Selling here is a pleasure. For best success I would offer the pieces separately (perhaps not the finder, though, it might be best to include that with the camera, since it's of questionable provenance according to our friends above). You can do this with one ad. Just provide a list of the items and prices rather than one price for the whole kit.
Here's what people will want to know as they consider purchasing:
--in the camera, whether the shutter fires at every setting, and whether it's firing at an appropriate seeming speed. I test by starting at one second which is easy enough to sync ("one-one-thousand") and then see if the next few cut the previous in half. Once you're up to 1/15th you're just judging roughly against the previous. 1/250 and up are hard to tell apart. Still, if it seems reasonable that's all a buyer can ask of a 60 year old mechanical device.
--viewfinder: clear? Bright? the rangefinder patch stands out with distinct contrast and the alignment is correct when you focus?
-- film advance -- is it smooth?
With the lenses you'll need to shine a flashlight through and check for haze, which is your most likely nemesis, as well as fungus and separation. Slight haze doesn't really affect the pictures too much. Above slight, buyer should be aware that a loss of contrast is likely. Also check the surfaces of the elements front and rear for cleaning marks and scratches.
I think that covers what people ask about. A decent price guide can be found here:
http://www.antiquecameras.net/nikonrflens.html
Stephen Gandy, who runs this site, is a Nikon RF collector and aficionado. An index of his writings on the subject, with links, can be found on his Cameraquest site:
http://cameraquest.com/classics.htm
Good luck.