Collectible cufflinks make a great gift for Father’s Day

  • By Terry Kovel
  • Tuesday, June 16, 2009 5:05pm
  • Life

A smart woman created Father’s Day in 1910. Sonora Smart Dodd wanted to honor her father, William Smart, in the same way mothers were honored on Mother’s Day. The idea caught on, and in 1972 Congress made the third Sunday of June the official holiday.

It can be difficult to find a gift for Dad, but cufflinks are back in style and collectors can find many vintage examples anywhere from $10 to more than $1,000.

But be sure Dad has at least one shirt with cuffs that have holes, not buttons. An expensive pair of cufflinks and a matching tie bar sold last year at a Sollo Rago auction for $1,715. The gold cufflinks and tie bar in an abstract design were made by a now-famous artist, Ed Wiener (1918-1991).

He was a self-taught jeweler who worked in Greenwich Village in the late 1940s. His unusual modern pieces were made of sterling silver until the late 1950s, when he started to use gold as well as silver.

Any piece by Wiener brings high prices today, and since he sold jewelry to many tourists, it’s not unusual to find examples in all parts of the country.

The best news is that he always marked pieces with his name, so they can be easily identified. If your father isn’t the cufflink type, shop for another collectible — perhaps sports memorabilia or a shaving mug.

Q: Years ago, I acquired three pieces of porch furniture. Two are wooden chairs. The third is a wooden seat attached to a metal glider. The manufacturing plate on the rocker says, “Rok-o-Glider, The Goshen Manufacturing Co., Goshen, Indiana.” Do you know how old the pieces are and what they’re worth? They have been repainted.

A: The Goshen Manufacturing Co. has been in business since the late 1890s. Today it’s a division of Gleason Industries and makes hand and platform trucks. It started out as a manufacturer of ladders, hay tools and lawn swings. The patent for the design of your glider was granted in April 1937, so your set probably dates from the late 1930s. A repainted glider and one chair sold a couple of years ago for $200.

Q: I recently went to a rummage sale, where I paid 25 cents for an old 33-1/3- rpm long-playing record album. It’s a recording of an original radio broadcast by W.C. Fields, and the album jacket and one side of the vinyl record picture Fields. What I find interesting, though, is that the jacket front also pictures four vintage ads for Coca-Cola, and there’s a Coke logo at the bottom. Plus, one side of the record pictures a woman on the beach drinking Coke alongside the words, “Drink Coca-Cola, Delicious and Refreshing.” How old is this album, and why was it made?

A: The album dates from the 1970s, when George Garabedian’s Anaheim, Calif., company, Mark 56 Records, persuaded the Coca-Cola Co. to help him produce a few original radio broadcast albums that also advertised Coke. Others in the series included “Superman,” “The Lone Ranger,” “The Shadow” and “Sgt. Preston of the Yukon.” Each album sells today for about $15 to $25. So you made a good buy.

Q: Several years ago I purchased a cast-iron box with a key on a chain inside the box. The box is engraved “Chicago Watch Clock Station.” What was this used for? How old is it?

A: Your container is a “key station,” used to record the time watchmen inspected a building. Key stations were attached to inside walls near a building’s doors. The key inside the box fit into the watchclock the watchman carried as he patrolled the building. When the key was turned, it stamped a paper inside the clock and recorded the time the area was checked.

Each key station held a different key that recorded the time that area was checked. Electronic watchclocks are used by security guards today. Chicago Watchman’s Clock Works was founded by Abraham A. Newman in 1910. The company eventually became part of Detex, which is still in business. Your key station was made in the early 1900s. Key stations like yours sell for about $50.

Q: We are searching for information about an old tin sign advertising DuPont gunpowder. It pictures two hunting dogs and an older man teaching a boy how to aim a shotgun. Under the fence in the picture, there’s a name that appears to be “Ed. H. Osthaus.” The title at the bottom of the sign says, “Generations Have Used DuPont Powders.” In the bottom right corner are the words “A-2078, Made in U.S.A.”

A: You don’t tell us the size of your sign, but we’ll assume it’s 33 by 23 inches, the size of other DuPont “Generations” signs we have seen. Edmund H. Osthaus (1858-1928) was a German-born American artist who was commissioned to paint hunting scenes for various firearm and gunpowder manufacturers. The paintings were then used to make signs, posters and calendars. The 33-by-23-inch “Generations” sign has sold for prices ranging from $600 to $1,200.

Write to Kovels, The Herald, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019.

&Copy; 2009 by Cowles Syndicate Inc.

On the block

Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions.

Royal Gelatin bank, figural King Royal, slot in back of head, 1950s, 10 inches, $115.

Joe DiMaggio baseball hat, facsimile signature, cloth tag reads “This Is a Genuine Joe DiMaggio Baseball Cap,” Irving L. Lewis &Sons, 1940s, $145.

Abbott &Costello movie poster insert, “In the Navy,” Bud and Lou in sailor uniforms, photo of the Andrews Sisters on battleship, 1941, 14 x 36 inches, $145.

George Washington Temperance Society silk ribbon, picture of Washington in center, “The Handmaid &Guardian Angel of Virtue, Liberty &Independence,” 1840, 3 1/2 x 7 inches, $315

Advertising sign, Coldwell Lawn Mowers, linen backing, reads “Hand-Horse-Motor Power,” image of horses pulling mower, golf scene, 1920s, 22 x 28 inches, $375.

Canadian Hockey lunchbox, metal, panels with hockey scenes, rink, referees giving washout, holding and elbowing signals, General Steel Wares, 1960, 7 x 8 x 4 inches, $410.

Cast-iron garden bench, elaborate openwork back, scrolled legs, “Patented April 25, 1891,” front signed “The North American Ironworks, N.Y.,” 1930s, 36 1/2 x 45 x 18 inches, $550.

Georg Jensen sterling-silver bowl, openwork berry and leaf stem, 1945, 4 1/2 x 4 1/2 inches, $575.

Errol Flynn “The Sea Hawk” punch-out book, stiff cardboard, 4 single-sided pages, Flynn as Geoffrey Thorpe, other pirates include Dona Maria and Capt. Lopez, 1940, $610.

Regal China teapot, The Mad Hatter from “Alice in Wonderland,” hat is lid, handle is stack of cups, 1951, 8 inches, $750.

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