 4/14-PA)
7. Valley Timeless Antiques & Flea Market
2918 20th Ave., Valley, AL 36854. Come see the shop everybody’s talk-ing about! Conveniently located off exit 79 of I-85, with offerings and features too numerous to list here. Visit us online at www.timelessan-tiques.us, then beat a path to our door. Ph: (334) 768-8463. (K-P/M)
8. Alexandria Valley Antiques & Collectibles
6312 US Hwy 431, Alexandria, AL 36250. Hours: Mon-Sat. 10:00-5:00 pm, Sun 1:00-5:00 pm. We have 4,500 square feet of everything from black powder long guns, vintage jewelry, artwork, clothing, hats, furni-ture, chandeliers, rugs, coins, knives, NASCAR as well as collectibles and gifts. Don’t miss our Mark Down corner. We are located halfway between I-59 and I-20 on US Hwy 431 at mile marker 240. Great mer-chandise at affordable prices. (256) 820-0025. (P12/14 -M)
9. WetumpkaWetumpka Flea Market and Antiques
5266 Hwy. 231, Wetumpka, AL 36092. In the Winn-Dixie Shopping Cen-ter across from Ruby Tuesdays. 25,000 sq. ft. of air-conditioned antiques, collectibles, and neat stuff of all kinds. Low rent to draw only the finest dealers. Hours:Mon-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 1-5. Info: 334-567-2666.on
(P 4/14-PA)
ANTIQUE SHOP AND MALL DIRECTORY
Antiquing ALABAMA
Vicinity Map
The map will show the general vicinity of shops and malls listed. If you need exact directions, call the shop or mall during business hours, and they
will be happy to provide the information.
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Advertise in the Antique Shop and Mall directory
Only $30/MonthCall 1-888-388-7827
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1. EllentonFeed Store Antique Mall Inc.,
4407 Hwy. 301, Ellenton, Fla. 34222. 50 quality dealers showing lots of furniture, china, glassware, primitives, jewelry & some-thing for just about everybody. It’s a soup-to-nuts mall, located less than a half-mile off I-75, exit 224. Just take 301 South to the mall. We’ll see you there! Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5. Call 941-729-1379. (C/A-K)
2. OCALAWagon Wheel Antique Mall
3130 NW Bonnie Heath Blvd. (Hwy. 27), Ocala, FL 34475. Located just a half-mile south off exit 354 of I-75. Open 7 days a week. Over 40 quality dealers, selling antiques, vintage, primi-tives, shabby chic, glassware, collectibles, Civil War items, hand-made collectors’ knives and more. Still a few spots open for quality dealers. Like us on Facebook (WagonWheel-AntiqueMall). Ph: (352-351-0684. (P/M-K).
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Antiquing FLoridA
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1. COLLINSThe Galleria
3487 Hwy. 495, Collins, MS 39428. Featuring fine antiques, collectibles, gifts and children’s boutique. Open mon.-Sat. 9-5. Ph: (601) 765-1527 or (601) 765-6977. www.thegalleria-ms.com (P/M-K)
2. BAY ST. LOUIS Antique Maison, LLC
111 North 2nd Street, Bay St. Louis, MS. Come back to the “good old days” where you’ll find the finest in all areas of antiques: furniture, linens, jewelry, china, gifts, household items, collect-ibles, art, more. We’re open Mon.-Sat. 10-6, and Sun. 12-5. Ph.: (228) 466-4848 or (228) 493-6316. Or visit us online at www.antiquemaison.com. E-mail: [email protected]. (C/K)
Antiquing Mississippi
1. ClArkSvilleOut of the Past Antiques and Collectibles
436 Boillin Lane, Clarksville, TN 37040. Located just south of Crossland Ave. in Historic Clarks-ville. Furniture, jewelry, silver, crystal & glass-ware, books, vintage clothing & much, much more! Hours: Monday-Occasionally; Tuesday - Saturday 9-5. Phone 931-645-5612. (P/M-K)
2. MAnCheSter MAdeline’S AntiqueS
6107 Murfreesboro Hwy., Manchester, TN 37355. Fine antiques, vintage collectibles, an-tique furnishings, vintage clothing, home acces-sories, accent pieces, toys, advertising, primi-tives, glassware. Open 7 days a week 10-5. Phone (931) 723-8013. (P/M-K)
3. SOuth PittSBurg SOuth PittSBurg AntiqueS
224 S. Cedar Ave., is located in the Tennessee River Valley where I-24 meets Hwy. 72. We offer a wonderful collection of exquisite antiques from around the world. Choose from American and European furniture, chandeliers, lamps, china, pottery, glassware, Oriental rugs, door hardware, architectural antiques, collectibles and vintage jewelry. We have a massive fine art selection. I-24 exit 152, right 2 miles. In historic downtown South Pittsburg, 20 min. west of Chattanooga, Open 7 days a week. 423-837-5439; www.southpittsburgantiques.com. (P/M-M)
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Antiquing GEorGiAANTIQUE SHOP AND
MALL DIRECTORY
Vicinity Map The map will show the general
vicinity of shops and malls listed. If you need exact directions, call
the shop or mall during busi-ness hours and they will
be happy to provide the information.
●12 Conyers
St. Marys●25
Savannah
●23 Perry
4. BOlingBrOke Antiques of Bolingbroke
8083 Rivoli Rd. (Hwy. 41). I-75 N., Exit 175, I-475, Exit 15; right in the fork of I-75 & I-475. Three buildings full of period/ 1930s furniture and accessories, American, English & French. Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30. Call us at 478-994-9353 and stop by today! (P/M-M)
5. BufOrdQueen of Hearts - Buford
4125 Ga. Hwy. 20, Buford, GA 30518. Located across from the Home Depot. 175+ dealers and 33,000 sq. ft. of fine quality antiques and interi-ors. Open 7 days a week, Mon.-Sat. 10am-6pm; Thurs. 10-8 Sun. 12pm-6pm. Come by and see us soon! Info: 678-714-0643. (P/M-M)
Further Down the Rabbit HoleSpecializing in Primitives, Antiques, Vintage and Cottage. We are located in historic downtown Buford at 15 Scott Street, Buford, GA 30518. Phone: 770-831-5040. Our winter hours are Thursday, Friday and Saturday 10-4 and Sun-day 12 noon to 4. Visit us on the web at www.furtherdowntherabbithole.net, and visit us on Facebook! (P/M-M)
6. BrOOklet67 Antique Mall
6700 Ga. Hwy 67, 1/4 mile North of Exit 127 on I-16. 10 miles South of Statesboro and GSU, also only 35 minutes from downtown Savannah. Located just off I-16; Exit 127, one of the area’s cleanest, biggest and best antique malls. 12,000 sq.ft., 100 booths; offering a wide variety of stained glass, antiques, sports memorabilia, coins, collectibles and so much more for you to enjoy. Join us in our 1950s-style snack bar for an ice cold Coke. Our gift shop sells locally-made candy, syrup, jams, etc. We love our cus-tomers! Open M-F 10-5, Sat. 10-5, Sun 1-5 and
closed on Tuesday. 912-839-2167, 67antique-mall.com. (P 5-14/M)
7. CAlhOun Calhoun Antique Mall & Calhoun Auction
Estate Sales, LLCAntique Mall, Open daily - 9 to 6pm Monday thru Saturday, 1 to 5pm Sunday. Up to 80 deal-ers set up with quality antiques, fine furniture, dep. glass, pottery, fossils, coins, records, books. Only 150 ft from I-75 exit 315, 1503 Red Bud Rd., Calhoun, GA. Phone 706-625-2767.The Calhoun Auction & Estate Sales LLC, is now taking calls for complete Estate Liquidations, Turn Key operations, set-up and display, research and advertising. Licensed, Bonded, Insured. All personal property, 20 years experience wholesale and retail sales and liquidations. Reasonable rates and professional staff. Call David Falls 706-506-8014. GL. #3707. www.calhounestatesales.com (P/M-K)
8. ChAMBleeAntique Row of Chamblee
Conveniently located in North Atlanta, just in-side I-285 on Broad Street & Peachtree Rd. in Old Chamblee. Chamblee’s Antique Row is the largest and most distinctive antiques destina-tion in the Southeast. Visitors enjoy browsing 20 shops with over 250,000 sq. ft. of antiques and col-lectibles including an outstanding selection of American & European furniture, advertising, Americana, painting, prints, pottery, glassware, toys, dolls, early medical & scientific instruments, clocks, watches, Art Deco & ‘50’s Modern, vintage clothing, linens, rare books, post cards, ephemera, costume & estate jewel-ry, radios, telephones, restaurant decor & prop rentals, coin-ops, silver, Black Americana, old sporting collectibles & more. www.AntiqueRow.com. 770-458-6316. (P/M-K)
9. ClArkeSvilleOld Clarkesville Mill Art & Antique Mall
583 Grant Street, Clarkesville, GA. 100+ vendors have filled 1/2 acre of this former textile mill with art, antiques, art supplies, vintage fur-niture, costume jewelry, ladies clothing, books, collectible dolls, rustic decor, old farm imple-ments and more. Be sure to check the birding supplies, bird houses, hummingbird feeder sand all the great trees, shrubs, annual and perenni-als in our Garden Center. Call 706-839-7500 or visit www.oldclarkesvillemill.com. (P/M-M)
10. ClevelAndYonah Treasures
2047-C Helen Hwy., Cleveland, GA 30528. Art, pottery, folk pottery, wood creations, cabin de-cor, custom picture framing, jewelry and fashion accessories. Hours: Wed.-Fri. 10-6, Sat. 10-4. Next to the Yonah Burger, 2 miles north of Cleve-land. Call 706-348-8236 for more info.(P/M-M)
11. COMMerCeOur Town Antiques
1671 S. Elm St., Commerce, GA 30529. Located in historic downtown Commerce. Antique mall with 16 dealers offering something for everyone. Come browse our large selection of quality an-tique furniture and glassware, as well as our col-lections of Roseville, Hull and Weller pottery, railroad items, military dinnerware, wall pockets and primitives. We also carry a large selection of folk art, including paintings by “Corn bread” An-derson, R.A. Miller and Marie Elam, as well as folk pottery by the Meaders family, Charlie West and Huey and Anne Wheeler. Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5. 706-335-8065. Visit us on the web at www.ourtownantiques.com and visit us on Facebook! Email: [email protected] (P/M-K)
1. AlPhArettAQueen of Hearts
670 N. Main St., Alpharetta, GA 30009. 200+ dealers and 33,000 sq. ft. of fine quality antiques and interiors, located just one block south of Windward Parkway and 3/4 mi. N of downtown on Hwy. 9. Open 7 days a week, Mon.-Sat. 10-6; Thurs. 10-8; Sun. 12-6. Come by and see us. 678-297-7571. (P/M-M)
2. BArneSvilleAntiques on Atlanta
100 Atlanta Street, Barnesville, GA 30204. Come shop the area’s newest antique mall located in historic downtown Barnesville, Ga., just south of Atlanta and only 12 miles off I-75 at exit #201. Built in 1898 and used by the Franklin Buggy Company, our restored facility now offers a fresh, relaxing environment to shop for your fa-vorite antiques, collectables and oddities that will please almost every shopper. Make us your destination and take time to stroll through our beautiful historic downtown area, located just 1 block from our shop. Open 7 days a week: Mon.-Sat. 10– 6; Sun. 1–6. Be sure to visit us on Facebook. Drive safe, and we’ll see you soon! 470-592-2033. (P/M-M)
3. BOwMAnThe Shops of Bowman
NE Georgia’s antique destination. Six unique an-tique stores, all located on the historic square. Stop in for a visit & enjoy our relaxed small town charm. Lots of variety & the best prices around. From country primitive to 50s modern. Multiple restaurants & a great little coffee shop. Plan to spend the day. All stores open Thursday-Sun-day, many open Wed. too. We are at the inter-section of GA Hwy. 17 & 172 in Elbert County, GA. Check out bowmanga.net for store info, hours, directions. See you soon! (P/M-K)
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Antiquing KENTucKy1. BOwling green
Vette City Antiques & Collectibles778 Interstate Drive, Bowling Green, KY 2101. 250 booths of climate-controlled shop-ping. Antiques, primitives and collectibles of all kinds. Don’t miss us! (Exit 28 on I-65) Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. -Sun. 9-6. Phone 270-393-9500. P/M-K)
2. frAnklinStrictly County Antique Mall
31-W North, 5945 Bowling Green Rd., Franklin, KY 42134 is located on a working farm approx. 5 miles north of Franklin, KY . The original farm-house, built in the 1840s, is occupied by the mall’s owners. The home and farm are listed on the National Register of Historic Places be-cause it is one of the few homesteads in S.Cen-
tral KY., which still has the original outbuildings intact. Don’t let the name fool you. Strictly Country offers antiques from various periods and styles. Visitors are welcome year round, ex-cluding Easter, Thanksgiving day and Christ-mas day. Open 10am to 5pm, Mon. thru Sat., closed Sunday. Phone (270) 586-3978. (PM/K)
3. MAdiSOnvilleKesterson’s Korner
502 Hall Street, Madisonville, KY 42431. Come experience 40 years of antiquing packed into a
1915 building. We’ve got antiques, fine furni-ture, silver, collectibles, cut glass and more. Light fixture restoration, burners, wicks. Come see our large oil lamp collection. Open Mon.-Sat, from 10-4:30. E-mail us for info at [email protected], or call (270) 821-7311. (P/M-K)
Antiquing GEorGiA...Continued
12. COnyerSLingering Memories Antiques and Collectables1403 Old McDonough Hwy., SE, Conyers, GA 30094. A multi-dealer mall with 12,500 sq.ft. of merchandise that changes daily. Come see our huge Elvis collection, and it is for sale! Movies are filmed here. We have antiques, collectibles, glassware, kitchenware, new and old furniture, home décor, unique items, record albums, new and old items. New dealer space available, and we accept furniture consignments. Open: Mon.-Sat. 10-6. Call 770-761-3486. Like us on Face-book. (P/M-M)
13. griffinThe Shops of Griffin
Weekend Treasures, 125 South Hill Street, 770- 233-1559; ‘Tiques & Fleas, 1511 Vaughn Rd., 770-265-1790; 47th Avenue Antiques, 324 E. Broad St., #212, in the Broad St. Mill, 404-569- 4760; Holly’s House, 900 South Pine Hill Rd., 678-251-2151; Sweet Southern Salvage, 324 Broad St., Ste. 210, 770-584-0116; Treasure Seekers, 110 S. 5th St., 770-233-6777; Shop at 11th Antiques, 212 South 11th St., 770-227-2349; and The Blue Goose, 109 E. Taylor St., 404-510-3862. Find them on Facebook.
14. lAgrAngeBradley’s Antiques & More
127 Main Street-Historic Downtown, LaGrange, GA 30240. Open: Daily 11-5; closed Wednes-day & Sunday. Visit us on facebook or www.bradleyantiques.com; 30+ consignors – We conduct estate/tag sales. 5,000 sq. ft. full of an-tiques, painted furniture, garden iron, pottery, sterling & costume jewelry, pictures, lamps, mir-rors. Info: 706-837-4888. (P5/14-M)
15. lAke PArkFarm House Antiques
I-75, exit 5 , Lake Park, GA (behind Taco Bell). Multi-dealer mall with a wide variety of glass, furniture, vintage pottery, old books , fishing col-lectibles, estate jewelry and more. Open 7 days 10-6, 229-559-0199 (P/M-M)
16. JOneSBOrO, gATreasure Seekers of Jonesboro
234 South Main St. Jonesboro, Ga. 30236. Walking through the doors at Treasure Seekers is like a stroll through time. Memories of things past, décor of the present and future memories. At Treasure Seekers, we have done
the rummaging for you. Second-hand furniture and décor at first-hand quality. Why pay full price when we have great prices waiting for you? Located in Jonesboro, Ga. at the caution light. Open Mon.-Sat. 10:30-5:30. Call 770-473-4070. (P/M-M)
17. kenneSAwBig Shanty Antiques & Auction
1720 N. Roberts Rd. NW, Kennesaw, GA 30152. Looking for the old, unusual and the unique? Big Shanty Antiques is the largest antique mall in the North Georgia/metro Atlanta area with 100+ dealers, a 50,000 sq. ft. showroom and an eclectic mix of furniture, glass, silver, jewelry, art, pottery, collectibles, vintage toys and games, primitives, Civil War, sports, Coca-Cola memorabilia and more! Open Mon.-Sat. 10-6 and Sun. noon-6. The Big Shanty Auction is on the 1st and 3rd Saturdays of each month. Info: 770-795-1186 or www.bigshantyantiques.com. (P/M-M)
18. lexingtOn Lexington Antique Mall
102 E. Main St., Lexington, GA 30648. Located just 15 miles east of Athens on Hwy. 78 (across from the Oglethorpe County Courthouse), this lovely antique mall features lots of period Amer-ican furniture, primitives, smalls and something for just about everybody. Well worth the week-end side trip while you’re on the Antique Trail! Open Wed.& Thurs. by appointment, Fri. 11-5, Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5. Log on to www.Lexing-tonAntiqueMall.com or e-mail us at [email protected]. Ph: (706) 743-5575 (P/M-K)
19. lilBurnAntiques in Old Town
93 Main St., Lilburn Ga. 30047 Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, closed Sunday...Gone to church. Visit us at Antiquesinoldtown.blogspot.com. Great pric-es...dealers love us ! Unique display and selec-tion. Small-town atmosphere, big-time invento-ry. 18 years selling great antiques, vintage and seasonal items. Come on by...6,000 square feet of treasures await you! Ph: (770) 279-1300. [email protected]. (P/M-K)
20. MCdOnOughPlanters Walk Antique Mall
42 Keys Ferry St., McDonough, GA 30253. Housed in an 18th century cotton warehouse, in about 15,000 sq, ft. of space, on the Downtown Square in downtown McDonough. Over 40 dealers, offering a little bit of everything: primi-tives, glassware, pottery, paintings, and much more. Located 3 miles off exit 221 of I-75. Open
Tues.-Sat. 10-5, closed Sun. & Mon. 678-432-5250. [email protected]. (P/M-K)
21. PerryAntique Theatre
806 Commerce St., Perry, GA 31069. I-75, Exit 136, 1 mile into town then turn right. Located in Perry’s historic Muse Theatre are 2 stories filled with fine antiques, vintage furniture, linens, chi-na, glassware, collectibles, books, jewelry, homemade items, artwork, and more. Show Times are Tues.-Sat. 10-6 and Sun. 1-5. Call 478-224-6873 or visit www.perryantiquethe-atre.com for more info. See you soon! (P8-14/M)
22. PlAinSCountry Charm Antiques & Gifts
(Plains, home of President Jimmy Carter) Located at Plains Historic Inn (early 1900) and Antique Market, 106 Main St., open 7 days a week. We have a wide selection of antique furniture, pottery, crystal, china, books by Jimmy Carter and gifts for all occasions and much more. Over 25 dealers, call for Inn reserva-tions or the Market at 229-824-4517. (P/M-M)
23. MAriettAQueen of Hearts
2745 Sandy plains Road, Marietta, GA 30066, at the intersection of Post Oak Tritt and Sandy Plains Rd. 175+ dealers and 24,000 sq. ft. of fine quality antiques and interiors. open 7 days a week. Hours: 10-6 Monday-Saturday; 10-8 Thursday; 12-6 Sunday. Come by and see our new store soon! Info: 678-453-0600. (P/M-M)
24. SenOiASenoia is hometo well established antique shops, bed and breakfast inns and an ecletic selection of one-of-a-kind gift shops. To learn more about Senoia, visit www.toursenoia.com, www.enjoysenoia.com, www.senoia.com, or become a fan on Facebook at ExploreSenoia. Conveniently located 35 miles south of Atlanta. Take Interstate 85 to Exit #61 (Hwy.74) which leads to Rockaway Road and turn right. Rocka-way becomes Main Street as one comes upon the historic district. (CA/K)
25. St. MAryS St. Mary’s Antique Mall
921 Osborne Rd., St. Marys, GA 31558. Locat-ed in beautiful St. Marys, Ga., the 2nd oldest city in America. Come browse our 7,000 square feet of climate-controlled space, packed with antiques and collectibles, including Civil War relics and vintage furniture. Open 7 days a week, from 11-6. We’re located not far off exit 1 of I-95. Ph: (912) 673-8884. (PM/K)
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1. denMArkThe Caroline Collection Fine Antiques
One of the Southeast’s finest & largest private collections of quality antiques displayed in vi-gnette settings on three spacious floors of the historic AT&T building, also, The Mayfield House and The Old Commissary. Denmark, SC, at the intersection of Hwy. 321 & Hwy. 78. Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, closed Sun. Anytime by appointment. 803-793-4739. (PM-M)
2. SuMterThe Southern Cross
202 Broad St., Sumter, SC 29150. Worldwide antiquities in a veritable museum, where every-thing’s for sale! See, feel, hear and touch histo-ry: dinosaurs, meteorites, U.S. and Confederate money and more. Immerse yourself in the natu-ral and man-made arts of all ages – European, African, Asian, Hispanic, Native American, Christian, Buddhist and Islamic jewelry, sea-
Antiquing N. cAroLiNA1. ChArlOtte
Metrolina Expo Marketplace7100 Statesville Rd., Charlotte, N.C. Held the first weekend of every month! Four days of shopping just $5! (5 days for $10 for April and November Extravaganza). Come find great treasures and gifts at the Metrolina Market-place from antique to shabby chic and every-thing in between. Collectibles and antiques to Market Street: home decor, fine antiques, fur-niture, collectibles, antique guns, art, jewelry, rugs, crafts, vintage toys and games, silver, pottery, china, coins, ephemera, salvage items, outdoor decor, vintage instruments, fresh pro-duce and more. Exit 16A off I-77. (P/M-K).
2. COnCOrdWhite Owl Antique Mall & Design Center
455 Spring St. NW, Concord, NC 28025. Not far off exit 58 of I-85 (use the Concord ramp). White Owl is a Cabarrus County “don’t miss” shopping experience, with 66,000 square feet and tons of dealers selling antiques, collect-ibles, vintage items, new and vintage art, furni-ture, pottery, handmade soaps, designer cloth-ing, gifts, jewelry, crafts and more. Upstairs is now open to the public. Community Yard Sales held the first and third Saturday of each month, auctions every Friday night from 7-10 p.m. (by ActAuction). Wine bar coming soon, with out-
Antiquing s. cAroLiNA
1-888-388-7827
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Antiquing VirGiNiA1. williAMSBurg
Williamsburg Antique Mall500 Light Foot Road, Williamsburg, VA 23188. Spend an hour or a day at one of the best antique malls in the country! 45,000 sq. ft. with 300+ dealers specializing in quality antiques and collectibles. The one-story facility is climate controlled, handicap accessible and has La Petite Tearoom serving gourmet lunches and desserts. From I-64 take Exit 234 east onto 199. Exit at Mooretown Road west then turn left at
the stop light onto Light foot Road. 500 feet to mall on left. Look for our white picket fences. Mon.-Sat. 10-6; Sun. 12-5. Phone 757-565-3422. Email: [email protected]. Website: www.antiqueswilliamsburg.com. (P/M-K)
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shells and sculptures. Open Wed.-Sat. from 10-5 (except January to April, when we trav-el the world to find the new, the unusual and the historic to put into our museum-shop). Located off exit 135 (378W) or 122 (521N) of I-95. Ph: (803) 774-3475, www.cannofsiam.com. (P/M-K).
Exit 211. Hours: on.-Wed. 10-6, Thurs.-Sat. 10-8, Sunday 1-6. For more info visit www.triadan-tiques.com or call 336-662-0544. (P/M-M)
5. SylvA The Old School Antique Mall
4704 U.S. Hwy. 441 South, Sylva, NC 28779. 12,000 sq. ft. of quality antiques in over 100 show-cases and booths. Open year-round, 7 days: Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5. Celebrating over 30 years as one of the finest antique malls in the South, with something for every budget and taste. We’re 5 miles south of Dillsboro,15 minutes north of Frank-lin, 15 minutes to Cherokee. Call (828) 586-8097. (P/M-K)
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Greensboro
77
Asheville
● ●13Charlotte
●5 SylvaConcord
2
side seating area. Classes forming soon (quilt-ing, painting, etc.). Got a special event? We can host it in our new Events Center. For reserva-tions, call (704) 795-2657 or e-mail [email protected]. Visit us online at www.whiteowlantiquemall.com. (P/M-K)
3. frAnklinWhistle Stop Antique Mall
1281 Georgia Road, Franklin, NC 28734. Experi-ence North Carolina’s newest and largest antique mall with over 100,000 sq. ft. housing antiques and other fine shops. There’s a full size caboose right inside the mall, as well as fine antique cars and a train engine. Located in the western corner of the state, just south of the Great Smoky Moun-tains. Mon.-Sat. 10-5; Sun. 1-5. Call (828) 349-0576. (P/M-K)
4. greenSBOrO Antique Market Place
6428 Burnt Poplar Road, Greensboro, NC 27409. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. Right off I-40 at
These LisTings Are On The inTerneT: www.antiquingmagazine.com 40
ANTiQuiNG And coLLEcTiNG cLAssiFiEds
1350 West Bay DriveLargo, FL 33770
20
US 7920
49
49
1210
Ponchatoula●1
1. POnChAtOulAThe Shops of Ponchatoula
Ponchatoula is nicknamed “Amer-ica’s Antique City.” Over 250,000 sq. ft. of antiques and collectibles shops all within walking distance of one another. Ponchatoula is lo-cated 35 minutes north of New Orleans and 35 minutes east of Baton Rouge. For more informa-tion call 1-800-617-4502 or log on to www.ponchatoulachamber.com. (P/M-K)
Antiquing LouisiANA
Home Study
Dealers Wanted!
Antique dealers and makers and sellers of all handmade items--woodworking, yard art, jewelry, glass, pottery, dolls, stained glass, and so on. New location opening up in Chamblee area, 1 mile inside I-285 off Peachtree Industrial Blvd. Rent space for $2.50 per sq.ft.—any size you want. For info, call 404-574-3555 or email [email protected].(P5/14-M)
McCormick Place Antiques & Collectibles
141 East 5th St., Russellville, KY • (270) 726-0077
Gordon and Eleanor McCormick welcome you to step inside and step back in time while browsing stunning items from the past, including lots of beautiful furniture (cherry, mahogany, walnut and oak), handmade Amish furniture, over 20 different dining sets, plus beautiful sofas and love seats. We also have fine china (Noritake, Haviland, Limoges), beds (walnut, cherry, brass and iron), gorgeous chandeliers, very large oval and gold leaf beveled mirrors, glassware, lots of lamps and other unique items. Great for weddings and other special occasions. Take home a print from artists such as C.G. Morehead, Don Enser and Glen Robertson, plus many one-of-a-kind pictures and oil paintings. We have several pieces over 200 years old, including a beautiful walnut corner cupboard, almost 9' tall. We also have an outstanding large
wardrobe and marvelous woodwork, including 18 doors. MAJOR STOCK REDUCTION AND INVENTORY SALE NOW UNDERWAY!
Cool down in our air conditioned shop with some big summer savings!
• New Items Arriving All the
Time!
• 200 Year Old Chippendale
Large Highboy
• 3000 Square Feet
• Major stock reduction and inventory sale!
• 35 Miles from Bowling Green, KY
65 Miles From Nashville
• Very Pretty Gold Leaf Oval Beveled Mirror
McCormick Place Ants. 7.14_Banner
Open Thurs.-Fri 11-5 & Sat. 11-4,or by appointment.Please call ahead for your private appointment. Just 60
miles from Nashville!
STERLING FLATWARE• Bought and Sold •
Hundreds of patterns in stockBefore you buy or sell call us.Toll Free 1-800-252-6655
Web: RSGoldberg.com E-mail: [email protected]
R.S. Goldberg67 Beverly Road, Hawthorne, NJ 07506
RS. Goldberg.8th.12.08_SEA
THESE LISTINGS ARE ON THE INTERNET: www.antiquingmagazine.com 40
ANTIQUE HOME STUDY COURSE - For "Profit" and "Pleasure". Become a certified appraiser. You may be a natural for a career that offers tremendous financial and personal rewards. FREE book: Asheford Institute of Antiques, 981 Habor Blvd., Ste. 3, Dept. 275SACC6 Destin, FL 32541-2525. Or call 877-444-4508. www.asheford.com. (P12/14-M)
ANTIQUING And COLLECTING CLASSIFIEDS
1350 West Bay DriveLargo, FL 33770
US 7920
49
49
1210
Ponchatoula●1 20
1. PONCHATOULAThe Shops of Ponchatoula
Ponchatoula is nicknamed “Amer-ica’s Antique City.” Over 250,000 sq. ft. of antiques and collectibles shops all within walking distance of one another. Ponchatoula is lo-cated 35 minutes north of New Orleans and 35 minutes east of Baton Rouge. For more informa-tion call 1-800-617-4502 or log on to www.ponchatoulachamber.com. (P/M-K)
Antiquing LOUISIANA
Home Study
McCormick Place Antiques & Collectibles
141 East 5th St., Russellville, KY • (270) 726-0077
Gordon and Eleanor McCormick welcome you to step inside and step back in time while browsing stunning items from the past, including lots of beautiful furniture (cherry, mahogany, walnut and oak), handmade Amish furniture, over 20 different dining sets, plus beautiful sofas and love seats. We also have fine china (Noritake, Haviland, Limoges), beds (walnut, cherry, brass and iron), gorgeous chandeliers, very large oval and gold leaf beveled mirrors, glassware, lots of lamps and other unique items. Great for weddings and other special occasions. Take home a print from artists such as C.G. Morehead, Don Enser and Glen Robertson, plus many one-of-a-kind pictures and oil paintings. We have several pieces over 200 years old, including a beautiful walnut corner cupboard, almost 9' tall. We also have an outstanding large
wardrobe and marvelous woodwork, including 18 doors. MAJOR STOCK REDUCTION AND INVENTORY SALE NOW UNDERWAY!
Cool down in our air conditioned shop with some big summer savings!
• New Items Arriving All the
Time!
• 200 Year Old Chippendale
Large Highboy
• 3000 Square Feet
• Major stock reduction and inventory sale!
• 35 Miles from Bowling Green, KY
65 Miles From Nashville
• Very Pretty Gold Leaf Oval Beveled Mirror
Open Thurs.-Fri 11-5 & Sat. 11-4,or by appointment.Please call ahead for your private appointment. Just 60
miles from Nashville!
Dealers Wanted!
Antique dealers and makers and sellers of all handmade items--woodworking, yard art, jewelry, glass, pottery, dolls, stained glass, and so on. New location opening up in Chamblee area, 1 mile inside I-285 off Peachtree Industrial Blvd. Rent space for $2.50 per sq.ft.—any size you want. For info, call 404-574-3555 or email [email protected].(P5/14-M)
STERLING FLATWARE• Bought and Sold •
Hundreds of patterns in stockBefore you buy or sell call us.Toll Free 1-800-252-6655
Web: RSGoldberg.com E-mail: [email protected]
R.S. Goldberg67 Beverly Road, Hawthorne, NJ 07506
PAYING CASH FOR YOUR OLD COINS AND CURRENCY!
Mark G. Thompson 770-579-5794
Life Member ANA, BRNA, FUN, GNA, MNA, SCNA & TSNS
We BUY • SELL • APPRAISE
American Bottle Auctions • 915 28th Street, Sacramento, CA 9581620 years in business!
1-800-806-7722
Discover the beauty of early American glassFREE Appraisals
We pay top dollar for your antique bottlesLow consignment rates
Over 20 years’ experienceFor more information, visit our website at americanbottle.com
or email us at [email protected]
Ahlers & Ogletree, Inc.
Summer Estates Auction 1,000 Lots
Christopher Le Brun “Day Painting” Oil on Canvas
Rembrandt van Rijn Etching “Old Man with a Divided Fur Cap”
Theo Meier “Balinese Female Nude” Oil on Canvas
Ed Moulthrop Wild Cherry Center Bowl
Carved Stone Sculptural Fragment of a Nude Satyr
American Marble Top Empire Style Pier Table
Thomas Trythall Rowe, British Harbor, Signed Oil on Canvas
Marble Top Bombe Chest with Wine Cork Motif
Empire Style Ormolu Mounted Mahogany Armchair
Empire Style Mahogany Sofa withCustom Silk Upholstery
Mahogany and Satinwood Inlaid Flip Top Game Table
Preview: August 6-8, 10am - 6pm DailyOpening Reception: August 7, 5pm - 9pm
715 Miami Circle, Suite 210, Atlanta, GA 30324 404.869.2478 www.AandOauctions.com GAL#C2954Seeking quality consignments for future auctions. Email inquiries to [email protected].
August 9-10, 2014 11am EST