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Landmark Gift To Reading Public Museum From The Estate Of Dr. Luther W. Brady Jr. Donation

Was Also Made To George Washington University

The Foundation for the Reading Public Museum is pleased to announce a landmark gift from the estate of Dr. Luther W. Brady, Jr., a collector and world-renowned radiation oncologist from Philadelphia. A longtime friend and patron of the museum, Dr. Brady’s generosity will enrich the museum and the community for years to come. The gift includes over 120 paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by 20th and 21st century artists. The museum will display many of the works in an exhibition in the Jerome I. Marcus American Gallery and the Irvin and Lois E. Cohen Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art from July 8 through Jan. 7, 2024.

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One of the largest and most valuable bequests in the museum’s 120-year history, the donation “will unquestionably transform the permanent collection of modern and contemporary art,” says curator Scott A. Schweigert. “The gifts from the estate will join the approximately 100 works previously donated by Dr. Brady between 2002 and 2018. Dr. Brady’s art collection was built over a period of approximately seven decades, during which he forged personal relationships with many of the worldrenowned painters and sculptors. We are so grateful to Dr. Brady and his keen eye for high quality works that will now enrich our visitors’ experience at RPM.”

The gift includes works on canvas by iconic Abstract Expressionists Hans Hofmann, Robert Motherwell, Helen Frankenthaler, Adolph Gottlieb, Esteban Vicente, Friedel Dzubas, and Kenzo Okada. These paintings will join works by American

Modernists Jules Olitski, Frank Stella, Louise Nevelson, George Segal, and Nancy Graves, among others.

Additional works represent British artists Howard Hodgkin, Henry Moore, Lynn Chadwick, and Antony Gormley. Also featured are works by important Native American modernist Fritz Scholder and Kevin Red Star and paintings by Paul Pletka, who heroicizes Indigenous peoples in his work. Works by leading Philadelphia-area artists such as Liz Osborne, Thomas Chimes, Edna Andrade, Murray Dessner, Diane Burko, David Fertig, and Jimmy Leuders are also among the paintings to enter RPM’s collection as part of the Brady bequest.

Brady’s estate also made a major concurrent donation of

Continued on page 7

To Mark Anniversary Of Albert Einstein’s 1923

Nobel Prize Address Centennial, Book About His Life Now Available

“Einstein: The Man And His Mind” Published

It’s been 100 years since Albert Einstein gave his Nobel Prize lecture titled “Fundamental Ideas and Problems of the Theory of Relativity” on July 11, 1923. The centennial of this event is a reminder of the remarkable history of Einstein’s Nobel Prize and the address. Now, a book is available chronicling the life of the renowned physicist.

Titled “Einstein: The Man and His Mind,” the one-of-a-kind, hardcover, 4.4-pound book contains rarely seen photos of Einstein, as well as preserved letters, manuscripts, journals and even equations written in

“This book is fascinating reading for people interested in scientist biographies,” said DiRuggiero. “It’s also an exquisite photo research opportunity for scholars of the history and philosophy of physics.” to his theory of relativity. Among his most strident detractors, Allvar Gullstrand (1911 Nobel laureate in Physiology or Medicine), said, “Einstein must never receive a Nobel Prize, even if the whole world demands it.”

From today’s perspective, one might think the most acclaimed scientist since Isaac Newton would have won a Nobel Prize for the theory virtually synonymous with his name, relativity. But this did not happen, according to Berger, in his essay titled “Einstein’s Nobel Prize Address Centennial.” “The path to the Nobel Prize was anything but smooth,” noted Berger.

One of the most famous photographs of Einstein, signed and dated (1938) by him, is twice signed by Lotte Jacobi, the female portraitist and Einstein’s favorite photographer.

Einstein’s hand. The book helps place in historical context his ideas about time, gravity, quantum theory and cosmology. It’s for sale on Amazon for $51.99.

The book comprises an astounding private collection of Einstein memorabilia owned by Dr. Gary Berger, with annotations and commentary by Dr. Berger and his two co-authors: Michael DiRuggiero (owner of Manhattan Rare Book Company in New York City) and Dr. Hanoch Gutfreund (a physicist at Hebrew University of Jerusalem who also wrote the book’s foreword).

“The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences had repeatedly rejected Einstein as a Nobel Prize recipient despite his 60 nominations, most of them for relativity, over a decade,” wrote Berger. “In 1921, the Committee for Physics became deadlocked, resulting in no award that year. The following year, the Academy awarded Einstein the unused 1921 Prize, but pointedly not for the theory of relativity. The prize was for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect.”

Einstein’s 1905 publication on the photoelectric effect was undoubtedly worthy of a Nobel Prize. It explained the behavior of electron emission from metals when struck by light. His theory was a foundation of quantum mechanics. But it was surprising to many that he didn’t receive the award for his most significant scientific contribution, the general theory of relativity, which is the basis of virtually everything we know about the universe’s structure, history, and behavior.

Some Nobel Prize committee members blocked Einstein because they didn’t comprehend relativity theory since he was Jewish, a pacifist, a theorist who didn’t perform experiments. These few individuals objected to him personally and, specifically,

In 1922, a compromise ended the Swedish Academy’s position of denying Einstein the prize he deserved. He was granted the 1921 Prize “for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially his discovery of the photoelectric effect.” But, to clarify that not all of his contributions were being recognized, the award citation had an unusual qualification excluding the theory of relativity. Einstein’s Nobel diploma is unique in stating what the prize was not awarded for.

Einstein did not attend his Nobel award ceremony. Instead, as scheduled, he had embarked on a five-and-a-half-month trip to the Far East, Palestine, and Spain. Although he intended to present his Nobel lecture at the 1923 award ceremony in Stockholm, that was not to be the case either.

In March 1923, Svante Arrhenius, chairman of the Committee for Physics, wrote to Einstein, suggesting he not wait until December to deliver his Nobel lecture in Stockholm but instead address the Scandinavian Society of Science in Gothenburg in July on the 300th anniversary of the city’s founding. Although he’d been instrumental in excluding relativity from the Nobel award, Arrenhius suggested the address be about relativity. Einstein accepted the invitation.

As with everything else concerning his Nobel award, Einstein’s lecture on relativity presented in Gothenburg on July 11, 1923, became a source of controversy. His detractors objected to it being accepted as an official Nobel lecture since it hadn’t been delivered in Stockholm and was not about the topic for which the prize was awarded. But Arrhenius had already submitted the lecture manuscript for inclusion in the Nobel Foundation’s yearbook, Les Prix Nobel. Although questioning its qualification, the Swedish Academy allowed it to stay in the publication.

The recently published book, “Einstein: The Man and His Mind,” helps place in historical context Einstein’s ideas about time, gravity, quantum theory and cosmology.

Einstein’s lecture has this footnote in the later English translation (but not the original German version): “The Lecture was not delivered on the occasion of the Nobel Prize award and did not, therefore, concern the discovery of the photoelectric effect.” The unusual events (or, more accurately, non-events) regarding Einstein’s Nobel Prize and Nobel lecture had lasting effects.

For Einstein, the award apparently meant little by the time he received it besides the money he had promised his wife, Mileva, in their divorce agreement. He neither attended his award ceremony nor delivered a lecture to the Swedish Academy on the topic of the award citation.

When Einstein listed his most significant achievements and honors years later, the Nobel Prize was conspicuously absent. Perhaps this omission reflects the emotional residue of the contentious history surrounding his Nobel Prize.

To inquire about “Einstein: The Man and His Mind,” email info@manhattanrarebooks.com.

08/12/23, FREDERICK, SAT. AT 9AM, 60+ pcs. fine framed artwork- orig. & prints, art deco bronzes & statuary, leaded stained glass, ruby red etched glass panels, fine porcelains, Royal Copenhagen figs. & books, vtg. movie cameras & audio components/ record albums/ CD's, old typewriters, art/ depression/ Vaseline glass, vtg. hat boxes, vtg. clocks, candelabras, old lic. plates, etc., Frederick Fairgrounds, 797 E. Patrick St., Bldg. 12, Howard B. Parzow Auctioneer

PENNSYLVANIA

07/27/23-08/07/23, EPHRATA, THROUGH MON., Single Owner Matchbox Auction & Outstanding Toy Auction!, Online Only: Gehmanauctions.hibid.com, gehmanauctions.hibid.com

08/02/23, BOYERTOWN, CLOSING BEGINS WED. AT 6PM, Toy Trains & Accessories, HO Scale. Single collector auction., Online Only: www.KimberlyK Auctions.com, Kimberly K. Auction

08/05/23, HARRISBURG, SAT. AT10AM, 1,000+ comic book collec.: Silver, Bronze & Copper Age, Furn. incl. Asian, primitive, mod., LR/ DR/ patio, art prints & paintings, collec. incl. Asian ceramics, books, cameras, clocks, stoneware, arrowheads, sports cards BB guns, studio ceramics, fishing lures, dinner/ barware & adv. from Cinco's Bar, lawn/gdn., mower, tools, etc., Online Only: www.Cordier Auction.com, Cordier Auctions & Appraisals

08/05/23, ORWIGSBURG, SAT.

AT10AM, Alaskan black wolf mount, firearms, coins incl. 1999 $50 gold pc., 1914-D $10 gold eagle, Morgan dollar collec. incl. 1895-S, jewelry, Star Wars, video games, furn., antq. dry sinks, oak roll top desk, antqs., ephem. incl. 1821 Orwigsburg City Plan & Deed, 1852 & '56 deeds, comics, vtg. books, Pokemon cards, sports rel., mus. instru., + more!, 1506 Centre Turnpike, Blum's / Auction Time Bid Board

08/07/23, LANCASTER, MON.

AT2:30, Furniture Auction: Stickley, Thos. Moser & more, incl. Stickley Oxblood arm chairs, sofa, end table, qu. bed frame, antq. Stickley rocking chair, Thos. Moser breakfast table, Williamsburg repro. folk art ptd. chest from Rockefeller Collec., antiques & collec., jewelry, & more., Live & Online: 3601 Columbia Ave.; boltzauctions.com; hibid.com, Boltz Auction Co.

08/08/23, GLEN ROCK, TUES. AT9AM, Outstanding Antique Auction! Lg. cast iron figural collec., 6' 2-sided porcelain Texaco sign, 2 lg. fly wheel coffee grinders, 30+ pcs. sterling serving pcs., duck decoys, levels, cruets, steam whistles, clocks & more!, Live & Online: 4067 Snyder Rd.; wehrlysauction.com, Wehrly's Auction Svc.

08/12/23, EPHRATA, SAT. AT 9AM, Antqs. & collec., antq. GermanPrusian sword, RR collec., cast iron, copper/ brass/ pewter, Longaberger baskets/ access., seas. decor., ephem., books, artwork, prints, jewelry, linens/ textiles, sports cards/ mem., toys, early Steiff dog on wheels, Hess trucks, Tonka, Lionel, hh goods, tools, box lots & more!, Horst Auction Ctr., 50 Durlach Rd., Horst Auctioneers

SHOW & FLEA MARKET CALENDAR

08/26/23, HARTFORD, SAT.

10AM-5PM, 84th PAPERMANIA

PLUS: Antq. Paper Show + Advertising & Photography, 1 Civic Center Plaza, XLCenter: exit off I-84; exit 32-B off I-91

08/10-13/23, ATLANTA, THURS.-SUN., Antique Market, 3650 Jonesboro Rd. SE, Atlanta Expo Center, North Bldg.

09/07-10/23, ATLANTA, THURS.-SUN., Antique Market, 3650 Jonesboro Rd. SE, Atlanta Expo Center, North Bldg.

09/22-23/23, LEBANON, FRI. 95 EARLYBUYERS ($100 FEE) & SAT. 9-3 ($10 ADM.), Indy Antique Advertising Show, 1955 Indianapolis Ave., Boone County 4H Fairgrounds

08/06/23, BARNEGATLIGHT, SUN. 9AM-5PM, RAIN OR SHINE, Antique & Collectible Show, 19th & Bayview Ave., Historic Viking Village

Artisans & on

Parking

08/26/23, GETTYSBURG, OUTDOOR MKT.: SAT. 8-2 08/12/23, LANCASTER, SAT. 9AM-1PM, 63rd Lancaster Hunting & Fishing Show & Sale, 1383 Arcadia Rd., Lancaster Farm & Home Center

SALE: 9-5), Outdoor Antique Market, 2885 York Rd., Gettysburg, PA 08/12-13/23, REINHOLDS, SAT. & SUN., 7AM-4PM, Native American, Fossils, Rocks, Gems & Minerals, 607 Willow St., Reinholds - Lancaster County

29th Annual Postcard Expo, 1383 Arcadia Rd., Lancaster County Farm & Home Center 04/08/23 TO 12/31/23, BERWYN, EVERYSAT. & SUN, 9-4, Indoor/Outdoor Vintage Flea Market - Now Open Year Round!, 270 W. Swedesford

09/23-24/23, CHANTILLY, SAT. 9-6 & SUN. 11-5; $10 ADM., DC BIG FLEAAntiques Market, 4320 Chantilly Shopping Center, Dulles Expo Center

LANCASTER, SAT. 08/05-06/23, REINHOLDS, SAT. & SUN., 7AM-4PM, Tools, RR, Motorcycles & Transport.; Yard Sales; Sat. only, 9-1 - Spec. CAR, 607 Willow St., ReinholdsLancaster County 06/25/23 TO 10/01/23, DENVER, EVERYSUNDAY: 7:30-4; SPEC. SUNDAY, 10/1: OUTDOORS 5AM, INDOORS 7:30-4, Antique & Collectors Special Sundays, 2500 N. Reading Rd., Renningers Adamstown who had robbed $32,640 from the First National Bank of Winnemucca, Nev., four years earlier. Against an estimate of $6,000-$8,000, the poster sold for $19,965.

Another novel entry was an original late-19th century Yellowstone National Park Observation Wagon, which would have been used as a sightseeing vehicle for tourists visiting the area. It rolled to the upper end of its estimate range, closing at $26,620.

Immediately after the show and auction, Brian Lebel remarked: “We couldn’t have been more pleased with the entire weekend. The show dealers were happy and busy, the auction buyers were thrilled with their purchases, and the auction consignors got the prices they wanted. It’s an incredibly difficult trifecta to pull off, but through the teamwork of both the Old West staff and the Morphy staff, we hosted an incredibly successful event.”

“It was a genuine pleasure for Morphy’s to work cooperatively with the Lebel team. There was a high level of professionalism throughout our first collaboration, and now we’re setting our focus on the next Lebel’s and Morphy’s joint event, which will take place under one roof in Las Vegas,” followed Dan Morphy.

The Jan. 26 and 27, 2024, edition of Brian Lebel’s Old West Events and Cody Old West Show and Auction will be held in tandem with Morphy’s Las Vegas Antique Arms show in a 130,000square-foot, three-ballroom space at the luxurious Westgate Resort and Casino.

To learn more, call Brian Lebel at 480-779-WEST (9378) or email brian@brianlebel.com or visit www.oldwestevents.com.

All images courtesy of Morphy Auctions.

Variety Sale

ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, TOYS, MODEL TRAINS, DOLLS, HOUSEHOLD GOODS, TOOLS

SATURDAY, AUGUST 12 AT 9:00 A.M.

Preview Times - Friday, August 11 from 2:00 P.M. thru 5:00 P.M. and Saturday, August 12 from 7:00 A.M.

*The following is just a very general list of items to be sold. Photos representing the entire auction will be posted on our website www.horstauction.com on Friday, August 11.

Sale to be held at Horst Auction Center, 50 Durlach Road, EPHRATA, PA 17522 (The corner of Rt. 322 & Durlach Road, approx. 2½ miles west of Ephrata.)

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES; ANTIQUE GERMAN PRUSIAN SWORD, RAILROAD COLLECTIBLES; CAST-IRON; COPPER & BRASS; PEWTER; LONGABERGER® BASKETS & ACCESS.; CHRISTMAS & SEASONAL DECORATIONS; CHINA & GLASSWARE; POTTERY; ESTATE & COSTUME JEWELRY; LINENS & TEXTILES; ARTWORK & PRINTS; BOOKS & PAPER; TOYS; HESS TRUCKS; TONKA; LIONEL TRAINS & ACCESSORIES; EARLY IVES METAL TRAIN SET; SPORTS CARDS & MEMORABILIA; LG. COLLECTION OF STARTING LINEUP FIGURES; DOLLS & STUFFED ANIMALS; EARLY STEIFF DOG ON WHEELS, COLLECTION OF STEIFF REPLICA SERIES TEDDY BEARS; HOUSEHOLD GOODS; ASSORTED ANTIQUE HAND TOOLS; BOX LOTS &

A New West Co. burlwood club chair with routed bugling elk in profile on sides, reversible red leather and Chimayo (N.M.) textile cushions, sold for $8,260 against an estimate of $1,500-$2,500.

Yuma (Arizona) territorial prison-made hitched horsehair bridle with American flags on both the reins and romal and diamond swells on the brow and nose bands, complicated diamond designs in colors unique to Yuma productions, sold for $27,830 against an estimate of $15,000-$20,000.

G.S. Garcia silver-inlaid spurs in Pattern No. 16 “Rattlesnake,” with detailed decorations depicting writhing snakes and conchos engraved with images of eagles, realized $27,830. A pair of No. 16 “Rattlesnake” spurs are shown in the reference “Bit and Spur Makers in the Vaquero Tradition” (1997, Ned and Jody Martin).

The fine example of a scarce two-page Nov. 14, 1904, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid pictorial “wanted” poster offering $2,000 reward, issued by Pinkerton’s National Detective Agency subsequent to the Sept. 19, 1900, robbery of the First National Bank of Winnemucca, Nev., sold for $19,965.

Reading

Continued from page 4 art to the George Washington University in Washington, D.C., where he was an alumnus and where the campus art gallery bears his name. The two institutions will both host exhibits featuring the recent donations and co-publish a catalogue of some of the key works to enter each institution’s collections.

Brady, who died in 2018 at age 92, was an avid supporter of the visual and performing arts. He served two terms on the museum’s board of directors and was a member of RPM’s collections committee. He was also an emeritus board member of the Santa Fe Opera, served on the board of the Textile Museum in Washington,

D.C., and was a member of the collections committee at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, where he also endowed the Luther W. Brady Curator of Japanese Art.

About The Reading Public Museum

The Reading Public Museum is supported in part by grants from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and is located at 500 Museum Road, Reading, Pa.

Admission per day is $10 adults (18-64), $6 children/seniors/ college students (w/ID), and free of charge to members and children 3 years old and under. The museum is open daily 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

For additional information, visit www.readingpublic museum.org.

FINE ART WANTED ROGALLERY.COM

BUY. SELL. CONSIGN

ONLINE ART AUCTIONS

OVER 5000 ARTISTS

800.888.1063 art@rogallery.com

47-15 36th ST., LIC, NY 11101

OLD PAINTINGSWANTED

American Impressionists, New Hope School artists, PAFA artists, European paintings. 40 years experience. Immediate payment. Call 215-348-2500.

This installation shot shows work by (from left) Jules Olitski, “New Love,” 1964, acrylic-on-canvas, courtesy estate of Jules Olitski; Helen Frankenthaler, “Untitled,” oil-on-canvas, courtesy estate of Helen Frankenthaler; Hans Hofmann, “Furioso,” 1963, oil-on-canvas, courtesy estate of Hans Hofmann; Robert Motherwell, “Spanish Death VI,” 1977, acrylic-on-canvas, courtesy Dedalus Foundation Inc.; and Adolph Gottlieb, “Shadows and Halos,” 1968, oil-and-enamel on canvas board, courtesy Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation.

Carlisle

Continued from page 3 car clubs, while Carlisle Events staff picked the coolest club too.

one-off high-performance cars, including some Callaways, and some highly modified examples. Adjacent to T were Building Y and the Solid Lifter Showroom. As always, Brian Henderson and his Supercar Workshop team hosted well-restored and maintained Yenkos, COPOs, Corvettes, and more.

A variety of activities kept guests entertained too. With no shortage of options, there were open autocross runs with the Cumberland Valley Corvette Club, performance parts showcase rides with UMI Performance, Nitrofest with Bruce Larson, pop-up parades, a rolling exhaust contest, plus rolling donuts and burnouts presented by Atturo Tires.

The competition winners weren’t the only ones heading home with awards. A select group of car owners earned Carlisle Elite honors on day one, while dozens more cars picked up celebrity-judged awards on the second day. Hemmings Marketplace also honored the top three largest

Ron Funk

Continued from page 1 accompanied by an adult. Door prizes will be given away, and breakfast and lunch will be available for purchase. An early buyer’s preview will be held at 8 a.m. with a $10 admission.

There will be approximately 100 exhibiting dealers and collectors displaying for sale antique hunting and fishing licenses, shell boxes, old lures, decoys, fishing rods, reels, posters, books, knives, guns, traps, and patches. The diverse array of hunting and fishing related items found at this show is extensive.

While this year’s event has concluded, next year promises to reach head and shoulders above this most recent offering. Planned display themes include a big move by the Solid Lifter Showroom from Building Y to Building T (one year only) for the 16th offering of their popular Carlisle display. This display hosts an entire feature gallery of COPOs, Yenkos, and other high-performance GM optioned cars of the Muscle Car Era, Cadillac is honored, a return of the 3rd Gen Nationals, and even more Nova Nationals excitement. With discounted spectator admission tickets available and a 10 percent savings on the National Parts Depot Showfield, save the date, because the 2024 Carlisle GM Nationals return June 21 and 22 at the Carlisle, Pa., Fairgrounds.

To learn more, call 717-243-7855 or visit www.CarlisleEvents.com.

This show is often simply referred to as the Lancaster Show within the hunting and fishing antique and collectible community.

To learn more, call Ron Funk at 717-371-0395 (evenings).

BUYING SPORTS CARDS & COMIC BOOKS:1940-1990 ANY Condition. Vintage Toys, all related collectibles and memorabilia. Don Deluca, P.O.Box 581, Cranbury, NJ 08512 #609-203-1900 delucadon@yahoo.com

BUYING: COINS, BASEBALL CARDS (all SPORTS cards), COMIC Books, Model TRAINS, and ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES! Call or Text: 610-476-4276! Can pay in CASH!

Movie Posters

Highest Prices Paid. Lobby Cards, 1-Sheets, Displays, Window Cards, Glass Slides. Dwight Cleveland, ph. 773-525-9152 POB 10922, Chicago, IL 60610 posterboss@aol.com

STAMPS

CHINESE STAMP BUYER PAYS TOP $ www.chinesetampbuyer.com jon@chinesestampbuyer.com

PINBALL MACHINES WANTED. Any condition, working or not. Call Matt: 717-538-9485, thanks.

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

Richard H. Bailey, STONE SCULPTOR www.richardhbailey.com

Art Event at Blue Ball Barn, 1914 W. Park Dr., Rte. 202, Wilmington, DE 19803 Aug. 12th, 10-12 Richard will talk about his book, ‘A Sculptor’s Miracles’ (200+ pgs. w/ 175 pictures) and exhibit diamond tools for lettering lapidary engraving on stones. Black & brown granite, marble, sm. tombstones for sale. Call for appointment. 302-399-9777

COINS/CURRENCY

SMALL COLLECTOR PAYS FOR COINS & COLLECTIONS: ALLTYPES. Will travel to you. Call Gary: 301-809-0291

SHEET MUSIC WANTED, any era. Sandy Marrone, 113 Oakwood Drive, Cinnaminson, NJ 08077, 856-829-6104 E-mail smusandy@aol.com

Very lg. stamp collec. from around the world and books. Antq. books incl. signed, dolls/Noah’s Ark-in boxes, old watches, old greeting cards, Reward pictures-late 1800’s/1900’s, & much more! Call/ lv.msg.: 717-553-2980

1-888-828-7811

LOOKING TO PURCHASE Sports/Trading Card CollectionsBaseball, Football, Basketball, Hockey, Pokémon $$$ CASH PAID 717-889-9331 $$$

SATURDAY,

Silver, Bronze & Copper Age

Superheroes, Sci-Fi, TV & Movie, Adventure & More. Marvel, DC, Dark Horse, Independent and Small Presses. First and Key Issues First Appearances: Venom, Sabretooth, She-Hulk, Beta Ray Bill, Thanos, Carnage, Gambit, Apocalypse, Both Captain Marvels, Jane Foster Thor, Elektra, Infinity Gauntlet, Taskmaster, Harley Quinn, Symbiote Suit, John Constantine, Man-Bat, Huntress, Boba Fett, Doctor Aphra, Admiral Thrawn and Many More! Great Runs of Amazing SpiderMan, Avengers, Batman and More/ Mark Jewelers Edition Comics. Early Fanzines. Trade Paperbacks and Hardcovers. Original Art, Signed Prints, and Statues. Autographed Books. Fantastic Misc. Large Lots.

CONSIGNMENT & ESTATE

Furniture, Art & Collectibles

FURNITURE: Asian, Primitive, Modern, Living ,Dining, Bedroom and Patio.

ART: Prints and Paintings. Karl Foster; Robert Girrard; Frans Van Baars; William Stillle; Lyn Marsh; Jacob Meyer; Charles Pelletier; Sean Wu; Karl Lundgreen; James Wing; John Dusko.

COLLECTIBLES: Asian Ceramics; Books; Cameras; Clocks; Stoneware; Arrowheads; Sports Cards; BB Guns; Studio Ceramics; Fishing Lures; Dinnerware: Limoges, Minton, Wedgwood. Collection of Barware and Advertising from Cinco’s Bar Shenedoah, PA.

HOUSE & HOME: John Deere D130 Riding Mower; Troy-Bilt Snow Thrower; Lanos Stair Climber; Paulan Leaf Blower; Hand Tools.

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