This is a report on the Labor Day weekend auction, the Preston Evans 
Opportunities Auction, held in Newnan, GA.  It was a huge 2-day auction of 
almost every type of mechanical or music collectible, such as music boxes, juke 
boxes, crank organs, clocks, vintage toys, advertising items, arcade machines, 
slot machines, and even phonographs. The juke boxes, slots, and music boxes 
were abundant and quite spectacular, as this auction house specializes in those 
items.  The relatively few phonograph items of interest are as follows.  Prices 
include the 10% buyer's premium, but not sales tax.

Columbia BF cylinder phono with green morning glory floral horn, average 
condition, $990
Oak Opera with oak horn, refinished, quite nice overall, $5,500 (good price)
Mahogany Opera and horn, wood refinished rather poorly, $5,500  
Edison Home in floor cabinet with glass top, rough case in and out, (not H&S I 
believe), $5,500
Victor IV with mahogany horn, below average condition, horn refinished, case 
fair, $2,310
Victor VI, highly polished brass pedal horn with repairs (didn't like horn), 
$3300 (good price if mahogany horn put on it)
Little Wonder phono, average condition, has correct original crank, $550
Kalamazoo Duplex, average to poor condition, both original horns present, $7,700
Edison Fireside with Cygnet horn, average condition, $1,210
Mahogany round front Herzog cabinet, poorly refinished, replaced shelves and 
pegs, $2,200
Columbia BF with reproduction small horn, $660
Columbia AH, front mount, average original condition, nice horn, $715
Cylinder record cabinet, 4-drawer oak, beautiful serpentine shape, tiger stripe 
finish, original pegs, nice one, $990
Amberola 75, average condition, $550
Reginaphone, style 240, beautiful and complete, $12,925
Mae Starr phono doll, don't know if phono worked or not, $385 
Effanbee talking doll, also don't know about talking mechanism, $550
Wurlitzer Model 850 jukebox, "the peacock", absolutely gorgeous original, 
$22,800
Wurlitzer Model 780 jukebox, very nice, $6,325
Wurlitzer Model 800 jukebox, a real beauty, $9,625
Wurlitzer Model 750 jukebox, beautiful, $7,150

The list is not complete as I missed some phono prices due to the fast pace.  
Also, there were some other small phonos and record cabinets, selling for a few 
hundred dollars that I didn't bother to record prices.  And there were lots 
more wonderful jukeboxes, including the super rare 950, that sold after the 
phonographs were sold and I had left the auction house.  

Ray


  
From [email protected]  Sun Sep  2 13:47:05 2007
From: [email protected] (john robles)
Date: Sun Sep  2 13:52:33 2007
Subject: [Phono-L] Preston Evans Opportunities Auction
In-Reply-To: <003901c7ed9d$df1c7120$6101a...@wilenzick>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>

Wow, it seems live auction is the way to sell machines, as nothing sold at the 
CAPS show but my cheapest offerings. I had a nice Vic III, 2 Vic II humpbacks 
which I still have, a COlumbia BF which I still have, a Columbia Elite (1st 
inside horn grafonola with early Disc Graphophone decal), and the prize, a 
Thomas Home Phonograph radio-cassette player that looks like an Edison Home!! 
My complete Edison 2 minute recorder didn't sell, nor my Edison Battery Post 
wrench (everyone was interested til they found out what it was!!). The only 
reason I got some stuff to bring home was that I traded the III, a nice record 
cabinet and an Amberola 30 for some other stuff. I still had a good time and it 
was great to see everyone, but I didn't see machines changing hands. A few 
people said that it had become a record show. I didn't see the variety of items 
I have seen in the past, not a lot of parts or horns, and when some of the big 
guys showed up without any outside horn disc machines, I
 knew something was amiss!!
  John

[email protected] wrote:
  This is a report on the Labor Day weekend auction, the Preston Evans 
Opportunities Auction, held in Newnan, GA. It was a huge 2-day auction of 
almost every type of mechanical or music collectible, such as music boxes, juke 
boxes, crank organs, clocks, vintage toys, advertising items, arcade machines, 
slot machines, and even phonographs. The juke boxes, slots, and music boxes 
were abundant and quite spectacular, as this auction house specializes in those 
items. The relatively few phonograph items of interest are as follows. Prices 
include the 10% buyer's premium, but not sales tax.

Columbia BF cylinder phono with green morning glory floral horn, average 
condition, $990
Oak Opera with oak horn, refinished, quite nice overall, $5,500 (good price)
Mahogany Opera and horn, wood refinished rather poorly, $5,500 
Edison Home in floor cabinet with glass top, rough case in and out, (not H&S I 
believe), $5,500
Victor IV with mahogany horn, below average condition, horn refinished, case 
fair, $2,310
Victor VI, highly polished brass pedal horn with repairs (didn't like horn), 
$3300 (good price if mahogany horn put on it)
Little Wonder phono, average condition, has correct original crank, $550
Kalamazoo Duplex, average to poor condition, both original horns present, $7,700
Edison Fireside with Cygnet horn, average condition, $1,210
Mahogany round front Herzog cabinet, poorly refinished, replaced shelves and 
pegs, $2,200
Columbia BF with reproduction small horn, $660
Columbia AH, front mount, average original condition, nice horn, $715
Cylinder record cabinet, 4-drawer oak, beautiful serpentine shape, tiger stripe 
finish, original pegs, nice one, $990
Amberola 75, average condition, $550
Reginaphone, style 240, beautiful and complete, $12,925
Mae Starr phono doll, don't know if phono worked or not, $385 
Effanbee talking doll, also don't know about talking mechanism, $550
Wurlitzer Model 850 jukebox, "the peacock", absolutely gorgeous original, 
$22,800
Wurlitzer Model 780 jukebox, very nice, $6,325
Wurlitzer Model 800 jukebox, a real beauty, $9,625
Wurlitzer Model 750 jukebox, beautiful, $7,150

The list is not complete as I missed some phono prices due to the fast pace. 
Also, there were some other small phonos and record cabinets, selling for a few 
hundred dollars that I didn't bother to record prices. And there were lots more 
wonderful jukeboxes, including the super rare 950, that sold after the 
phonographs were sold and I had left the auction house. 

Ray



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