I am the proud owner of one of those tapes, egor. Just know (if you haven't learned the hard way) that you need to be very careful with that tape. A breeze could break that box (although gravity broke mine). As for the deleted scenes on the tape, some small bits of deleted scenes are seen on the trailer, the Texas Promotional Trailer has the only known footage of Buddy Ebsen as the Tin Man to survive (he's not in costume but he's still on the set), Ebsen's version of "If I Only Had A Heart" is one of the few pieces of Richard Thorpe's version to survive (Thorpe filmed everything from the beginning of the Scarecrow scene to the end of the Tin Man scene, and everything at the Witch's castle, but his footage was deemed unusable, and it is now considered lost and possibly destroyed), the footage of "The Jitterbug" is only some rehearsal footage shot by Harold Arlen (the film's composer), and the Scarecrow Dance scene is the only deleted scene known to exist in its entirety. These are great special features, but they can now be easily found on a DVD or Blu-Ray. The only ones that can't are the book and the trailer, which was created for the 1955 theatrical reissue. All releases from 1993 onwards have the 1949 reissue trailer, with this one completely forgotten. Being that I haven't watched a DVD of The Wizard Of Oz yet (my DVD at this point has only been used to pair the movie with The Dark Side Of The Moon), my review of this tape is that despite the bad sound and high amount of film damage, the Oz scenes had the best color on this tape. It's a shame the studios didn't take that into consideration when making the newer releases. Had you or your family went shopping a year earlier, they would've wound up with either the 1985 or 1988 VHS (same tape, different box), which was utterly disappointing. Everyone wants the 1988 tape because of the box (it has the Witch holding her crystal ball and a picture of Dorothy and everyone else on the crystal ball), but it's only when you watch the tape that you realize you truly did pay for a box. I get that many VHS tapes were of inferior quality, but the early copies of The Wizard Of Oz (essentially, everything before the 1988 Criterion laserdisc or the 1989 MGM/UA release) go beyond inferior. They're literally somewhere between "holy shit, this is awful" and "I think the TV's broken."
As for the video on eBay, just as they were about to check the tape, someone else bought it. So I'm still shit out of luck on that one.