Deco designs beloved by collectors

Chase Brass & Copper Co. made this pair of lamps, the Colonel and the Colonel’s Lady, in about 1935. This pair sold recently for 00 at a Jackson’s auction in Cedar Falls, Iowa.

Many companies today are looking at their sales figures and deciding how to change their products to attract more customers. The same thing was true in the 1930s when Chase Brass & Copper Co. decided to make art-deco pieces for the home, along with the buttons, nails and thousands of other brass products it had manufactured since the company’s founding in 1876. Chase’s deco designs were a little more expensive than pieces by its competitors, but they were attractive, novel and in the latest fashion. The company made cigarette boxes, candlesticks, tea sets, hors d’oeuvres trays, lamps, bowls, bookends, newspaper stands, planters and more. In the 1934-35 catalogs, the company offered the “Colonel Light.” It was a lamp that looked like a soldier. The light bulb was the head, and the hat its shade. There was also a “Colonel’s Lady” light. Each lamp is 9 3/8 inches high on a 4-inch-diameter base. Lurelle Guild was the famous industrial designer who created these lamps for Chase. Collectors search for these lamps because they are amusing and useful and were made by a famous company and a famous designer.

I have a sterling-silver cigar case that was a wedding gift given to my grandfather by my grandmother in 1916. It has his initials, “FW,” on the front. I treasure it as a family heirloom, but is it very valuable?

Cigar cases were made to keep cigars fresh and also to keep them from getting crushed. Cigar smoking was popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Although smoking is now banned in many places, cigar cases are still made. The value of your silver cigar case is about $125.

Q: I have a beer poster that seems quite old. It pictures a nymph sitting next to a bottle of Schlitz beer. The label on the bottle says it is less than 1/2 percent alcohol. How old is this poster?

A: Your poster was probably made during Prohibition, between 1919 and 1933. A picture of a nymph might indicate it was made during the early years of Prohibition. The Volstead Act, or National Prohibition Act, was passed on Oct. 28, 1919, and prohibited the sale of intoxicating beverages. Beer that had less than 1/2 percent alcohol by weight was considered nonalcoholic and was allowed. Schlitz was one of the brewing companies that made “near beer” or “nonalcoholic” beer. The legal limit of alcohol content was raised to 3.2 percent on April 7, 1933, when the Cullen-Harrison Act was passed. Prohibition was repealed on Dec. 5, 1933. This poster has been reproduced in the past 20 years. If yours is old and large, it’s worth hundreds of dollars.

Can you tell me if a pack of cigarettes made in the U.S.S.R that commemorates the Apollo-Soyuz flight is a collector’s item?

The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project was the first joint space mission between two countries. Apollo docked with the Russian spacecraft Soyuz in July 1975. Many souvenir items were issued to commemorate the historic event, including cigarettes in a special Apollo-Soyuz pack with the mission emblem on it. The cigarettes were a joint venture between Philip Morris, which provided the tobacco, and Tava, a Russian company that manufactured them. The cigarettes went on sale in Russia on July 15, 1975, the day the Soyuz launched, and later in the United States. They were popular in Russia, where commemorative cigarettes were common, but didn’t sell well in the United States. Value of your pack of cigarettes: $5 to $10.

I have a set of 12 dinner plates, never used, with scenes of the MIT campus in Cambridge, Mass. Each one is signed by S.W. Stratton and dated 1930. There is an impression on the back that says “Wedgwood, made in England.” I would appreciate knowing the value of these plates.

Wedgwood made plates with scenes from colleges and universities from 1927 until the 1950s. The colleges commissioned the plates and sold them to alumni and in college bookstores. The plates were made of Queen’s Ware, a cream-colored earthenware, and marked with the name of the building pictured on the plate. S.W. Stratton was president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1923 until 1930. Wedgwood was established in England in 1759. It is part of WWRD Holdings today. The value of the plates vary, but it’s about $50 to $65 per plate.

While cleaning out the garage, we found a brass 100-pound-capacity Forschner hanging scale. There’s a round seal embossed on it that says, “Approved Type 34 Serial 1 New York City.” We’re hoping you can shed some light on its history and value.

You have a hanging butcher scale made by the Forschner Butcher Scale Co. of New Britain, Conn. It’s a commercial scale made for a butcher shop and probably dates from the late 1800s. The company was founded by Charles Forschner in 1855. Eventually, it made other types of scales and imported knives, including Swiss Army knives. The company was bought and sold a few times before it became Swiss Army Brands Inc. in the mid-1990s. We have seen scales like yours sell for $5 to $50.

Tip: Spray a glass flower vase with nonstick food spray. It will keep the water from staining the glass.

Current prices

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.

Baltimore &amp Ohio Railroad coffee cup, Centenary pattern, shows 1830 horse-drawn car and 1st stone of the B&O RR, laid July 4, 1828, Scammell’s Lamberton China, Trenton, N.J., c.1930, 3 inches, $95.

Babe Ruth baseball bat figural knife, two blades, red and cream celluloid, blade with maker’s name “Camillus,” 2 5/8 inches, $140.

Bakelite ivory and amber cigarette holder, carved pair of wild galloping horses on top, original base embossed “Consolidated Pipe Factory,” c. 1910, 11 x 3 inches, $260.

Dick Tracy Detective Club hat & belt, pressed wool, Miller Bros. hat, profile of Dick Tracy and Junior on patch, Detective Club premium, 1940s, size 30 belt, $275.

Madame Alexander groom doll, black felt jacket, gray trousers, silver tie, velvet vest, black shoes, painted face, open/close eyes, molded hair, 1950s, 8 inches, $445.

George Nelson Action Office desk, walnut roll-top over laminated writing surface, chromed steel base, two plastic pencil drawers, by Herman Miller, 54 x 30 x 34 inches, $660.

Camel Cigarettes transparent door sign, brown camel on front, gold ground, blue lettering, lithograph on paper, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., c.1915, 9 3/4 x 7 7/8 inches, $710.

Bill Graham concert poster, featuring The Yardbirds & The Doors, psychedelic bird design with woman’s face, BG-75, July 25-30, 1967, 14 x 21 inches, $1,012.

Engraved horn cup, farming scene, barn, animals, peafowls, figures, well and carriages, dated 1768, 3 3/4 inches, $1,535.

Delft puzzle jug, globular, blue design, reads “Fill me with ale, wine or water/Any of the three it makes no matter,” pierced floral neck, marked, 7 3/4 inches, $2,125.