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I don't recognize that particular model, but I'm guessing it's not particularly valuable. If you want to restore it, it would be a lot of fun, and you would have a very nice sounding and nice looking set.
However, if you paid someone with woodworking and refinishing skills to do the work, you would probably end up paying triple what the restored radio would be worth.
On an unrelated fyi, jpg's don't really compress when you zip them, and not everyone is comfortable unzipping/extracting compressed files.
Pic #26 was originally 462,774 bytes and compressed to 460,446.
Pic #27 was originally 517,829 bytes and compressed to 515,844.
So, you only saved about 1% on the file sizes. Pics are always a great help in ID'ing a radio, so go ahead and post them as jpgs.
Hope somebody can give you a model number and/or a Sam's number so you can get started. Good luck!
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