The Supertone was repaired by a fantastic luthier here in Omaha, the picture of the end result is attached below.
The catalog number of my harp guitar is 650. I looked up the old archives of the Sears catalog and discovered this:
The 650 number was featured in the catalogs from Spring of 1915 to the Spring of 1918. It sold for $22.45 and included an extra set of strings, a Capo, a book of chords, a fingerboard chart and a "partial scholarship certificate". What a bargain!
From the Fall of 1918 until Spring of 1919, the model number is 250 and sold for 29.95, and the listing did not mention any of the extra goodies. After Spring of 1919, the harp guitar was no longer part of the catalog.
So...I'm going to say my 650 was made somewhere between 1915 and 1918. Fair enough?
The strings stay in tune much better than I anticipated. The sound is fairly deep, and the overtones are fantastic! I worked with the guys at Harp Guitar, and went with the Bennett tuning. Best of all, it is fun seeing people's reaction to it, and all are amazed it is over 90 years old. It's not worth a fortune, but if it was, I probably wouldn't be playing it on a regular basis. It is simply too fun to leave in a case or in a museum.
Hats off to everyone finding these ancient instruments!!!

Statistics: Posted by omaha_dad — Mon Nov 07, 2011 5:01 pm
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