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  #1  
Old 05-31-2020, 05:27 AM
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Scott Garner Scott Garner is offline
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Default June pickup thread

BOB FELLER vs. SATCHEL PAIGE ALL-STARS 1946 BARNSTORMING TOUR TICKET STUB

I'm thrilled to have recently picked up this rare ticket stub from the very 1st game played on Sept. 30th of the historic 1946 Bob Feller vs. Satchel Paige All-Stars Barnstorming Tour.
This first game was played immediately after the regular season at Pittsburgh's Forbes Field. To put this in perspective, keep in mind that this tour actually preceded HOF Jackie Robinson's ML debut in 1947.


For those of you that are interested in learning more, here is info about the Feller vs. Paige All-Star barnstorming tour directly from the HOF MLB website:

"A historic barnstorming tour, with teams led by two of the greatest pitchers in baseball history, took place soon after World War II and helped usher in a new era of opportunity.

It also changed the face of big league travel.
The year was 1946 and the Second World War had only ended the previous September. While the 16-team major leagues – still a year away from breaking its longstanding color barrier – had stayed afloat during the conflict, many ballplayers who served in the military were heading home hoping the layoff hadn’t affected their game. Hundreds had traded in their baseball togs for military uniforms, maybe none more renowned than Bob Feller.

Feller burst on the baseball scene with the Cleveland Indians in 1936 before he had even finished high school. Arguably one of the hardest throwers of all time, “Rapid Robert” fanned 15 St. Louis Browns in his first major league start. Soon he was the game’s top pitcher, averaging 25 wins a season and leading the league in strikeouts from 1939-41. But the day after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, the 23-year-old enlisted in the Navy missed most of the next four seasons.
It was while aboard the USS Alabama that Feller, a savvy entrepreneur his entire adult life, began to seriously consider a unique barnstorming tour pitting a team of white big leaguers against a squad made of Negro League stars as a way to augment his big league salary when he returned to the field.
“I had it all laid out,” Feller told William Marshall, author of "Baseball’s Pivotal Era, 1945-1951."
“I knew what I was going to do and I knew the people personally that I was going to have get the black clubs together – the Kansas City operator, Mr. (J.L.) Wilkinson, and Satchel Paige and many others that I wanted to oppose us.”

Bob Feller returned to the big leagues after three years in the U.S. Navy late in the 1945 season. After winning 26 games in 1946, Feller teamed up with Satchel Paige for a cross-country barnstorming tour. (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum)

After making nine starts for the Indians at the end of the 1945 season upon his postwar return, Feller reclaimed his throne as one of the sport’s top hurlers in ‘46 with an America League-best 26 wins and 348 strikeouts. It was in mid-July of Feller’s stellar comeback campaign that he announced plans for a coast-to-coast exhibition tour featuring an all-star squad made up of players from both the American and National leagues and a team of the nation’s finest Negro League players.
Having obtained from Commissioner A.B. “Happy” Chandler’s permission to carry the tour beyond the 10-day barnstorming limit, the 27-year-old Feller’s ambitious plans by September called for a 27-game tour beginning Sept. 30 at Pittsburgh with the itinerary including stops in such outposts as Cleveland, Chicago, Cincinnati, Baltimore, Newark, New York, Columbus, Dayton, Louisville, Davenport, Des Moines, St. Paul. Omaha, Wichita, St. Louis, Kansas city, Denver, Los Angeles, San Diego, Vancouver, San Francisco, Seattle, Portland and Tacoma. Feller even set a game in Versailles, Ky., home of Chandler.
Teammates on Bob Feller’s All-Stars included Bob Lemon, Mickey Vernon, San Chapman, Charlie Keller, Spud Chandler, Phil Rizzuto and Stan Musial. Satchel Paige’s All-Stars, among the top performers from both the Negro American League and Negro American League, included Max Manning, Barney Brown, Hilton Smith, Buck O’Neil, Hank Thompson, Art Wilson, Howard Easterling and Quincy Trouppe.

Satchel Paige was 40 years old during his 1946 barnstorming tour with Bob Feller but was still one of the biggest gate attractions in baseball. (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum)

The Bob Feller/Satchel Paige barnstorming tour following the 1946 season made stops in 32 United States cities over 27 days, including a game at Los Angeles' Wrigley Field, as advertised in the Oct. 16, 1946, Los Angeles Times. (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

In his autobiography "Now Pitching, Bob Feller," the “Heater from Van Meter” wrote about the elaborate logistics that went into his planned transcontinental trek in 1946. No one had ever attempted to use airplanes to crisscross the country, let alone playing a game in the afternoon then flying to a second game that night hundreds of miles away.
“I had put together a full roster of players whose combined annual salaries in the majors exceeded two million dollars,” Feller wrote. “The owners of the teams didn’t like that. They said they were concerned about their players getting hurt while barnstorming. Then they really objected when they found out how were travelling. We were going to fly.
“That was unheard of for professional sports teams. They took trains. They said I was exposing their athletes to even greater dangers. But I chartered two DC-3s for a month from Flying Tigers Airlines. We had ‘Bob Feller’s All-Stars’ painted on the side and took off to play 35 games in 27 days. We were the only baseball teams travelling by air. No other barnstorming tours were doing it yet, and the major league teams hadn’t started flying either. We were pioneering the practice of a professional sports team travelling that way. Today it’s hard to imagine teams going any other way.”

Feller had a longstanding affinity for air travel, as newspapers across the country wrote about the then 22-year-old fireballer learning to fly in 1941. As was reported in The New York Times in Sept. 24, 1941, he had been taking flying instructions at Cleveland Airport for three weeks and had soloed for the first time a week prior.
“Feller is interested in flying for the sport only,” said instructor Don Patrick. “He has flown a lot of miles on airlines and had been thinking about lessons for the past two years.”
Having special access to an airplane that October came in handy for Feller.

Bob Feller was a licensed pilot and believed in the future of air travel for teams when he conceived his 1946 barnstorming tour featuring MLB and Negro Leagues stars. The tour was one of the first to rely on air travel. (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum)

“The only two games I missed conflicted with a contract I had made to appear at a milk convention in Atlantic City,” he wrote. “We were playing in California at that point of the tour, so I flew all night from Sacramento, made my appearance in Atlantic City, and flew all night again to rejoin our tour in California.”
While big league teams traveling by airplane increased with the West Coast expansion of the Dodgers and Giants in 1958, trains were the dominant mode of transportation for baseball players for decades. After the first major league team to fly to a game, the Reds, who went from St. Louis to Chicago on June 8, 1934, there were sporadic flights over the next decade, but it not until after World War II that plane travel became common.
There were reports in 1946 that a pair of future Hall of Famers were paid thousands of dollars by their teams to not take part in Feller’s barnstorming tour that offseason partly due to the fear of planes crashing.

“Some of the owners objected to what I was doing so much they paid their stars not to barnstorm with me,” Feller wrote in "Now Pitching, Bob Feller."
“Tom Yawkey, the owner of the Red Sox, paid Ted Williams $10,000 to stay home so he wouldn’t get hurt playing in a game or killed in a plane crash. Yawkey’s counterpart in Detroit, Spike Briggs, paid Hal Newhouser the same amount.”
According to Feller, not only did he cover all the air travel, he also carried “millions of dollars of liability insurance if either ballclub, black or white, went down.”
Buck O’Neil, in his autobiography, "I Was Right On Time," addressed not only the air travel, but also the racial component involved in the 1946 barnstorming tour.
“I was looking ahead myself during the (Negro Leagues) series, to the biggest barnstorming tour ever, when Satchel Paige and Bob Feller were going to square off against each other with their own all-star teams in games all across the country,” O’Neil wrote. “I was excited to be chosen for the Satchel Paige All-Stars, along with guys like Hilton Smith, Gene Benson and Quincy Trouppe, because I knew I’d be making more money in one month than I had made in the last six. And I was excited to able to play against guys like Mickey Vernon, Phil Rizzuto, Johnny Sain and Stan Musial right after the big-league World Series.
“But I may have been most excited about taking my first plane ride, since both teams traveled in (DC-3s), just like Satchel had been doing for some time. That’s when we found out how the other half lived.
“I also felt that, even though it was black against white, this tour was an event that could have a real effect on big-league integration, because it took place after Jackie (Robinson) had proven himself, and if a lot of us weren’t that lucky, we could at least prove ourselves against big-leaguers in these games.”

In Fay Vincent’s book, "The Only Game in Town," Feller told the former baseball commissioner: “We were interested in one thing, making money. I mean what else is there; yes we put on a good show; there was racial rivalry, not amongst the players, but amongst the fans. And we got a few laughs, they’re great friends of mine. They love me dearly. I love them dearly. I know all the guys. We made more money in that month of October than we made all year round.”
By the time the tour concluded in California at the end of October, approximately a quarter of a million fans had witnessed this unprecedented tour.

Stan Musial, who led the National League with a .365 batting average in 1946, joined Bob Feller’s All-Stars after helping the Cardinals capture the ’46 World Series. He told the Sporting News he didn’t care too much for the tour’s one-night stands.
“Good money in it, though. I sure wouldn’t do it if we couldn’t fly. It must be might rugged making jumps on a plane. At least we get some rest this way.”
The tour was described by Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert author Timothy M. Gay as “the most ambitious baseball undertaking since John McGraw and Charles Comiskey dreamed up their round-the-world junket in 1913.”
The Sporting News, in its tour wrap-up story on Nov. 6, 1946, called Feller the game’s greatest “money” pitcher, estimating he made $80,000 barnstorming from New York to California that year. In the 27 days the tour visited 32 cities in the United States, 17 states and British Columbia.
“Sure, I’m tired,” said Feller, “but who wouldn’t be after travelling 15,000 miles? My arm is in great shape, though, and in a few days I’m going to settle down and relax for a couple of months.
“After all, you know a fellow is only young once and I’m going to make as much money as I can while I can.”

Last edited by Scott Garner; 06-03-2020 at 10:17 AM.
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  #2  
Old 05-31-2020, 05:38 AM
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Great pickup Scott. That ticket is in great shape too especially for one that's 74 years old.
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  #3  
Old 06-01-2020, 08:58 AM
Baseballcrazy62 Baseballcrazy62 is offline
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Default June pick up thread

This pennant finally showed up. Anyone have a guess on a time period of this. You don’t see the green ones very often.
899116BA-250D-47A5-8EE1-DD96262ADD30.jpg
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  #4  
Old 06-01-2020, 10:57 PM
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That's a toughie! 3/4 size... right?

Pretty confident it's circa late 1940s - early 50s.

Great pickup!
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  #5  
Old 06-02-2020, 02:38 PM
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Default Ring Lardner and companion piece.

Picked up this odd ball snapshot of Ring Lardner in a White Sox uniform during spring training around 1915 from a board member a while back. Just recently grabbed this early 1900`s Edison phono tube recording of "I`m forever blowing bubbles", to match with the photo. The photo/recording makes me think of the movie "Eight Men Out" and the train scene when Ring breaks into song. Nice stuff boys, keep it coming.
Funky snapshot, author Ring Lardner at W Sox camp. 1916 by Hugh Murphy, on Flickr
Untitled by Hugh Murphy, on Flickr
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  #6  
Old 06-03-2020, 02:09 AM
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Default June is shaping up nicely

It’s only 3 days in and June is looking to my best collecting month in a long time.

Not even my favourite items that I expect this month (will be back to post) but pretty cool and scarce nonetheless.

1967 NHL Stanley Cup Finals stubs from Toronto. For those not up on hockey - the game is a BIG deal in Toronto, and these are from the last Cup winner for the Leafs. Have never held even one of these before let alone the Cup
Clincher.

1964 Stanley Cup finals, Game 4 stub and program (with a period-correct Gordie Howe auto) from Detroit.
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File Type: jpg 80253330-E7DA-4C62-8418-DB0136CF9A3A.jpg (16.6 KB, 1079 views)
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Last edited by baseball tourist; 06-03-2020 at 02:09 AM.
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  #7  
Old 06-03-2020, 04:44 AM
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Default Great pickup!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Scott Garner View Post
BOB FELLER vs. SATCHEL PAIGE ALL-STAR BARNSTORMING TOUR TICKET STUB

I'm thrilled to have recently picked up this rare ticket stub from the very 1st game played on Sept. 30th of the historic 1946 Bob Feller vs. Satchel Paige All-Stars Barnstorming Tour.
Congrats on a great pickup! I love learning about baseball's barnstorming days, and seeing memorabilia from this era. The research brings these relics to life. Thanks for sharing!
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Old 06-03-2020, 05:02 PM
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Mark: thanks for the info. It is 3/4 pennant.
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  #9  
Old 06-03-2020, 06:57 PM
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Because perezfan wanted to see....

I've been searching for this stupid postcard (showing red chairs) for 25 years. I have had the yellow chair/cocktail lounge version for a long time. Unlike the myriad postcards of early Candlestick Park, this one was not sold at every drugstore and Five & Dime in SF. This is one year only; sold or handed out in the Stadium Club and has the Giants' 1961 home schedule. Alwaays nice to delete an ebay search!
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Old 06-04-2020, 02:17 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ooo-ribay View Post
Because perezfan wanted to see....

I've been searching for this stupid postcard (showing red chairs) for 25 years. I have had the yellow chair/cocktail lounge version for a long time. Unlike the myriad postcards of early Candlestick Park, this one was not sold at every drugstore and Five & Dime in SF. This is one year only; sold or handed out in the Stadium Club and has the Giants' 1961 home schedule. Alwaays nice to delete an ebay search!
25 years is a long time. Very gratifying to hear that you fulfilled that search. What is next?
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Old 06-04-2020, 03:00 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark View Post
25 years is a long time. Very gratifying to hear that you fulfilled that search. What is next?
I think I still have 82 ebay searches.
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Old 06-09-2020, 09:33 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ooo-ribay View Post
Because perezfan wanted to see....

I've been searching for this stupid postcard (showing red chairs) for 25 years. I have had the yellow chair/cocktail lounge version for a long time. Unlike the myriad postcards of early Candlestick Park, this one was not sold at every drugstore and Five & Dime in SF. This is one year only; sold or handed out in the Stadium Club and has the Giants' 1961 home schedule. Alwaays nice to delete an ebay search!
That's a great feeling. Nice find!
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Old 06-11-2020, 03:52 PM
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Default a bat

Not many people would be all that excited about getting a George Grantham bat, but I am. I collect bats from the Pirates teams of the 1920's, and "Boots" Grantham was key to those teams. 26 years ago, when I was just starting out, I had the chance to buy a pro-model Grantham bat. But the dealer wanted $75 more than usual for it, so I didn't pull the trigger right away. He sold it quickly, and I promised myself I'd get the next one that I could. So, I kept my promise and got one ---26 years down the road!
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Old 06-04-2020, 09:19 AM
jakeinge jakeinge is offline
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Forgive me for posting this on multiple June pickup threads, but I'm pretty excited about this one! To my knowledge it's the first time one of these has changed hands in almost a decade.
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Old 06-04-2020, 11:45 AM
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Great postcards Rob... Those just scream early sixties.

Very cool that you finally found the missing version!
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Old 06-04-2020, 07:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jakeinge View Post
Forgive me for posting this on multiple June pickup threads, but I'm pretty excited about this one! To my knowledge it's the first time one of these has changed hands in almost a decade.
Ok in my house that's a mike drop moment!
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1971 Pirates Game used bats Collection 18/18 (100%)
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Old 06-05-2020, 06:31 PM
GatorJay87 GatorJay87 is offline
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Picked up this 1930's illustration of former Gator Johnny Burnett. It appears to be cut out of a German newspaper. If any of you know more about this I would love to hear it.
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  #18  
Old 06-05-2020, 08:36 PM
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Some purchases






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  #19  
Old 06-08-2020, 07:28 PM
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Default Feller Magazines

Picked up two seldom-seen magazines for my Bob Feller / Cleveland Baseball Magazines Collections
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Old 06-09-2020, 05:26 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JLange View Post
Picked up two seldom-seen magazines for my Bob Feller / Cleveland Baseball Magazines Collections
Jason,
Both of these are excellent Feller magazine covers. Congrats!
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  #21  
Old 06-15-2020, 09:08 AM
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Been looking for one of these for awhile.

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  #22  
Old 06-15-2020, 10:13 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jcosta19 View Post
Been looking for one of these for awhile.

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Beauty! what is it made of?
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Old 06-15-2020, 01:13 PM
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My understanding is that its a gypsum cast and hand painted bronze finish.

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Old 06-16-2020, 07:55 PM
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Great bust!
For me it was a lot of paper at the flea market and the Joe C ad poster from EBay.

Greg
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Old 06-16-2020, 09:32 PM
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A lot of new items for me the last few days. I was happy to add all of these to my Olympic photography archives.

Press Photographer's Messenger Pass from 1948 for wrestling. They issued these for photographers and messengers. They were very specific and not like current credentials. I have two photographer passes, football (soccer) preliminaries and the water polo venue, and one messenger pass for pentathlon. They are all the same color, about the size of a baseball card and about twice as thick on stiff cardstock. I believe they were press punched out of a larger piece of stock.

1948.jpg

This is a RPPC from the 1920 Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium. It shows Aileen Riggin of the U.S. and Nils Skoglund of Sweden. Riggin won the gold medal in springboard diving. She was 14 years and 120 days old at the time. Skoglund won a silver medal. He was 14 years 11 days at the time. He is the youngest male to win a medal in Olympic diving and the youngest male to win an individual medal in the Olympics. There are 4 women who were younger. I also have an original copy of the press photo of this shot.

riggin-1.jpg

A photo I am very excited to obtain. It shows Walter Winans practicing for the running deer competition at the 1908 Olympics. Winans was born in St. Petersburg, Russia. His father and uncle were engineers helping to build the national railroad. He eventually settled in England. A talented shooter, he had to pledge allegiance to the United States at the U.S. Consulate in London to be able to compete in the 1908 Olympics. He won two gold medals and a silver medal in shooting. He was a noted sculptor and also won a gold medal in the arts category at the 1912 Olympics. Art competitions were held at the Summer Olympics from 1912 to 1948. Winans is the only person to win a gold in both disciplines. Winans finally visited the United States in 1910. I had never expected to find a photo of him shooting. I partly expected to find a studio portrait from England since he lived and died there. This came from France and was taken by V. Forbin of Paris.

winans-1.jpg
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Last edited by Michael B; 06-16-2020 at 10:22 PM.
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Old 06-17-2020, 02:01 PM
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Was lucky enough to come by this locally.....a 1946 Rockford Peaches semi final playoff program....can't be too many of these out there...Rockford only hosted 2 of these games before advancing and losing in the finals that year.
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Old 06-18-2020, 12:28 PM
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Picked up two new items this week. 1979 Chuck Tanner GU jerseys as well as an original Follow me to Forbes Field sign.
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Old 06-22-2020, 10:17 PM
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Picked these up at a garage sale this past weekend. No Ruth or Gehrig’s hidden in the middle


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Old 06-23-2020, 09:31 AM
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CLEMAZ, That is a FIND.
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Last edited by Mark; 06-23-2020 at 09:31 AM.
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Old 06-23-2020, 09:59 AM
bobfreedman bobfreedman is offline
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Default Catchers Sign

Picked this up in Leland's latest offering
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  #31  
Old 06-23-2020, 10:01 AM
Bumpus Jones Bumpus Jones is offline
chris
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Beauty Bob!
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  #32  
Old 06-23-2020, 12:15 PM
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sayhey24 sayhey24 is offline
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Wow, wow and wow to those last three!


Greg
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  #33  
Old 06-23-2020, 02:40 PM
Hankphenom Hankphenom is offline
Hank Thomas
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bobfreedman View Post
Picked this up in Leland's latest offering
Gorgeous!
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