Shoe lasts are hard to get rid of under the best of conditions.
Whole sets (and there should be 8 or 10) sell for around $10. if you are lucky.
Monkey Wards (and Sears) offered them around 1900, and every farmer in America, plus millions of city people, bought them. Nobody ever used them, and nobody ever threw them away.
It doesn't matter where you go in No America, you will see them.
People will ask any price that occurs to them, but there are no takers.
They are exactly like the fancy little drafting tool sets, in a velvet box.
Millions were made, none ever used, millions are still available.
Maybe if you wait another 100 years there will be a market.
I tossed the last ones I foolishly bought into the scrap iron pile at the dump.
yours Scott