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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>Howard W. Rosenberg</b><p><a href="http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6279563.html" target="_new" rel="nofollow">http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6279563.html</a><br><br>I'm not related to subject of the article, at least as far as I know!
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>jay wolt</b><p>Don't know if the card was worth anywhere near $75K<br>But the publicity for the lady that found it and now <br>for the buyer Mr Rosenberg sure puts them in the spotlight.<br>And sometimes good press is priceless.
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>Red</b><p>I just hope they don't cut it up in little pieces to put in packs.
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>davidcycleback</b><p>I remember when a collector asked what was the best method to remove the baseball photo from cardboard it was stuck to. I told him what he had was called a cabinet card, and the two should stay together.<br><br>In an attempt to get money for bail, boxer Jake Lamotta famously took a hammer and knocked the jewels off his championship belt, only to be informed by the jeweler that the financial value was in the intact belt (Lamotta didn't meet bail).
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>Alan</b><p>Mazel Tov to him. I'm happy for him, especially since there was an article in one of the sports hobby publications about him recovering from cancer.
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>Rich Klein</b><p> But he loves the hobby too -0- and has a great deal of respect for those older dealer/collectors who came before him. It may have never been mentioned on this board; but in the January, 2005 Houston Show; he set up an area for long-time dealers who used to do the old Kennedy/Koppa Houston Show and hosted an hospitality room especially for those dealers, etc. I was fortunate enough to be invited to the hospitality room and the stories told were absolutely awesome about old-time card purchasing.<br><br> On a side note; I'd love to see other promoters do that to honor those promoters and dealers of the past who may or may not be as active as they used to be. <br><br>Regards<br>Rich
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>Dan Bretta</b><p>That's a good story. It will be interesting to see what the next one sells for. Did that one bring a premium just because of the notoriety? Did the notoriety of the card give it a permanent boost?
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>Alan</b><p>Does Rob have one in his upcoming April's REA auction ? Probably not, but it would be interesting to see what it would bring without the newspaper stories, Jay Leno, etc,...
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Yes, REA has a Peck & Snyder Red Stocking card coming up.
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>doug goodman</b><p>Am I the only one who can't get the link to work?<br>Doug
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>Jay</b><p>I would guess that he bought the card through his business and will give it away as a prize. The fact that he paid a ridiculous price for the card will make it seem like a bigger deal as a prize and the government will subsidize his overpaying with his tax deduction.
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article about the buyer of the 1869 Cincinnati card
Posted By: <b>JDRUM</b><p>They are cetainly in the subsidizing business. Good for him, nice story.
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