1) It should be complete with nothing missing for starters. "Mint in Box" is the ultimate in
antique and collectible quality. Rarity pushes the price to the stratosphere. Most
items in the 40-45 year age range are not worth much yet unless extremely rare.
2) Take it to a local antique/collectibles dealer or two (those who specialize in old toys
and games) and have them give you an estimate of the value. Do not sell it to them
yet. Many will give you a low estimate and buy it from you then sell it to someone
(who is looking for such items and has the word out they are looking) and make a
nice profit.
3) There are books that list "current values" of such items. Check local libraries,
bookstores, and collectors/dealers.
4) Wait until "Antiques Roadshow" comes to town or an area dealer/auction house
has an appraisal day. Go to it and take your set.
5) If it has been in your family, use it and take care of it as it has much more sentimental
value than monetary value. Pass it on to your family.
A case study on monopoly market structure indicates a number of things. In most cases, consumers are exploited as they do not have any alternative in a monopoly market.
A wooden butter press that are decorated with a maple leaf is being sold on eBay for about $20. However, in the case of most antiques condition, as well as the market the item will be sold in can vary the value a great deal.
There may be a case for government, the welfare consequences of monopoly, duopoly or oligopoly.
I bought a used Rodney sewing machine in a wooden case in 1974. I cleaned and oil it and it is still running good!It is invaluable to my daughter. I would like to find an instruction manual on it! The model says "Precision SuperDeluxe" Serial number is F8101977
I invented the first router completely out of wood. Wooden antennae, wooden case, wooden power supply, wooden circuit boards. Trouble is, it wooden work
Framed
Andrew Carnegie's Monopoly is the extreme case in capitalism.
The original game, marketed in 1935, contained four colored wooden pawns shaped like "Sorry" pieces. Parker Brothers acquired the game in 1936 and began using the die-case metal tokens in 1937.
A Wiccan is a follower of the Wiccan spiritual path, while a wooden ring is, well, a wooden ring. I'd say in this case it's a wooden ring belonging to a wiccan.
The value of this set is underpinned by the metal value of the coins that are in it. I'd expect you'd get $5,000 to $5,500 at present. If you do an online search, you'll see them being retailed at $1,000 to $2,000 more than that.
Framed
A slatted wooden case used for transporting or storing goods.