Besides the much more rare No. 720 Fly-N-Gyro mentioned and pictured earlier in this post, Tootsietoy also produced the No. 4659 Autogiro.
As near as I can tell, it was released from 1938-41 as part of box sets.
I've identified at least six different airplane sets that featured the No. 4659 autogiro (apparently the autogiro was referred to as No. 4650 in one catalog).
What's difficult (and a little frustrating) is that Tootsietoy seems to have identified all of these distinctly different sets as "No. 6150" on the boxes
I know of four different "No. 6150 Speedy Aeroplanes" sets. One with 5 airplanes included, one with 8 airplanes included, and two different ones, each with 11 airplanes included. They all seem to share the same graphics on the box lid.
Here's the 5 airplane No. 6150 Speedy Aeroplanes set:
5 airplane No. 6150 Speedy Aeroplanes set
Plus, there is a set with a primarily blue box called the "No. 6150 Aeroplanes" set that features 6 airplanes, including the autogiro.
And finally, there is a set with a primarily green box that is also called the "No. 6150 Aeroplanes" set. This set has 5 airplanes and was actually just one part of a 3-set "Tootstietoy Gift Box" ensemble. The three sets were inside an open-faced cardboard sleeve/box. The Gift Box also included a "Playtime Set" and a "Fire Department" set that went along with this green-boxed "Aeroplanes" set. A source once told me this gift box ensemble was released in 1938, but I've never confirmed that assertion.
Here's the Aeroplanes" set of that Gift Box release:
Gift Box release No. 6150 Aeroplanes set
The No. 4659 Autogiro came in cream with a blue rotor, silver with a red rotor, and green with a yellow rotor.