Friday, December 27, 2013

Catalog Sales

Catalog Sales
1901 Bishop Furniture Company
1903 CREX grass furniture
1904 Hughes Furniture Mfg.
1906 Sectional Bookcases
1907 Adams furniture Company
1907 The Wisconsin Furniture Manufacturing Company
1909 Stickley Furniture 
1910 Arts and Crafts Furniture
1910 Character Furniture
1910 Stickley Furniture
1910 Mission Furniture
1911 Come-Packt Furniture Co.
1914 Richter Furniture Company
1915 The Craftsman
1915 Paine's Furniture
1915 Larkin factory to family Furniture
 Peppler Brothers Company
1917 Furnishing for the Home
1918 Wallace Nutting
1920s IDEAL built in furniture
1921 G.W. Huntley & Co.
1922 Sears and Roebucks Furniture Department
1923 Imperial Upholstering Company
1927 Leavens finish to your order furniture

1925 Ad Super Model VII Deluxe Chinese Speakers Zenith Radio Antique Music


SILVERTONE FLOOR CABINET PHONOGRAPH: Ca. 1920. Oak cabinet, excellent working condition. Extra needles & 3 records. 43 1/4" high x 23" wide to end of handle x 21 1/2" deep.













SILVERTONE FLOOR CABINET PHONOGRAPH: Ca. 1920. Oak cabinet, excellent working condition. Extra needles & 3 records. 43 1/4" high x 23" wide to end of handle x 21 1/2" deep.




Beautiful QUARTER SAWN OAK antique phonograph, manufactured By Chas. H. Elting & Company, Chicago U.S.A., The production number is stamped in metal on the interior of the cabinet No. 10787 - All Original Interior, Exterior has been refinished back to the original beauty. Large cabinet stands 49 1/2 " Tall, 21 1/4" Wide x 21 1/4" Deep - all measurements are approximate. 

Columbia Grafonola Cabinet Phonograph









Party like it’s 1920 with this grand old Columbia Model 701 Grafonola phonograph. It’s in good condition. The music making part works well and the case is OK but it does have a couple faint water marks and an ephemeral ghost-like damp stain in the front. We’ve got  a small bunch of 78 rpm records that we’ll throw in (including several fox trot favorites of the day).
It measures a surprisingly small 32 1/2 inches wide, 20 1/2 inches deep and stand just about 37 inches tall. Apparently these weren’t very expensive when they were originally sold since Columbia saw them as the purchase for their most profitable enterprise: albums.

Edison C2 radio/phonograph, large cabinet