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#1
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Posted By: Glenn
My most recent ebay pick-up: |
#2
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Posted By: Chris
Love that! |
#3
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Posted By: warshawlaw
and cocaine to liven up your day |
#4
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Posted By: Scott Gross
Great pick up ............ |
#5
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Posted By: Steve M.
Coca-Cola used to contain cocaine. |
#6
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Posted By: Bob
Mr. Steroid just belted 713 off the facing of the upper deck |
#7
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Posted By: leon
He says, in the ad, he drank it after the game. Sort of like Bonds not using steroids during the game, I guess. What a shame such an ass will surpass Ruth in HR's. Such is life.... |
#8
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Posted By: craig
thats really a neat item. it made me think of this ty cobb ad that is in a newspaper i own, another of my collections. the sunday, sept. 10, 1916 san francisco examiner has an ad on page N7 of ty cobb selling nuxated iron. he is shown sliding in the picture. the ad is actually very lon with him describing how it keeps him this the physical condition it takes to be "the worlds greatest baseball player." i will try to scan the ad tonight, hopefull i can, and post it tomorrow afternoon. |
#9
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Posted By: Glenn
Chris, |
#10
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Posted By: Daniel Bretta
Nice ad piece...I saw a bunch of these hit ebay a few weeks ago. |
#11
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Posted By: Glenn
Thanks for the compliments, everyone. It looked pretty cool in the auction, but it looks even better now that I actually have it. |
#12
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Posted By: drc
As it uses coca leaves in the flavoring and the cocaine can't be |
#13
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Posted By: craig
here is that ty cobb ad. |
#14
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Posted By: Chris
Glen, |
#15
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Posted By: Glenn
Nothing like that, at least none that I can detect with my eyes and fingertips. The texture is uniform across the whole piece, with nothing stamped/pressed/in relief on it -- same as an ordinary baseball card except that it's monochromatic. |
#16
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Posted By: Howard W. Rosenberg
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#17
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Posted By: prewarsports
To the best of my knowledge, this was originally an advertisement from a magazine which someone made into a cardboard display piece within the last 30 years. I do not think this was done to deceive but rather to make a nice display in the 1970's or early 1980's. All the ones I have seen of this piece have been as such, and I have seen the original ad in a magazine (might have been National Geographic) and it was much smaller which is why Lajoie looks really grainy in your piece after he was enlarged. |
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