B.O. Plenty dropped, reintroduced many times
Antiques & Collecting
Comic collectibles remain popular as long as the comic characters are still seen or heard in comic books, cartoons, radio, TV, movies, plays or reruns. And B.O. Plenty, who was an early figure in the Dick Tracy comic strip that started in 1931, has been dropped and reintroduced many times.
He married Dirty Gertie, and these two ugly people had a beautiful daughter, Sparkle Plenty, in 1947.
Later, they had a very ugly son whose face was never shown in the strip. The tin windup toy by Marx picturing B.O. holding his daughter Sparkle just sold at a Bertoia auction for $118.
The 8-¢-inch toy shuffles across the floor while his hat tips. The Dick Tracy characters and inventions still are familiar. The original artist, Chester Gould, drew the strip from 1931 to 1977.
Other artists have continued it. His characters, their strange names and the inventions used by policeman Dick Tracy still are popular. The two-way wrist radio first mentioned in 1946, two-way wrist TV (1964) and Spacecar (1960s) have all become realities.
Q: I just found a metal tin that seems to have held pepper at the White House. How much is a political piece like this worth?
A: Sorry to disappoint you, but White House is a brand name used by Wilson Burns & Co. of Baltimore in the 1930s. In those days, all grocery store containers of small amounts of spices were sold in tins.
There still are collectors of the tins for their advertising or country-store collections. The best place to find them is at the back of the kitchen cupboard at a house sale. Most tins sell for $15 to $35.
Q: I bought a modern copy of a tall flower container with 24 tubes to hold flowers that go to a center section. I bought it to use as a flower vase and now I’m told it was used to grow indoor plants in places like Williamsburg. Can you settle a bet about this for us?
A: The name “tulipiere” is used for tall many-spouted vases like yours, and for a shorter vase with five spouts that looks like fingers on a hand or just a round vase with spouts facing in all directions.
The original tulipieres were made of 17th-century Delft. Queen Mary II of England liked flowers in the palace and ordered the vases to be refilled three times a week with cut flowers, including tulips. Part of the reason was renewed fascination with the flower due to the strange “tulipmania” of the 1630s, when rare tulip bulbs had become a very expensive status symbol.
Like other economic “bubbles,” it burst in 1637 and caused financial ruin for many. The many-spouted tulipiere also was used to grow flowers indoors, and each spout was made the right size to hold a bulb partially covered with water.
So both of you are right. They held either cut flowers or bulbs now or in the past.
Q: I have a picture from the Civil War that is a family heirloom. An ancestor whom I believe was named William Heard (or Hurd) was General Grant’s wagon master during the war. The story behind the picture is that a New York Times reporter wanted a picture of General Grant for his paper, but Grant was signing the peace treaty. So, the reporter asked if he could have a picture of the horse. My relative would let the reporter take a photo of the horse only if the reporter allowed him to be in the picture, because his wife didn’t know if he was alive. The reporter agreed and took the picture of the horse and my relative, which appeared in The New York Times. I have an enlarged version of that picture and wonder about its value.
A: To be valuable, a historical picture requires an event or people who are important, few existing pictures of the event and documented proof of the history that is the same age as the picture.
Your enlargement probably is a copy of the original picture, which means it is not unique. What written proof do you have of the story? A letter written when the war ended? A copy of The New York Times with the picture?
A description of the picture in a relative’s home in the 1860s? A piece of the uniform your cousin wore in the picture, and his Army records? Family legend is not enough, and usually a story as unusual as yours is a fable that has been enhanced through the years.
You might take the picture to a shop, auction house or museum that has an appraiser who can date the picture from the paper, subject matter or type of developing.
Even if the story is true, there would be minimal interest in the general’s horse even if it is a picture over 150 years old.
