Net54baseball.com Forums

Net54baseball.com Forums (http://www.net54baseball.com/index.php)
-   Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions (http://www.net54baseball.com/forumdisplay.php?f=2)
-   -   NEW Find solves old gum wrapper mystery (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=150771)

danmckee 05-05-2012 06:27 AM

NEW Find solves old gum wrapper mystery
 
2 Attachment(s)
There has been a generic Goudey gum wrapper that no one really knew what it belonged to. Some thought it contained the knot hole gang generic cards that look like inserts.

I always thought it was the original 1st run of the 1938 Goudey Heads Up cards since the wrapper favored the 1938 Goudey Heads up wrapper with the figures surrounding it.

My reasoning was that the 1938 Goudey set was issued as a continuation to the 1933 Goudey set (assumed by the numbering of the 38 series), and that the generic wrapper had similarities to the actual Heads Up wrapper.

Well, I was close! But no cigar!

The generic wrapper turns out to be a 1938 wrapper, but..

It belongs to the 1938 Big League Goudey Movies booklets.

Mystery solved! Thanks to a recent find.

Dan

http://www.baseballwrappers.com/gall...70&submit.y=16

Exhibitman 05-05-2012 06:41 AM

That is way cool...wish I could stumble across a find like that.

danmckee 05-05-2012 07:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Exhibitman (Post 990284)
That is way cool...wish I could stumble across a find like that.

Man you are up early Adam! And you work too hard to be snooping around every where for stuff. I am a COBOL programmer, a soon to be extinct animal.

john.clowes 05-05-2012 07:33 AM

Dan, if it's any comfort to you, I took my first real job in 1983 as a COBOL programmer and was told then that I was crazy to do so because the language would be obsoleted in two years. Nearly 30 years later, here we are with it still in use.....

Kinda like when I moved out of my parents house back then and Mom suggested that I toss my old ball cards since they were old.

Clutch-Hitter 05-05-2012 07:44 AM

Nice find Dan

danmckee 05-05-2012 07:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by john.clowes (Post 990296)
Dan, if it's any comfort to you, I took my first real job in 1983 as a COBOL programmer and was told then that I was crazy to do so because the language would be obsoleted in two years. Nearly 30 years later, here we are with it still in use.....

Kinda like when I moved out of my parents house back then and Mom suggested that I toss my old ball cards since they were old.

Well put!

I actually am doing XML coming in from the net to the mainframe, neat stuff.

Using CICS Web Service and COBOL now actually has XML PARSE and GENERATE commands.

Dan

jcmtiger 05-05-2012 09:01 AM

You guys crack me up. I started with punch cards, sorters, printers in 1960, after that cobol programmer and left after being a DataBase Administrater about 16 years ago.

Joe

Runscott 05-05-2012 09:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by danmckee (Post 990293)
Man you are up early Adam! And you work too hard to be snooping around every where for stuff. I am a COBOL programmer, a soon to be extinct animal.

Haha. I WAS a COBOL programmer - for about ten years - now I am also extinct as of May 31.

Congrats on that wrapper mystery solving!

wrapperguy 05-05-2012 10:23 AM

Congrats
 
Dan,
That is awesome. Amazing that these still exist. You must tell us the history of the find sometime.

4815162342 05-05-2012 03:09 PM

I've been told that one of our legacy systems was previously developed in COBOL running on a Wang system. I couldn't imagine developing software in that environment! :)

Exhibitman 05-05-2012 04:20 PM

Insomnia. 5:41 is late for me.

danmckee 05-05-2012 07:03 PM

God Bless you Adam, seems like a side affect from years of pain killers :)

slidekellyslide 05-05-2012 07:10 PM

McKee shows off an incredible discovery and you guys want to talk about computer programming. :D

TELL US ABOUT THAT DISCOVERY MR McKEE!!!

danmckee 05-06-2012 08:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by slidekellyslide (Post 990511)
McKee shows off an incredible discovery and you guys want to talk about computer programming. :D

TELL US ABOUT THAT DISCOVERY MR McKEE!!!

This is a very good point!

Actually, kind of uneventfull, I was turned on to the family by a 3rd party. The family is in the MidWest. The collection was very interesting, mostly non sports. 1 1920s strip card, the bulk of the collection was 1935 thru 1941, a 1950 Yogi Berra, 2 1967 Topps cards and a load of 1991 cards which I told them to give out to the neighborhood kids.

The 1938 movie booklets with wrappers were the neatest

a complete set of 1941 Uncle San

Some non sports strip sets

Gmen, horrors of war cards

1961 Essex Meats hoops cards

Some other odds and ends

Not the motherlode but a neat discovery due to the movie booklets with warppers

Dan


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:40 PM.