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Legendary Auctions 1906 Word Series Ticket
How can anyone say that this ticket is a World Series ticket from 1906? There is a hand written date, but that could have been written at any time for many different reasons. The two 1907 ones at least have a reference to it being a World Series game. Yet the 1906 has nothing. If anything the reference for the rain check to be used for any game during the season makes it seam like this is a regular season ticket.
Also Legendary says the ticket can't be authenticated: Quote:
I want to say I am not asking this because I know the answer and want to "trap" people, but I really don't know and am curious. I don't deal with vintage tickets and I have been pondering this since I first read the auction write up. |
It's not a 1906 WS ticket.
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Nevermind...posted a link to an NL 1906 WS Ticket stub. But would it surprise anyone that Comiskey was too cheap to have World Championship tickets made up and just used regular season tickets instead?
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The Washington Shirt store advert on back of tix is dead giveaway. They didn't have a shoe dept until 1911 or later. They went into the shoe business after the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, when new safety regs went into effect making the shirt business less profitable, so they "branched out" into the footwear trade.
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Anybody else think the print they used in that new catalog is tough to read?
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Barry Halper probably wrote the date and game etc on that ticket. Maybe he traded someone Cy Young's ipod for it or whatever.
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Yes, the text is hard to read. It's the background colors they use.
Though I'm getting to the age where it's hard to read some prescription bottles. |
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Dims are now 8 1/2" x 9 1/2", instead of the traditional 8 1/2" x 11". I guess we'll all have to invest in magnifying glasses! It's still a classy looking catalogue, FWIW... |
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Dan Bretta Moderator * Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: Lincoln, Nebraska Posts: 3,417 Quote: Originally Posted by thebigtrain The Washington Shirt store advert on back of tix is dead giveaway. They didn't have a shoe dept until 1911 or later. They went into the shoe business after the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, when new safety regs went into effect making the shirt business less profitable, so they "branched out" into the footwear trade. Anyone notified Legendary about this? Seems like if that's indisputable then it's impossible this is a 1906 WS ticket stub. ------------------------------------------ I would like to point out that in 1906 there are adverts saying that the washington shirt co. opened up a shoe dept. in the fall of the previous year so the shoe dept. making it "a dead giveaway" is a red herring. I think we had a little rush to judgment there. put down the noose. I am just kidding. But google is a wonder these days. Legendary can owe me. I squashed it before it got legs. If it is hard to read, the review is dated Jan. 10, 1906 and is a review of the wholesale market for 1905, the image i have is bigger and i can email it to anyone who wants a copy. the image posting mechanism resized it into a smaller size i guess. __________________ |
I guess it's not indisputable. And like I said earlier in the thread it would not be unlike Charlie Comiskey to be a cheap bastard and use regular season tickets for the World Series.
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As for the dimensions of the catalog, the 'National' live auction catalog has been more of a square catalog the last few years. The print, however, is REALLY difficult.............and, I too, am old.........
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