Beware of fakes when dealing with antique tobacco jars
The first U.S. surgeon general warning on tobacco products was required in 1964. Tobacco was labeled as bad for your health.
Americans were soon using fewer tobacco products, like cigarettes, pipe tobacco, snuff, chewing tobacco and cigars. In the late Victorian era, use of snuff lost favor, and tobacco was used mainly for pipes. Tobacco is a dried leaf, and it crumbles easily, so it’s kept in a container that could be used as a humidor. By the mid 19th century, many pottery jars were being made in Germany in amusing shapes. Few were made in the United States. Animals, human heads, historic figures and obvious shapes like barrels were popular. By the 1930s, most potteries were making more-formal and less-colorful jars.
Collectors search for ornamental examples, especially those made of majolica or another colorful ceramic or by well-known factories.
Tobacco jars range from 6 to 13 inches tall. They sometimes are confused with cookie jars. But a jar-humidor has a section with a hole inside the lid that held a moist sponge. And a tobacco jar lid opens at half the height of the jar. A cookie jar has a lid that opens near the top. Tobacco jars, especially the full figures of a person or animal, sell for $500 to more than $1,000. Beware. There are many fakes.
Q. My old Wheaties box is intact and has eight sports cards printed on it, including football players Otto Graham and Johnny Lujack and baseball star Stan Musial. Can you tell me when the box was originally sold and what it’s worth? And where should I try to sell it?
A. Your old cereal box was on store shelves in 1952. Boxes were sold that year with a total of 60 different trading cards of 30 athletes.
The athletes were shown in both portrait and action poses, and the images are in Wheaties colors – blue and white on an orange background. You were smart never to cut the cards. An uncut box is more valuable than the eight cut cards printed on the box. Depending on the identity of the other athletes pictured on your box, the box could sell for more than $100, perhaps a lot more. Your box is a crossover collectible, but it would be worth more to a sports collector than to an advertising or cereal-box collector. You probably would get the best price by selling it at an auction that specializes in sports memorabilia.
Q. In 1996 I paid $12 for a 5-inch Donald Duck figural mug at an antiques mall. The mug is in the shape of Donald’s head. The base is blue, the same color as the rim around the top of the mug. It’s marked with a copyright symbol and the words “Walt Disney Prods., Japan.” I’d like to know the mug’s age and value.
A. Walt Disney ceramic dishes were made in Japan before and after World War II, but your mug dates from after the war. The mark dates it anywhere from the 1950s to the early 1980s. It would sell today for roughly what you paid for it 16 years ago.
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.
n Scarf, orange and black plumes, orange border, signed Paoli, 1960s, $20.
n Fitz & Floyd Art Nouveau lady-stem goblets, woman wrapped in gauzy gowns, creamy white glaze, marked, 1978, 7 3/4 inches, pair, $35.
n TV Magic Kit, Marshall Brodien as Wizzo the Wizard, 50 tricks, 1960s, $40.
n Bazooka Bagatelle marble pinball game, graphics of military jeeps, tanks and guns, four white marbles and one black, Marx, box 12 1/2 x 6 3/8 inches, $85.
n Fondue set, enameled metal pot with wooden handle, Peter Max design, 6 forks, Ernest Soho Creations, Japan, 1970s, 5 x 7 inches, $175.
n Wheaties cereal-box flat, Musketeer record cutout on front panel, 78 rpm, “Donald Duck’s Song,” Mickey as bandleader on back, offers four record premiums, 1956, 11 1/2 x 18 1/2 inches, $175.
n Micro-beaded purse, gold, tan, blues and red-orange beads, two pockets, original mirror, change purse, marked “Sterling,” 1920s, 6 3/4 x 8 inches, $395.
n Regency sewing table, mahogany, yellow silk fitted basket, single drawer, lyre-shape base, spool-turned stretcher, brass paw feet, early 1800s, 28 x 24 1/4 inches, $3,750.
Write to Kovels, Observer-Reporter, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019.