DELAWARE, OHIO – Arts and Crafts along with an assortment ofModern and camp items were featured at an exciting Garth’s sale onSeptember 9. The auction was well attended and good prices werereported throughout the auction.   Featuring the collection of Tom and Marion McCollough, the  auction also included a substantial shaving mug collection from  the late Tom and Eileen Ashburn, along with select items from the  collection of Paul B. Williams.   The McColloughs collection of Arts and Crafts materials had been  formed after the couple purchased a defunct bank building in  Glenford, Ohio, and began renovating it. The Glenford bank was  one that had closed for a so-called “bank holiday” in the middle  of the Depression, and never reopened its doors. The neoclassical  red brick structure was home to many businesses over the years,  and after perusing the building for many decades, the McColloughs  finally bought and restored it as a home.   Their collection of Arts and Crafts materials fit well on the  interior until the couple decided to sell the contents and their  home recently as they were retiring to Florida.   “It was nice,” commented Garth’s vice president Amelia Jeffers of  the sale, “We don’t normally get enough material to have a  dedicated Arts and Crafts sale. Things are usually just  interspersed throughout other sales. We had a good crowd turn  out, there was lots of phone bidding, and the Internet bidding  was strong,” she said.   The top lot of the auction came from the selection of art pottery  as a Weller Sicard relief decorated plaque was offered. The  unusual piece, with decoration of a woman with her hair in a bun,  sold well above estimates, bringing $13,800.   A George Washington Maher Prairie School high chest originally  made for the Maher-designed Rockledge House near Homer, Minn.,  attracted quite a bit of interest. In an original white paint  with minor touchups, the four-over-four drawer chest sold for  $8,050. A Lifetime oak eight-legged server exceeded estimates at  $3,737, and a contemporary Prairie style settle made $3,105.   A “Steinlen” chromolithograph advertising poster “Lait pur  Sterilise” attracted the attention of numerous bidders. The  framed piece, printed in France by Verneau, depicted a girl  sipping milk from a bowl with several anxious cats hovering  around her feet. Bidding on the lot was brisk with it selling at  $8,870.   A large oil on canvas depicting a village scene with a man  leading horses and ducks through the street, signed by Leslie  Cope, soared past the $300/400 presale estimates bringing $2,875.  A pair of formed metal decorative floor lamps in a cattail and  floral motif with “realistic original paint” sold for $2,760.   A selection of modern furniture included a couple pieces  attributed to Reitveld with an armchair in multicolored bright  paints selling at $345, while a toy chest on wheels with the same  attribution brought $115.   The selection of occupational shaving mugs sold well with a mug  with painted horse-drawn wagon bringing $517, a horse-drawn  enclose carriage $402, a machinist working at a motor $402, and a  mug with an accountant writing in a ledger brought $575.   Prices include the buyer’s premium charged. For further  information, contact Garth’s at 2690 Stratford Road, Delaware OH  43015, or call 740-362-4771 or view Garths.com.          
 
    



 
						