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LOT DESCRIPTION ITEM
1 "Dr. Guysott's / Compound / Extract Of / Yellow Dock & Sarsaparilla" Medicine Bottle, America. 1845-1860. Square with beveled corners, light to medium bright blue green, applied sloping collared mouth - crude iron pontil mark, ht. 8 7/8 inches.
Similar to D# 90 variation 11    A beautiful colored, early crude medicine in a fine color. The accompanying picture shows a building at a commemorative celebration in 1934. The building behind the horseman is the former general sto.

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Estimate $2000-4000

2 Mammoth Size Snuff Jar, possibly America. 1860-1870. Tall rectangular with beveled corners, yellow olive, crude sheared mouth - smooth base, ht. 9 1/2 inches.
Very similar to MW plate 230 #10    A mammoth size snuff in fine condition.

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Estimate $500-1000

3 Bulbous Blown Three Mold Decanter, probably Parks, Edmunds & Parks glasshouse, Kent, Ohio. 1820-1840. Bulbous with long neck, deep aquamarine, crudely applied collared mouth - pontil scar, ht. 8 1/2 inches, greatest dia. 5 1/4 inches; (some faint interior stain spots, some minor exterior highpoint wear).
GII-6    A beautiful Ohio bar bottle which rarely comes to the market place.

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Estimate $2500-5000

4 Freeblown Snuff Jar, New England. 1815-1840. Rectangular with wide beveled corners, light yellow olive, sheared and tooled mouth - pontil scar, ht. 4 3/4 inches, wdth. 2 7/8 inches, dpth. 1 7/8 inches; (some very minor exterior highpoint wear).
Form generally similar to MW plate 227 #12    A beautiful freeblown and paddled snuff jar in virtually perfect condition.

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Estimate $400-800

5 Sunburst Flask, Coventry Glass Works, Coventry, Connecticut. 1814-1830. Light to medium yellow olive, sheared mouth - pontil scar, half pint.
GVIII-16    A beautiful bottle in wonderful condition.

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Estimate $400-800

6 Freeblown Creamer And Open Sugar Bowl, probably a South Jersey glasshouse. 1830-1860. Creamer is of graceful form with exaggerated handle and plentiful applied rigaree, applied foot; the sugar bowl has an applied stem with inward rolled foot, fiery opalescent, sheared rims - pontil scars, creamer ht. 5 1/2 inches, sugar bowl ht. 4 1/2 inches.
Fine examples of early blown tableware in great color.

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Estimate $1000-2000

7 "Holtzermann's / Patent / Stomach / Bitters" Bottle, America. 1860-1880. Tall cabin form, golden amber with a red tone, applied sloping collared mouth - smooth base, ht. 9 1/4 inches.
R/H #H155    Fine condition with a multitude of tiny bubbles throughout the glass.

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Estimate $1200-2400

8 Freeblown Cased Glass Open Sugar Bowl, early Pittsburgh district, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 1840-1860. Graceful form with applied concentric ring stem and foot, bowl white with blue loopings and colorless stem and foot, tooled rim - pontil scar, ht. 5 3/4 inches, greatest dia. 4 3/4 inches; (a part of the white interior case glass has been lost during manufacture leaving some rough edges, someareas in the outer covering have manufacturer's fissures).
Beautiful bowl. Early and desirable.

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Estimate $400-800

9 "Baltimore" Monument - "Corn For The World" Historical Flask, Baltimore Glass Works, Baltimore, Maryland. 1845-1860. Brilliant bubbly topaz, applied square collared mouth - iron pontil mark, quart; (pinpoint flake on the side of the applied mouth).
GVI-4    A beautiful color for this Baltimore flask.

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Estimate $1500-3000

10 Pitkin Type Flask, ribbed and swirled to the left, twenty four ribs, Midwest America. 1800-1830. Brilliant yellowish green, sheared mouth - pontil scar, ht. 6 5/8 inches; (some minor highpoint wear).
Form similar to MW plate 233 #17    Good color. Fine condition.

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Estimate $400-800

11 Early Medicine Bottle, a Stoddard glasshouse, Stoddard, New Hampshire. 1860-1870. Oval, golden amber, applied double collared mouth - smooth base with a straight line mold seam, ht. 7 1/2 inches, wdth. 3 1/4 inches.
This is the first example of this particular medicine or utility bottle that we have seen. A great find for Stoddard collectors.

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Estimate $300-600

12 Early Pattern Molded Bowl, twenty ribs swirled slightly to the left, an early Pittsburgh glass house, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 1820-1840. Straight sided bowl with applied inward rolled pedestal foot, deep sapphire blue, sheared rim - pontil scar, ht. 3 7/8 inches, greatest dia. 4 1/4 inches.
There is a beautiful iridescence to the glass near the center of the bowl on the exterior.

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Estimate $500-1000

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