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View Full Version : The Ballcard Collector - March '73 w/Lionel Carter..and "52 Topps in late June "


Leon
06-17-2014, 12:23 PM
A nice recount of card collecting and some rather strong comments from Mr. Carter....enjoy..

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bigtrain
06-17-2014, 12:41 PM
Wow! Mr. Carter was a real charmer.

autograf
06-17-2014, 01:01 PM
WOW.....wonder if that's all tongue-in-cheek humor stuff or he was just hanging it all out there actually pissed at those guys? Interesting........thanks for the share. I have 2-3 of these Ballcard Collectors lingering around somewhere.......

brianp-beme
06-17-2014, 01:41 PM
I like the auction for the T213 tobacco card of Honus Wagner...perhaps scamming our hard-earned collecting money goes back further than previously believed. I wonder if the seller actually meant a T216 Wagner?

Brian

Jason
06-17-2014, 02:02 PM
Great story about the kid discovering Baseball cards and going on a town wide hunt for the source!

Brian B@rry
06-17-2014, 02:12 PM
Longtime lurker here. My brother and I were at that "Baseball Nostalgia Expo." I would have been 15 years old. We ended up trading five Kahn's Wiener cards for almost an entire 1955 Topps set (I believe the dealer's name was Bob Rathgeber - something like that - a Kahn's expert). A couple hours later and we had completed the set, going from none to all in one afternoon and spending almost nothing to do it.

For a couple brothers who knew only of the Card Collector's Company and Wholesale Cards, it was like Christmas Day. The first time I ever saw a Goudey and if I recall correctly, the T206 Wagner was on display, worth over $400!!!

Jay Wolt
06-17-2014, 02:13 PM
Love those old articles, thanks for posting it

Griffins
06-17-2014, 06:32 PM
Longtime lurker here. My brother and I were at that "Baseball Nostalgia Expo." I would have been 15 years old. We ended up trading five Kahn's Wiener cards for almost an entire 1955 Topps set (I believe the dealer's name was Bob Rathgeber - something like that - a Kahn's expert). A couple hours later and we had completed the set, going from none to all in one afternoon and spending almost nothing to do it.

For a couple brothers who knew only of the Card Collector's Company and Wholesale Cards, it was like Christmas Day. The first time I ever saw a Goudey and if I recall correctly, the T206 Wagner was on display, worth over $400!!!

I remember buying Kahns from Bob in the early/mid 70's. If I remember correctly he worked for the Cincinnati Reds.

ZachS
06-17-2014, 06:37 PM
Ok so who has the next issue? I want to finish reading 'Summer of '52'!

Leon
06-18-2014, 10:25 AM
Ok so who has the next issue? I want to finish reading 'Summer of '52'!

I should have seen this coming. Here ya go....and a few more articles from this edition. It's so funny to me that some things never change. I bet in another 41 yrs we (hopefully, though I will be 93 then :)) are still debating the same things!! Interestingly, the magazine got this shipped out the day after Part II was written, March 21, as it has a postmark of March 22, 1973.


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barrysloate
06-18-2014, 10:53 AM
Imagine buying a box of 1952 Topps high numbers when they were issued and finding all those mint cards. Zowee!

And I do recall the first big purchase I ever made, back in 1982, was a 1949 Bowman set from Stan Martucci. Although the cards were terribly overgraded, I had never seen a complete set before and was nevertheless in awe. That's a name I won't forget.

GasHouseGang
06-18-2014, 11:19 AM
Imagine buying a box of 1952 Topps high numbers when they were issued and finding all those mint cards. Zowee!

And I do recall the first big purchase I ever made, back in 1982, was a 1949 Bowman set from Stan Martucci. Although the cards were terribly overgraded, I had never seen a complete set before and was nevertheless in awe. That's a name I won't forget.

Imagine splitting the 168 cards in the box with a friend and giving him all the Yankees so you can have all the Dodgers. That means he gave his friend all the Mantles! I wonder how many there were, since the card was double printed? Then his friend's mother got rid of them all a few years later when she got rid of his "junk". At the time he wrote this article the 1952 Mantle hadn't reached the icon status it is today.