:It's a deal that's hard to beat: The preview for the Historic
East Berlin Antiques Show. For 12 bucks visitors are admitted to
the Area Community Center, served wine and other beverages to
wash down a tasty array of cheeses, dips, vegetables and hors
d'oeuvres, and shop the booths of 26 exhibitors. It all began
this year at 5:30 pm on Thursday, May 18, and ran for three hours
with just under 200 visitors taking advantage of this bargain.
The show then ran for two more days, coinciding with the dates of
the two shows under one roof in nearby York.
Beverly Jadus, who manages the show with fellow East Berlin
dealer Gretchen Davis, said, "The gate was up from last year,
about 500 visitors in total, and we were very pleased with the
show." Most of the exhibitors were happy, and "we already have
some of them asking for contracts for next year," she said. The
show is run by an all volunteer committee and it supports the
historical society. "We have five buildings in town to maintain,
and that is a lot for a community the size of East Berlin,"
Beverly said. The show started as a tailgate to the events in
York and it will continue to run during the same time period, and
only in the spring.
The majority of the exhibitors were from Pennsylvania, but Ohio,
Kentucky, New York, New Jersey and Maryland were also
represented. Hailing from Gettysburg was J&J Murphy with a
selection of country items including a nice grouping of early
handled baskets displayed on a green-painted country bench, and
an early Nineteenth Century two-sided trade sign in sheet metal
for Franz Xaver Kulbinger, Schuhmacher, with a red boot pictured.
Beverly Jadus, East Berlin, Penn.
The largest and most interesting piece of stoneware in the
show was displayed in the booth of The Passes of Mechanicsburg,
Penn. - a 12-gallon water cooler, probably from Ohio, decorated
with a large freehand flower in cobalt blue and a spread eagle on
the lower portion over the spout. It was shown with a mid
Nineteenth Century flour bin of Pennsylvania origin with the
original tiger graining intact.
From Millersville, Penn., Cortland Antiques offered an Amish
grain painted clock shelf that came from Farmersville, Lancaster
County, and three Lancaster County show towels, the earliest
dated 1859.
Kathy Bonnes of Burton Country Village Antiques, Burton, Penn.,
showed a nice apothecary in red stain with 18 small drawers
arranged over three drawers. The drawers retained the original
labels and porcelain knobs. Of interest was a patent applied for
model for wooden bedsprings that probably would support a young
child, but might just land a hefty adult on the floor.
Among the local exhibitors was Lion and the Lamb with a large,
early sawbuck table with three-board top, old painted surface,
and a nice schoolmaster's desk on tapered lags in the original
old red surface. Also from East Berlin was Beverly Jadus with an
assembled set of eight, one arm, birdcage Windsors, unpainted,
and an American corner or roundabout chair. The wallet and papers
belonging to Captain John Flagg, born in Portsmouth, N.H., 1764,
dated from the 1790s and were displayed under a militia musket of
Massachusetts origin.

Lion and the Lamb, East Berlin, Penn.
Three large wooden bowls, two with red paint and one with
green, were hanging against the back wall of the booth of Bob Lutz
and Ellen Katona, Greenwich, N.J. Within minutes of the preview
opening, all three had been taken down and were inspected front and
back by perspective buyers. A lollipop bench from the Friends
Meeting House in Woodstown, N.J., circa 1800, was shown under the
bowls. Before the preview was over Bob Lutz said, "We are having a
very good show" while writing up another sales slip at the same
time.
Marvin Eliot of Pottles and Pannikins, Windsor, Conn., said, "We
have done this show in the past and are pleased to be back. It is
a very nice show to do and we have a good audience here." The
booth was hung with iron and brass implements for the kitchen and
hearth, including a selection of skimmers. One was brass, in oval
form, with an iron handle, American and dating from the
Nineteenth Century. Of New England origin, and in cast iron, was
a rotating grill/broiler dating from the Nineteenth Century.
Complimenting the exhibit of iron and brass was some early
furniture including a six-board storage chest in blue/green paint
with dovetail construction and the original snipe-form hinges.
The lid was lettered "LMLD," measured 221/2 by 121/2 by 11
inches, and dated circa 1820.
Shaeffer's Antiques of Glyndon, Penn., showed a collection of 11
yellowware child's cups, some with sayings, including, "The Good
Child's Reward," along with several pairs of Staffordshire dogs.
Copper luster was well represented, along with pearlware bowls
and tankards.
One expected decoys in the booth of Don and Pat Clegg, another of
the East Berlin dealers doing the show, and they were there. A
pair of yellowleg decoys in the running position, split tail and
in the original paint, shared space with a canvasback drake by
James Currier of Havre de Grace, Md. This bird dated circa 1936
and retained the original paint. An early Nineteenth Century New
England one-door storage cupboard, dovetailed with square nails,
original gray paint, hinges and toggle closure, measured 473/4 by
42 by 19 inches. And for those who did not get to the East Berlin
show it was possible to see more of the Clegg's inventory at the
show in York.

Pottles and Pannekins, Windsor, Conn.
A Nineteenth Century wooden plow or harrow, about one-third
the size of a regular working model, was shown in the booth of
American Room Antiques of Chambersburg, Penn. "We think it is
either a salesman's sample or a child's toy of some sort," George
Adams said of the piece. Measuring 8 feet 10 inches tall was a
Pennsylvania cupboard, 1810-30, with four raised panels each
painted to represent a different kind of wood - bird's eye maple,
tiger maple, satinwood and mahogany. The cupboard itself was of
chestnut and poplar and was 18 inches deep and 43 inches wide. A
very large room was needed to accommodate the piece.
"It is one of those booths where you can expect to find
interesting and sometimes unusual things," one preview patron
said to her companion. She was standing in the booth of Country
Corner Antiques of Bowie, Md., where tables were laden with
butter stamps with all manner of design, including flowers and a
swan, and nearby was a rack containing 11 wooden bread plates.
Molds in both ironstone and copper were shown, polished sugar
nippers were in several sizes, as were a couple sets of English
carpet balls.
Carol Schulman of Chester Township, Ohio, had a bowl of stone
vegetables including a potato and carrot, and a Shaker storage
bin dated from the Nineteenth Century. It was in the original
green paint and had a door that dropped open in the lower
section. An early watercolor depicted the Hudson River flowing
through a slightly populated area with several building and some
animals and people.
This show is fun, relaxed, and one never knows what will show up.
That is the reason many of the York dealers travel 12 miles west
to attend, joining a loyal following of showgoers. As one man in
line on opening night put it, "This is great fun and a fine way
to start antiquing. I am here every year and head for York in the
morning."