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 Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Violano brings $137,500 at Showtime sale Posted by Antique Trader Staff
From Showtime Auctions: A rare bow front violano music player, made around 1910 by the Mills
Novelty Company of Chicago and professionally restored in excellent
playing condition, soared to $137,500 at a three-day multi-estate sale
held October 10-12 by Showtime Auction Services at the Washtenaw Farm
Council Grounds. The violano, serial #195, is one of only 20 still
known to exist.
The sale, which saw 2,340 lots cross the block over the course of
the weekend, featured all three versions of the Mills violano. It might
be the first time in auction history that all three Mills violano
versions were offered in the same sale. The bow front sold had a midi
player with wireless system that permits the user to operate it from 90
feet away. Included were three Mills rolls and four midi albums.
The featured collector of the sale was Sandy Rosnick, the founder
of the Antique Advertising Association of America (AAA) and a dedicated
collector of country store tins in many categories. A top earner from
his collection was a very rare Mohawk Chief cigar tin with just some
minor scuffs and scratches but otherwise in very good condition. The
tin, once containing nickel cigars, brought $1,800.
“Sandy Rosnick was the featured collector, but we had so many
items in such a broad range of categories this was our most diverse
auction ever,” said Mike Eckles of Showtime Auction Services. “We
weren't sure what to expect, because the financial crisis hit the week
before the sale, and things were still in is a state of turmoil that
weekend. But I was very pleased with the outcome. It was great.”
A strong crowd of more than 400 people enjoyed the balmy weather
and packed the Washtenaw Farm Council Grounds. The Friday session was
held solely for in-house bidders. On Saturday and Sunday, phone and
absentee bidding was brisk, while about 2,500 registered bidders
participated online via LiveAuctioneers.com and eBayLiveAuctions.com.
In all, the auction grossed around $2.2 million.
Following are additional top lots from the sale. All prices quoted include a buyer's premium that ranged from 10-20 percent.
A paper sign advertising Buffalo Brewing Company of Sacramento,
Calif., and depicting a nude Indian maiden on the back of a buffalo, in
a period walnut frame and in mint condition, hammered for $45,100.
Also, a Brunhoff light-up Coca-Cola advertising sign, inviting patrons
to “Lunch With Us” and depicting a fountain glass, in excellent
original condition (12 inches by 14 inches) fetched $12,650.
An original oil painting by the German-born American artist Edmond
Osthaus (1858-1928) realized $44,000. The hunting scene, depicting two
Irish setters and a pointer, measured 24 inches by 36 inches (32 inches
by 44 inches framed). Osthaus was commissioned by the major firearms
and gun powder manufacturers of the day, such as Remington and
Winchester, for their posters and calendars.
A Watling Cupid trade stimulator (coin-operated, five cents, with
gum vendor) in excellent condition and with keys, went for $38,500.
Also, a limited-production exact replica of a Mademoiselle Zita fortune teller, in excellent working order, hit
$17,050. The original was made by Roovers Bros. Mfg., Brooklyn, N.Y.,
around the turn of the century. The replica was manufactured by Mike
Gorski.
A “Happy Jap” gum vendor, coin-operated and made around 1902, in
good original condition (10 inches by 13-1/2 inches by 10-1/2 inches),
went to a determined bidder for $39,000. Also, a four-gallon mechanical
butter churn with no chips or cracks – a wonderful example of grey
stoneware pottery – made $3,000. The piece, 35 inches tall, was made by
Jos. Hamilton Mfg. of Greensboro, Pa.
A Buster Brown Shoes tin sign, depicting Tig pulling Buster in a
big shoe, measuring 40 inches by 24-3/4 inches and made by American Art
Works Lithographers of Coshocton, Ohio, and in overall excellent
condition, climbed to $20,900. Also, a Boyce Moto Meter die-cut tin
flange sign, two-sided, measuring 21-1/2 inches by 18-3/4 inches and
with a bullet hole and a few bb dents, brought $18,700.
A child's sled intended as a Christmas present for a little boy in
Pennsylvania in 1893 who died before the holidays, retired to an attic
ever since and in original excellent condition, with a beautiful
hand-painted rendering of the Finger Lakes in New York, wood with iron
runners and geese head pulls, coasted to $5,775. Also, a Popeye Bag
Puncher tin wind-up toy, with the original box, reached $4,125.
Showtime Auction Services' next big sale will be held the weekend
of March 27-29, also at the Washtenaw Farm Council Grounds in Ann
Arbor. Mich. The featured collector will be Fred Bahlau who, over the
course of 57 years, has amassed an impressive accumulation of leaded
glass windows, Nickelodeons, lamps, signs, country store, petroliana,
advertising and other items – 1,800 lots in all.
Select items from other estates will also be offered. Showtime
Auction Services is always accepting quality consignments for future
sales. To consign a single item, estate or collection, you may call
Mike Eckles, at (951) 453-2415. His e-mail address is
Mikeckles@aol.com. To learn more about Showtime Auction Services and
its calendar of upcoming sales, click on www.showtimeauctions.com.
antique | Antiques Auction | Auction
Tuesday, October 28, 2008 3:44:23 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Monday, October 27, 2008
Treasure Hunt Sweepstakes: Vintage Halloween Collectibles Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Time is running out for you to enter for a chance to win the Vintage Halloween Collectibles book in the Antique Trader Treasure Hunt Sweepstakes. You can enter once each day, but this sweeps ends Friday at midnight! A new prize has been selected for the November sweepstakes. Keep watching your newsletters and AntiqueTrader.com for more information! Click here to enter the Antique Trader Treasure Hunt Sweepstakes.
Monday, October 27, 2008 4:04:52 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
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 Thursday, October 23, 2008
Salute to service: Let freedom ring Posted by Antique Trader Staff
It didn’t take our editorial staff long to realize that we’d struck a nerve with our recent reports on new policies at eBay.
There are new policies proposed and activities afoot that have become a
concern to dealers and collectors like you. And you let us know about
it. I would estimate I fielded about 150 reader responses in the form
of brief statements to long letters on this topic.
Some of you said we were right on to be concerned. Others said eBay is
heading in the right direction. The opinions ran the gamut. We didn’t
pick and choose what we would publish. Due to space constraints, we
couldn’t print them all. But we posted (published) all of them on our
Web site (www.antiquetrader.com) for other readers and all members of the collecting community to read. (Links to the eBay paperless payment policy reader responses: Part 1 • Part 2 • Part 3 • Part 4 • Part 5 • Part 6 • Part 7 • Part 8.)
For those of you who wrote in, we thank you for exercising your right
to voice your opinion. What a shame it would be if we didn’t
occasionally enjoy our freedom of speech. As we approach another
Veterans Day, let’s think again about those freedoms established in the
Bill of Rights back in 1791 and the countless men and women in service
who have defended them since. They deserve our salute.
I know from my friend and colleague John Adams-Graf, editor of our sister publication, Military Trader,
that veterans are often on the minds of collectors. “The area of
militaria memorabilia — weapons, uniforms, medal, helmets, etc. — is
growing,” he said. (For more info, visit their Web site at www.militarytrader.com.)
Although my father did not serve in the military, I had some uncles who
did, along with my brother and two nephews. I have the utmost respect
for them and enjoy visiting museums, watching movies or reading books
to learn more about our country’s involvement in various conflicts
(including our own Civil War).
The artist sketches and photographs are spellbinding, too, and I wanted
to share one with you. This incredible picture, suitably captioned “the
human statue of liberty” was taken in 1918 and has been circulating
around the Internet and in e-mails the last few years. It is 18,000 men
preparing for war in a training camp in Iowa.
 As the Web site of the of the Iowa National Guard explains, the
picture, formed by 18,000 posed soldiers, was taken in July 1918 at
Camp Dodge, Iowa, as part of a planned promotional campaign to sell war
bonds during World War I: It states: “On a stifling July day in 1918,
18,000 officers and soldiers posed as Lady Liberty on the parade
[drill] grounds at Camp Dodge. According to a July 3, 1986, story in
the Fort Dodge Messenger, many men fainted – they were dressed in
woolen uniforms – as the temperature neared 105 degrees. The photo,
taken from the top of a specially constructed tower by a Chicago
photography studio, Mole & Thomas, was intended to help promote the
sale of war bonds but was never used.”
Isn’t that amazing that the photo was never used? How unfortunate. It
moves me to see all those servicemen standing at attention in the shape
of what they are fighting for. Antique Trader would like to know if you collect militaria or something that is symbolic or honors someone?
Drop me a line at robyn.austin@fwmedia.com and send along a picture if you have one to share with other readers, or post a reply here on the blog.
Don’t forget to salute our servicemen and women on Veterans Day and every day! Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques, blog, question of the week
Thursday, October 23, 2008 10:15:53 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Antiques: Am I one? Posted by Antique Trader Staff
My grandchildren think I’m an antique. I remember watching in relief as my grandparents had indoor plumbing installed in their home. No more midnight trips to the backyard. Yaaayyy! It always took me what seemed like hours to go back to sleep after a trip outside – it felt like I might have one of those outhouse spiders crawling around in the bed with me. The alternative was to use the chamber pot, something I absolutely refused to do. I had SOME dignity, even as a child. I sewed my first doll dress on a treadle sewing machine. I managed to send the needle partway through one of my fingers. I rode on the back of draft horses as they pulled a hay wagon that was being loaded with hay bales by the farmhand, not a machine. My grandparents had a tractor, but it was kept in the shed and used only for the really BIG jobs because the gasoline it ran on, was so expensive at 27 cents per gallon. I remember our first television set … tiny screen and three channels. A remote? What’s a remote? Milk delivered to the back door. Stores closed on Sunday. A typewriter with a platen, a ribbon and a carriage return. What? No delete button? My grandchildren can hardly believe some of the stories I tell of my growing up years. “Wow! Did they even have lightbulbs then?” is one memorable quote. Some mornings I wake up with joints that are stiff and sore. I often feel like a turtle on its back as I try to sit up after a half-hour in the recliner; I huff and puff as I climb the second set of stairs. Sometimes it’s hard not to feel like an antique. But, what makes something an antique? An antique might be a 1945 Ford, an Early American pie safe or a wonderful painting by an Old Master. An antique could be a postcard sent from a lonesome soldier during WWI, your great-great-grandmother’s teacup, or a brooch found at an estate sale. An antique, while not necessarily always pretty or expensive, has class. Someone has seen the value in it or cherished the memories it brings. Someone knows that under what might be a not-so-beautiful exterior, it’s good and solid and they want to find a place for it in their life. By that definition, I guess I’m OK with being an antique. — Sandy
Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs
Wednesday, October 22, 2008 10:14:21 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, October 21, 2008
For Fellow Antique Lovers and Collectors Posted by Antique Trader Staff
This looks like it's going to be a really, really good auction at the Santa Margarita Auction Barn. All the pictures that I've seen are absolutely gorgeous! Check out the partial list below. Sunday OCT 26, 10 AM Sharp. A great consignment auction of hard to find and some one of kind antiques and collectibles, many from local estates. Our web page www.smab.com is updated for this auction which includes Victorian, turn of the century oak and mahogany, , early lamps, selection of clocks, early prints, glass, china, pottery, gold coins and other quality collectibles. ...
Furniture Museum quality R.J. Horner mahogany library desk with full standing winged griffins, carved top & claw feet * Art Nouveau style oak & marble top sideboard with leaded stained glass door, French c. 1910 * Outstanding oak triple bow glass china cabinet with bonnet top, carved winged lions, mirror back, claw feet * Highly carved English oak umbrella stand with Northwind motif, refinished condition * Fabulous Victorian mahogany hall seat by Paine Furniture Co. carved winged lions, fancy brass hooks, lift seat * Great Victorian walnut Renaissance Revival marble top deep well dresser with tear drop pulls * Beautiful Victorian walnut 3 pc Rococo Revival parlor suite, Sofa & 2 side chairs * Very ornate oak Armoire with 2 drawers, carved crest, beveled mirror doors * Oak stacking lawyer's bookcase by Macy Co. * Exceptional oak buffet with carved standing lions, fancy carved with claw feet * Victorian 54" round oak pedestal dining table with 6 leaves * Quality oak tall chest with serpentine front & sides, fancy carved with beveled mirror * Quality 48" square oak dining table, 5 carved legs, with leaves, c. 1900 * Very ornate oak hall seat, lots of carvings, round beveled mirror, original brass hooks * 48" oak "S" curved roll top desk, double pedestal base * Empire Period mahogany flip top game table * Pair of French style 3 drawer inlaid side stands * Original oak Hoosier kitchen cupboard * Mahogany Chifferobe with beveled mirror, Sandwich glass pulls, c. 1890 * Great oak Morris chair with large claw feet, refinished & reupholstered * Oak pressed back rockers * Unusual oak Larkin desk with beveled mirror * Victorian walnut cylinder secretary bookcase desk, lots of burling * Great Victorian walnut Rococo Revival full size bed, c. 1870 * Eastlake Victorian walnut & marble umbrella stand * Matching mahogany tall chest & dresser with serpentine fronts, fancy carved beveled mirrors * Art Deco style painted Hoosier kitchen cupboard * Selection of oak & mahogany lamp tables & fern stands * Victorian oak cylinder secretary desk, c1880 * Oak Jeweler's work desk, c. 1910 * 45" round oak pedestal dining table with claw feet & leaves * Sets of oak dining room chairs * Oak office chairs * Set of 4 Hitchcock style chairs with rush seats, c. 1840's * Matched pair of Victorian oak Armoires with crests * Fantastic Eastlake Victorian stick & ball carved oak hall stand * Louis XVI style mahogany vanity with beveled mirror * 2 door mahogany bookcase with columns & claw feet * Unusual oak ice box with sliding top * Arts & Crafts style oak blanket chest * Oak 4 drawer file cabinet by Library Bookcase Co. * Selection of oak dressers, tall chests * wash stands * Victorian walnut 42" ladies' S curved roll top desk * Selection of Victorian walnut platform rockers * side chairs * Oak smoker's stand, Arts & Crafts * Mission oak chairs & rockers * Much more... Glassware & China Brilliant cut * Limoges * Nippon * Roseville * Depression * Bavaria * Ironstone * Carnival * Victorian art glass * Cruet sets * Brides' baskets * Fiesta * Moser * Much more.... Miscellaneous Victor #5 oak record player with spear tip external horn * Empire Revival mahogany 3 weight grandfather clock with moon dial, c. 1900 * Victorian oak barber's chair by Koken, Chicago * Victorian rolled wicker baby buggy with original parasol top * National brass cash register, c. 1910 * Oriental rugs & carpets * Gold & silver US coins * Estate jewelry * Quilts * Oak organ with carved gallery & mirror * Collection of old radios * Early country store coffee tin * Restored Victorian cast iron & brass scale * Edison "Home" model cylinder record player * Selection of Victorian & 1920's decorative prints & mirrors * Gone with the wind style lamps * Tiffany style slag glass table lamps * Brass floor lamps * Leaded stained glass Tiffany style hanging lamp shades * Mantle clocks * Advertising * Kitchen collectables * Tools * Toys & dolls * Much more.....
For more information and images: info@smab.com, 805-438-5395, www.smab.comOh how I wish-wish-wish I could make it ... antique | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques News | Auction
Tuesday, October 21, 2008 2:29:25 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, October 20, 2008
More on the misrepresentations of antiques at the highest market levels Posted by Antique Trader Staff
The New York Times has recently run another article on the John and Carlton Hobbs, the British highest-of-the-high-end antiques-dealing brothers who employed the services of a British furniture restorer named Dennis Buggins to do MUCH more than buff and polish top-end antiques pieces. I encourage you all to read the story: The Feud and the FakesYou will probably want to stick to decaf when you're reading this ... I know I should have. Personally, I don't believe the "financial toll" of the scandal will be punishment enough, as Rupert Hobbs says. If it turns out the Hobbs brothers were deliberately altering antiques to bilk customers out of additional money, punitive damages should be in order. What do you think? — Karen
Antique News | Antique scams | Antiques | Antiques News
Monday, October 20, 2008 12:25:32 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, October 16, 2008
Treats of trick-or-treat time Posted by Antique Trader Staff
Driving around the neighborhood, seeing all the inflatable figures on
front lawns, lighted trees and other decorations, a person knows a
major holiday is just around the corner. But the trees aren’t green and
red. They are orange, black and purple. Those aren’t snowmen and Santas
I’m seeing. They are ghosts, goblins and jack-o’-lanterns.
Yup, it appears Halloween is becoming just as big as Christmas. But
some of you collectors and dealers already knew that, didn’t you?
Be sure to take time to read Mark Roeder’s “spooky delights” feature on
Halloween collectibles in this issue. You’ll learn what collectibles to
look for, where to find them and what to do with them.
You’ll also find yourself thinking back in time to when you celebrated Halloween as a child. I know I did.
 The first thoughts that come to mind are Halloween parties. This was
back in the day when we could just call them “Halloween” parties and
political correctness hadn’t’ been invented yet.
At 2 years old, my twin sister Raylene (“man” at right) and I made the
perfect couple at this home Halloween party. I don’t know if I should
be relieved I got to be the “woman” or embarrassed I was already
stuffing my shirt with socks as a toddler.
My parents occasionally threw a party, inviting friends, neighbors and
relatives. My creative mother always managed to throw some sort of
homemade costume together — even if it was just an ensemble of items
found in our “play box.” (See photo.) I think the box of clothes —
complete with plastic wigs and “mink stoves” (stoles) — eventually was
just called our “Halloween box.” Some pretty interesting costumes were
created over the years, that’s for sure.
I also enjoyed our grade-school parties, where we had pumpkin-carving
and costume contests, where we’d bob for apples, walk through the
then-scary haunted house, and win yummy prizes in the cakewalk —
usually cakes, cookies and cupcakes decorated with frosting and candy
corn. M-m-m. Those were the days.
At an even younger age, I recall putting together a Halloween puzzle at
my grandparents’ house. The wooden blocks formed the picture of a
little witch girl, stirring her brew in a pumpkin-shaped pot with
little black kittens running around.
I know that if I flipped the blocks, they would form other pictures,
but I don’t recall any of those. For some reason, I was enamored with
that Halloween picture. I put that puzzle together countless times on
each visit. I wonder what my grandma ever did with it.
Antique Trader would like to hear from readers who collect Halloween
antique and vintage items (or other spooky delights), or have a
favorite Halloween memory to share. Were they tricks? Or treats?
E-mail robyn.austin@fwpubs.com and let us know or post a reply here. Antique Blog | Antiques, blog, question of the week
Thursday, October 16, 2008 2:59:33 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, October 15, 2008
If you're serious about leaving eBay Posted by Antique Trader Staff
For many, enough is enough. Change doesn't come readily to many. What's good for some, may not be good for all. At this point, I see change as change. It's going to happen. I try not to put a value on it and just "roll with it." The last few weeks we've received dozens and dozens (I think the last count was 130) of responses about eBay's last round of changes – most significantly the new paperless payment policy. For those of you who have decided this is the last straw, so to speak, you may find this helpful. Click on the link below for buying and selling options other than eBay. 17 Alternatives to Buying and Selling on Ebay
Personally, if I were a regular seller, I would prefer a flat-rate monthly fee. Of course, the best option would depend upon the volume of my sales.
Do any of you have any experience with these eBay alternatives? Please post a reply here and share your experience with other readers.
Thanks.
— Karen
eBay
Wednesday, October 15, 2008 12:08:37 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, October 10, 2008
Bob Hope: Talented and charming Posted by Antique Trader Staff
From vaudeville to Broadway, radio to films – and let's not forget the USO – Bob Hope had a long and illustrious career in the entertainment industry. He was an all-around performer with brilliant comedic timing who made millions laugh. Coming up Oct. 18-19, Julien's Auctions will be holding an auction benefiting the Bob and Dolores Hope Charitable Foundation, selling collector and museum quality items from the life, career and estate of the legendary Bob Hope. The auction will be televised live from the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, Calif. Highlights in this historical auction from the life and career of Mr Hope include: • A one-page letter dated October 23, 1943 from Bette Davis to Mr. Hope • A red and white feathered Indian headdress worn by Mr. Hope on the cover of Life Magazine on May 11, 1962 • A Movado watch inscribed "To Bob Hope in sincere appreciation – The Cleveland Press Christmas Show 1944" • A turquoise western suit made by Nudies of North Hollywood, worn by Mr. Hope on several television shows including Barbara Mandress, Mandrell Sisters Show and Ann-Margaret Rhinestone Special. • The contents of his Burbank office that he used for over 50 years. Highlights from Mr. Hope's golf colleciton include: • A complete set of golf clubs from various makers • His Dunlop Bogie Buster golf bag • A Tiffany and Company sterling silver golf club given to Mr. Hope for his 95th birthday by NBC • 24K golf plated golf tees; two Chrysler Classic ball markers bearing Mr. Hope's image • A white, pink and blue striped golf shirt; Izod cardigan sweater; a red sports jacket made by Arthur Cross Auction preview, open to the public, Oct. 13-17, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. daily For more information, visit juliensauctions.com Auction
Friday, October 10, 2008 9:30:04 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, October 09, 2008
Question of the Week: Invisible collectibles Posted by Antique Trader Staff
I cannot see or touch one of my most valuable collectible items; it is
a memory from earliest childhood that involves playing cards.
My family – parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles would gather for
their every-other-week card party held in my grandparents’ dining room.
Each family would bring their table and folding chairs and something to
eat. After all the greetings and hugs, the adults got down to the
serious business of playing Sheepshead or Smear, changing tables often,
so everyone got to play and visit with everyone else. The dozen or so
cousins in attendance played Bingo; Thimble, Thimble, Who’s Got the
Thimble; I Spy with My Little Eye; or Old Maid.
I remember how lucky I felt when Grandma Schultz would let me sit on
her lap at the table with the big people while she played. She
sometimes even let me throw her card onto the middle of the table.
Even bedtime was fun, because we got to sleep in “The Parlor,” a very
special room, never entered without special permission because it was
only for important visitors. The lucky child, determined by drawing
straws, got the “privilege” of bunking on the couch, which was scratchy
(horse-hide?), narrow, and short, while the rest of the cousins were
relegated to the floor.
I remember drifting off to sleep listening to good-natured table
pounding, groans of distress, hearty laughter, squeals of surprise and
phrases like “no schneider,” “don’t you have any trump?” “did you
forget how to deal?” and “you know you can’t win with a red hand.”
Back then I didn’t recognize what I was feeling, but I liked it. Now,
50+ years later I recognize that what I felt was love and security. I
was in a house full of people who all loved me, and each other, and who
weren’t afraid to show it. And they knew how to have fun. Those card
parties reinforced my feelings of belonging to a family that would
always accept and love me. Maybe, someday, they might even let me join
them around their card tables.
That’s why I enjoyed putting together this issue’s cover story. It made
me feel as good as I felt on that scratchy horse hide couch listening
to all the fun in the next room.
We’d like to know: Do you have an antique, vintage or collectible
item that brings warm memories? Does an everyday item from today send
you back – in your mind – to a bygone time?
E-mail robyn.austin@fwpubs.com and let us know, or post a reply here.  My son, Christopher, caught the card-playing bug early. Here I’m teaching him the rules of cribbage – has it been 30 years ago already?! He also plays sheepshead when the family gets together. He regularly beats me at both. Perhaps his four children will carry that same warm feeling when they overhear the conversations going around our card tables today. Antiques, blog, question of the week
Thursday, October 09, 2008 10:45:17 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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