:Randy Inman Auctions' recent Collectors Harvest sale, featuring
antique advertising and the last holdouts from the F.H. Griffith
toy collection, took in more than $500,000.
The crowd at Inman's gallery may have been small, but phones and
the Internet more than made up for the modest turnout.
"The gross was way over the total estimate," Inman said. "The
only thing that was a little soft were the beer trays, but they
were later examples. Everything else in the sale did very well
and certainly surpassed our expectations."
Bidders got right down to business in the opening quarter-hour of
the sale, as phones sparked the activity on three back-to-back
root beer advertising lots. A 7- by 9-inch self-framed,
celluloid-over-card-board sign, featuring a Twentieth Century
beauty daintily sipping a mug of "Dr. Swett's Original Root Beer"
sparkled at $9,350.
Next up was a celluloid-over-cardboard sign, 6 by 8 inches, green
background, emblazoned "Say! Drink Hires," brought $10,450; this
was followed by an even more elusive red-background variation of
the same image, celluloid-over-cardboard format, which soared to
$13,200. Both the Hires signs featured the trademark pointing-boy
logo and had been estimated at only $800 to $1,200.
An elaborately carved, electrified Wilhelm Bruder carousel organ,
offered with two boxes of music books, also sold well above
estimate, to a bidder participating by phone, for $18,700.
"It's going into a collection. The buyer has four or five other
organs of this type," noted Inman.
A novelty arcade game, "Black Bart Quick Draw," which allows the
player to draw pistols and square off against a figural sheriff
dressed in black, hit the target at $2,970 against a $3/500
estimate, while a Hitler-themed "Kill the Rat" countertop penny
arcade game rang up $3,850, more than six times its high
estimate. According to Inman, "A few newer copies of this machine
have been made, but collectors could tell by the mechanism that
this one was an original."
Retaining its ornate original facade, this Wilhelm Bruder
carousel organ was offered with two boxes of music books and
sold for $18,700 against a $10/15,000 estimate.
Another desirable coin-op was the black and gold, wood cased
horse race game called "Pace's Racers." Introduced in Chicago in
1935, it is a consistent favorite with enthusiasts. Against an
$8/10,000 estimate, it galloped away at $13,200.
Publicized widely prior to the auction, a baseball-shaped
"Fan-Taz" soda fountain syrup dispenser benefited from a
last-minute absentee bid. "A dealer called up on behalf of a
client who doesn't collect dispensers but who liked this
particular one. Apparently he likes folk art and Americana, and
the baseball advertising on this dispenser definitely qualifies
it as Americana." The 16-inch-tall dispenser in very good overall
condition brought $15,400.
Mike Cassidy, a bottle collector bidding via the Internet from
his home in Toledo, Ohio, added a Lime Julep soda fountain syrup
bottle to his collection for $605. "I have about 40 of these
bottles in my collection, and fountain syrup bottles of any type
are difficult to find," he said. A first-time bidder at Inman's,
Cassidy also won a 13-inch Hires syrup mixture tin for $132.
During the second session the first toy to attract big bucks was
a mint-condition Ives cast-iron firehouse with horse-drawn pumper
from the fabled collection of the late F.H. Griffith. Most of
Griffith's toys were sold at auction in December 2000, but the
collector's family withheld a select grouping of early
American-made playthings until their consignment to the Inman
sale. Estimated at $5/6,000, the firehouse and pumper blazed to
$10,450. A few lots later, another superb Griffith-owned toy, a
Hubley four-seat brake, exceeded estimate to ring up at $16,500.
Made by an unidentified American company, a horse-drawn cast-iron
sulky was more interesting to bidders than its $100/150 estimate
alluded, hammering down at $3,850. "It was in really clean
condition and obviously caught the eye of many people in the
room," stated Inman.
A charming cast-iron comic character pull toy, "Happy Hooligan
Soapbox Derby" in near-mint condition, cruised well beyond its
estimate to $4,675.

A Hubley cast iron four-seat brake, from the F.H. Griffith toy
collection, achieved $16,500.
The top lot of the sale was a 10-inch battery-operated tin
robot, ex-Griffith collection, known as "Mego Man." Surpassing
several absentee bids, two phone bidders fought to the finish, with
one of them, an advanced collector, paying $23,100 for the
Japanese-made 1950s robot.
A 1920s Buddy L sand and gravel truck, 27 inches long, achieved
$4,675; while a 1930s Keystone sit-n-ride water tower truck, 33
inches long with working headlights and water pump, and original
box, made $2,860.
Collectors at the preview marveled over the almost impossibly
crisp condition of a 101/2-inch J. & E. Stevens cast-iron
still bank replicating the battleship Maine. "It looked
brand-spanking new," Inman said, "like it was fresh from the
factory." Against a $2,5/3,000 estimate, the Maine sailed
away to a new harbor for $7,150.
Other highlights of the Saturday session included a boxed Marx
tin windup "New York City Plane Ride," selling at $1,540; and
several steam toys. A Schoenner marine-type steam engine drew
$1,320; while a Marklin no. 41-46 steam engine, with original
packing crate, was snapped up for $1,650. A Falk no. 456 steam
engine achieved $1,430; and an interesting Bing steam-powered hot
air water fountain topped out at $1,980.
All prices include a ten percent buyer's premium.