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#1
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Posted By: dennis
ok, were they given to retailers to hand out with purchase? was there a package,containing card & candy?? does anyone know for sure or is there only speculation??? |
#2
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Posted By: T206Collector
...but I would speculate that the use was the same for caramel as for cigarettes, i.e., to provide a cardboard backing to a foil/wax/paper wrapped piece of candy. |
#3
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Cracker Jack cards were prizes in the boxes the first year; were mail in too the second year along with in the box. The west coast candy cards had the cards inside the wrappers on the candy. The others, I don't know. I speculate that the cards were placed on the candy owing to the number of stained cards. |
#4
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Posted By: Scott Gross
It kind of blows my mind that "we" don't know how a caramel card was packaged. I mean, it was ONLY 90-100 years ago. Generation-wise, that's not too long ago. My example is my maternal grandfather was born in 1896. So in 1909-11 he was of the age of probably buying both cigarettes and caramel's. He was from Philadelphia, were most of the caramels originated, and was a big sportsman. He died in 1975 when I was 15. I was old enough to collect e-cards, but didn't. I just can't believe someone, somewhere, at sometime didn't own a e-card in the 1970's, who didn't go up to a 70-80 year old guy (or gal), and say: "Hey, remember these cards ??" And get everything you would like to know about them. Maybe it's just me. |
#5
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Posted By: Patrick McMenemy
If I were a betting man, my quess is that it is highly probable that as a youngster opened his candy and admired the baseball player card that there is a strong likelyhood that the caramel was transfered from their hand(s)to the card. |
#6
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Posted By: Brian
I have wondered about this myself. The fact that many CJs lack egregious caramel stains suggests to me that there must have been a wrapper, and that a kid with sticky fingers just ruined the cards..... But if there were wrappers on CJ cards, why have they never surfaced on eBay (at least I have never seen one)? |
#7
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Posted By: Paul Kaufman
I have no proof of this, but I always have envisioned something like the modern day Sugar Daddy's, with a small slab of caramel, perhaps on a stick, with the card wrapped with the caramel inside a paper or wax paper wrapper. |
#8
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Posted By: Seth B.
Some cards, like Mello Mints, have distinctive creases that would suggest that they were included with some candy. I would still love to know if they shoved E92 Croft's into those cocoa bottles... |
#9
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Posted By: robert a
Many caramels exhibit staining that suggests the cards were packaged with direct contact to the candy. |
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