University of Kansas returning Native American remains

Spooner Hall, part of the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas, photographed in May 2018. In October, university officials stated online that it has begun the process of returning Native American remains, artefacts and sacred objects found in museum collections located in Spooner Hall and other university buildings. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Gen. Quon. Shared under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication.
Spooner Hall, part of the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas, photographed in May 2018. In October, university officials stated online that it has begun the process of returning Native American remains, artefacts and sacred objects found in museum collections located in Spooner Hall and other university buildings. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Gen. Quon. Shared under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication.
Spooner Hall, part of the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas, photographed in May 2018. In October, university officials stated online that it has begun the process of returning Native American remains, artefacts and sacred objects found in museum collections located in Spooner Hall and other university buildings. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Gen. Quon. Shared under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication.

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) – The University of Kansas has begun the process of returning Native American remains and other sacred objects that were recently discovered in its museum collections, the university said.

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Swedes find 17th century sister vessel to famed Vasa warship

The bow of the Vasa, a Swedish warship that sunk during its maiden voyage in 1628. Salvaged in 1961, it is now on display in a namesake museum in Stockholm. Swedish marine archeologists announced they have located the wreck of the Applet (Apple), Vasa’s sister ship. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Jorge Lascar. Shared under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
The bow of the Vasa, a Swedish warship that sunk during its maiden voyage in 1628. Salvaged in 1961, it is now on display in a namesake museum in Stockholm. Swedish marine archeologists announced they have located the wreck of the Applet (Apple), Vasa’s sister ship. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Jorge Lascar. Shared under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
Pictured is the bow of the Vasa, a Swedish warship that sank during its maiden voyage in 1628. Salvaged in 1961, it is now on display in a namesake museum in Stockholm. Swedish marine archaeologists announced they have located the wreck of the Applet (Apple), Vasa’s sister ship. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, photo credit Jorge Lascar. Shared under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.

STOCKHOLM (AP) – Marine archaeologists in Sweden say they have found the sister vessel of a famed 17th-century warship that sank on its maiden voyage and is now on display in a popular Stockholm museum.

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Morphy’s Nov. 3-5 auction rings with sounds of rare antique coin-op machines

Circa-1904 Caille Bros. 5-cent Roulette floor-model slot machine with seven coin-slots. Fresh to the market after being purchased from The Las Vegas Club in the 1970s. Finest original Caille Roulette machine that Morphy’s specialists have ever seen. Estimate $200,000-$300,000. Courtesy of Morphy Auctions
Circa-1904 Caille Bros. 5-cent Roulette floor-model slot machine with seven coin-slots. Fresh to the market after being purchased from The Las Vegas Club in the 1970s. Finest original Caille Roulette machine that Morphy’s specialists have ever seen. Estimate $200,000-$300,000. Courtesy of Morphy Auctions

DENVER, Pa. – Once found at saloons, hotel lobbies and oceanfront boardwalks all across America, antique coin-op machines are quaint reminders of an era when radio, television and video games were still mysteries of the future. For mere pocket change, turn-of-the-century fun-seekers could enjoy an entire afternoon of entertainment. By simply dropping a penny, nickel or quarter into the slot of a coin-operated machine, they could have their fortunes told, watch primitive motion pictures, listen to rhapsodic tunes from a mechanical band, or try their luck at any number of gambling devices or games of chance.

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Signed Galle glass lures bidders to Woody Auction, Oct. 29

Signed Galle French cameo art glass vase with ice blue ground and white cameo carved overlay, estimated at $25,000-$45,000
Circa-1920 signed Galle French cameo art glass lamp, estimated at $60,000-$80,000
Signed Galle French cameo art glass vase with ice blue ground and white cameo carved overlay, estimated at $25,000-$45,000

DOUGLASS, Kan. – Part 1 of the Ron Blessing estate collection – featuring quality Victorian antiques, French cameo art glass and period American furniture – will come up for bid on Saturday, October 29, beginning at 9:30 am Central time, at Woody Auction. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

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Wild about Harry Houdini? Potter & Potter’s Oct. 29 sale delivers

Detail of a signed and inscribed movie still depicting Harry Houdini in the film ‘The Grim Game,’ estimated at $2,500-$5,000
Left, Harry Houdini’s automatic flowering rosebush magic apparatus, estimated at $25,000-$50,000; Center, first edition of Houdini’s book, ‘The Unmasking of Robert-Houdin,’ estimated at $1,500-$2,500; Right, a signed and inscribed movie still of Houdini in the film ‘The Grim Game,’ estimated at $2,500-$5,000.
Left, Harry Houdini’s automatic flowering rosebush magic apparatus, estimated at $25,000-$50,000; Center, first edition of Houdini’s book, ‘The Unmasking of Robert-Houdin,’ estimated at $1,500-$2,500; Right, a signed and inscribed movie still of Houdini in the film ‘The Grim Game,’ estimated at $2,500-$5,000.

CHICAGO – On Saturday, October 29, starting at 10 am Central time, Potter & Potter Auctions will present Salon De Magie -The Klosterman Collection Part III, a 370-lot sale of historically significant magic apparatus, archives, collections and literature. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

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Two days of delights planned for Clarke Auction Gallery, Oct. 29-30

Roberto Matta, ‘Se Conduire,’ estimated at $30,000-$50,000
Roberto Matta, ‘Se Conduire,’ estimated at $30,000-$50,000
Roberto Matta, ‘Se Conduire,’ estimated at $30,000-$50,000

LARCHMONT, N.Y. — Clarke Auction Gallery leaps into the fall season with a two-day auction on Saturday, October 29 and Sunday, October 30, with bidding sessions starting daily at noon Eastern time. On offer is a highly curated selection of A-list art, jewelry, silver and decorative objects. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

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Colonial Williamsburg acquires its earliest piece of American silver

Caudle Cup, John Hull (1624-1683) and Robert Sanderson (circa 1608-1693) and marked by Jeremiah Dummer (1645-1718), silver, Boston, Massachusetts, circa 1670. Broad, baluster-shaped body with a lightly everted rim, a low base and a pair of cast handles applied to opposite sides. Museum purchase, the Joseph H. and June S. Hennage Fund, 2022-74. Image courtesy of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Caudle Cup, John Hull (1624-1683) and Robert Sanderson (circa 1608-1693) and marked by Jeremiah Dummer (1645-1718), silver, Boston, Massachusetts, circa 1670. Broad, baluster-shaped body with a lightly everted rim, a low base and a pair of cast handles applied to opposite sides. Museum purchase, the Joseph H. and June S. Hennage Fund, 2022-74. Image courtesy of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Caudle Cup, John Hull (1624-1683) and Robert Sanderson (circa 1608-1693) and marked by Jeremiah Dummer (1645-1718), silver, Boston, Massachusetts, circa 1670. Broad, baluster-shaped body with a lightly everted rim, a low base and a pair of cast handles applied to opposite sides. Museum purchase, the Joseph H. and June S. Hennage Fund, 2022-74. Image courtesy of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. – A 17th-century caudle cup that belonged to the Puritan congregation of the First Church of Christ in Farmington, Connecticut, and was used there as a vessel for sacramental wine, was recently acquired by the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, making it the earliest piece of American silver in its famed collection. The cup, wrought around 1670 in Boston, Massachusetts, was fashioned by the first silversmiths making goods in what is now the United States.

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Vermeer’s Maps book offers new perspective on Dutch master

Cover of ‘Vermeer’s Maps,’ released on October 11 and authored by Rozemarijn Landsman.
Left, Johannes Vermeer, ‘Officer and Laughing Girl,’ circa 1657. Oil on canvas, 19 7/8 by 18 1/8in. (50.5 by 46cm). The Frick Collection. Photo credit Joseph Coscia Jr. Right, Balthasar Florisz van Berckenrode and Willem Jansz Blaeu, ‘Map of Holland and West-Friesland,’ circa 1621. Engraving, 45 11/16 by 67 3/4in. (116 by 172cm). Westfries Museum, Hoorn
Left, Johannes Vermeer, ‘Officer and Laughing Girl,’ circa 1657. Oil on canvas, 19 7/8 by 18 1/8in. (50.5 by 46cm). The Frick Collection. Photo credit Joseph Coscia Jr. Right, Balthasar Florisz van Berckenrode and Willem Jansz Blaeu, ‘Map of Holland and West-Friesland,’ circa 1621. Engraving, 45 11/16 by 67 3/4in. (116 by 172cm). Westfries Museum, Hoorn

NEW YORK – With stunning reproductions and incisive text, Vermeer’s Maps (Delmonico Books / The Frick Collection, $39.95), a 128-page hardcover released on October 11, is the most comprehensive study of the artist’s depiction of wall maps to date. Drawing on rare surviving examples of the maps and other primary sources, author Rozemarijn Landsman examines this intriguing aspect of Vermeer’s work, greatly enriching and expanding our understanding of the art and life of the man dubbed the “Sphinx of Delft.”

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The radiant, humble beauty of glass fruit jars

A Mason’s Improved half-gallon fruit jar sold for $550 plus the buyer’s premium in August 2022. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates and LiveAuctioneers.
An amber Beaver quart fruit jar made $1,648 plus the buyer’s premium in June 2021. Image courtesy of Miller & Miller Auctions Ltd. and LiveAuctioneers.
A Mason’s Improved half-gallon fruit jar sold for $550 plus the buyer’s premium in August 2022. Image courtesy of Jeffrey S. Evans & Associates and LiveAuctioneers.

NEW YORK — In 1858, New Jersey tinsmith John Landis Mason revolutionized the home kitchen when he invented and patented a glass jar with a lid that used a screw thread. His invention became known as the Mason jar, and it has since been manufactured in endless quantities. Today, many home pantries contain at least one Mason jar, if not an entire case set aside for canning fruits and vegetables.

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Signs, signs, everywhere great signs at Miller & Miller, Oct. 29

American-made 1930s United Motors Service single-sided porcelain neon sign, estimated at CA$20,000-$25,000
American-made 1930s United Motors Service single-sided porcelain neon sign, estimated at CA$20,000-$25,000
American 1930s United Motors Service single-sided porcelain neon sign, estimated at CA$20,000-$25,000

NEW HAMBURG, Canada – A single family-owned 1966 Ford Ranger 250 Custom Cab Camper Special pick-up truck with Avion camper and a United Motors Service single-sided porcelain neon sign are both expected to do well in Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd.’s online-only Petroliana & Advertising auction slated for Saturday, October 29. The 381-lot auction, beginning promptly at 9 am Eastern time, will feature petroliana (gas station memorabilia), advertising signs, advertising tins, breweriana (beer and wine collectibles), general store items, jukeboxes and vintage and antique toys. All estimates quoted are in Canadian dollars. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

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