It is golden oak, and has the double-doors, a la Victrola. It has a three-spring motor mounted to a removable wooden board, no metal top-plate. Tone-arm is the early butt-soldered brass taper-tube, with the "pinned-ball" mount for the motorboard attachment.
It came wearing an unmarked Columbia # 6 reproducer ( un-marked in that there's no lettering around the bayonet hub - I have another example that reads "No. 6" and "Patents Pending" around the bayonet hub ).
This # 6 is a REALLY tight fit in the brass socket of the brass arm. I have another early Columbia butt-soldered brass bayonet arm with a # 5 (?) reproducer with "combination mount" - there is a nickeled flange with a bayonet-hub that attaches to a thick rubber washer with a three screws, and the washer attaches to the back of the reproducer body with three more screws - it appears that this could have been fitted to the earlier aluminum arm (via the screws) , or the later machines with the new bayonet attachment. At any rate, with this early rig, the bayonet hub is slightly smaller than the later Grafonolas: the early reproducer fits the early arm fine, later bayonet reproducers ( several # 6 and a "New Columbia") will not fit the early arm. I think they are two different dimensions, this is not a case of pot-metal disease. The early reproducer with its bayonet plate is a loose fit in later Granfonola arms.
All that said, I'm suspicious that my new "Favorite" had its reproducer upgraded at some point.
Would this machine originally have had a Grand / Concert Grand or perhaps # 5 reproducer ?
Thanks !