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#1
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Posted By: Terry
Does anyone know what the package looked like that DRUM backed T206's were issued in? Was it a soft pack or hard pack?? |
#2
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Terry, it is believed they came in 10 count boxes, but to date none have been found. |
#3
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
Terry - Drum cigarette cards most likely came in slide and shell 10-count cigarette packs. They most certainly did not come in soft tobacco pouches. Below is the only known Drum cigarette box I have ever encountered. As you will note, this Drum box was manufactured by Drummond (which also produced Cannon cigarettes, etc). Drummond was sold to the American Tobacco Company in 1898 and all cigarette production was shifted from St. Louis (where Drummond was located) to Virginia. The box pictured below was manufactured prior to 1898 and hence, would not have held a T205 or T206. However, the graphics would probably have been identical. |
#4
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Since there are two different sizes of Drum pouches, what is the possibility of cards being put in the 2.5 oz size pouch? The smaller size pouch was the one on the 206 museum website. |
#5
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
Absolutely did not come in the Drum pouches. Why advertise "Drum Cigarettes" on the back of the cards if you are not going to package your cards in the cigarettes? The fact that there are currently no known 1910 era Drum cigarette packs should not be a determining factor. Drum was a small brand without the widespread distribution that Sweet Caporal, Piedmont, etc enjoyed. It is not unfathomable that no cigarette boxes have surfaced to date. To add more credence to the my statement that Drum did not package cards in the tobacco pouches, ATC's own records from the era show that the pouches were not even manufactured or distributed during the time period consistent with the Drum backed T206's, while Drum cigarette packs were. |
#6
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
It was a roll-your-own CIGARETTE brand. |
#7
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
Drum was not a roll-your-own brand. Drum flake was just one product. ATC records clearly indicate that Drum cigarettes were manufactured between 1909-1913. Drum smoking tobacco was not. Also, the Hindu pack sold last year was the wrong pack. We know what the correct Hindu packs look like because of the Hindu ad's that depict cards coming out of packs. To date, none have been discovered. |
#8
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
How do you figure Drum wasn't a roll-your-own brand? You just got done slamming Drum rolling papers "tobacco wrappers" in another post. |
#9
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
I think it's hilarious to hear that the graphics on the 1890 Drum lid should be the same. That's like saying if my Aunt had a set she'll look like my Grandpa in 20 years. |
#10
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Posted By: Richard Dwyer
T206 cards were used as stiffeners, that's why they were inserted into slide & shell boxes. I agree with Jon about what he said about Drum pouches. |
#11
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Posted By: J Hull
What Jon said. |
#12
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Yep, they were definitely used to stiffen packs. They were also quite an advertising tool as we all read in that 1909 newspaper article with the boys on the streets. |
#13
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Posted By: barry arnold
I agree with Jamie. |
#14
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Jamie... |
#15
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Posted By: Mike D.
Rolling papers for cigarettes, some seem familiar. |
#16
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
That's a sweet collection! I only see one ATC Drum. The blue Drum is the Douwe-Egberts brand. |
#17
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Posted By: J Hull
NYHF, when you point out the chew and smoke brands associated with sport and nonsport cards you're making the case for those of us who are disagreeing with you. None of them say cigarette. They say scrap, or long cut tobacco, or plug, or twist, or something other than cigarette. If you can point to any loose tobacco product brand that's advertised on the back of a tobacco card via the word "cigarette," I'd very much like to see it. |
#18
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
My pouch reads Factory 39, 4th Dist, NC...but I've never said that the pouch in my collection has a card inside. I always just thought it was a great item to go along with my cards. And at the end of the day, I just want to see a Drum cigarette box from the 20th century!! |
#19
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Posted By: Richard Dwyer
Just because you have a 1910 tax stamp without overprinting, doesn't mean anything. It's very easy to remove the overprinting. 1910 tax stamps were overprinted with dates 1911-1916. If it was a 1909 tax stamp, there would be no argument, because they never overprinted onto this tax stamp. |
#20
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Yeah, but allegedly 1909 stamps weren't only used in 1909. Okay...so how easy is it to remove overprinting off a 100 year old thin and brittle piece of blue paper?...LoL...I'm sure it's as easy as it would be to remove a cancellation mark off a 150 year old stamp! |
#21
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
WHO KNOWS!!!...this is right from that link... |
#22
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Posted By: Scott B.
I found this thread very interesting. NYHighlanderFan is trying to bring up new ideas into those so called "theories" but got shot down right away since Jon "the expert" disagrees with his ideas and Jon's believers just basically repeats what Jon said and keep on hammering on NYHighlanderFan. |
#23
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Posted By: J Hull
I think the "experts" are also hopeful that innocent and unknowing folks don't waste their money buying GAI "authenticated" Drum pouches with hopes that a) a T206 card could be inside, or b) that packs like this once contained T206 cards. |
#24
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
Scott, |
#25
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Since 1887 (Allen & Ginter, Buchner, Kimball, Old Judge, etc.), the initial reason for inserting a BB (or Non-Sports) |
#26
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
Ted - I never even thought of the ABCD connection with the back designs. Also, to add to your scan above: |
#27
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
Thanks for the "visuals"....your pictures are prettier than mine. |
#28
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Posted By: Richard Dwyer
NYHighlanderFan: Would love to see you prove us wrong. Would also be the story of the decade if you opened your pouch on National TV and found a T206 card inside. If your pouch had a card in it, I would think you would be able to feel it. It would most likely be on the top or bottom of the pouch and not in the middle. Maybe the members here could offset your loss, only if you found a card inside. Open it on TV, I wish you luck. I believe the reason why you don't want to open the pouch, is because you know there is more of a possibility that it doesn't contain a card. |
#29
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Let me thank all of you guys for commenting...this has been outstanding! |
#30
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Yeah, if anything like this was ever to be opened, it would have to be filmed for every reason you can imagine...good and bad! |
#31
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
NYHighlanderFan, |
#32
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
A little more on Ty Cobb Brand. If you click on this thread and scroll down to Shawn's post of January 26 at 2:15pm, you will note many ads for Ty Cobb Brand that appeared in the Macon Weekly Telgraph in 1910. So, this at least dates the brand to the 1910 era. |
#33
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
1st....you are confusing Jon's and my posts....I brought up the subject of the Ty Cobb card. So, I'll respond |
#34
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Outstanding...thank You very much for taking the time for such an in-depth response! |
#35
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Ted...You too...thanks! Yeah, I did confuse posts there for a second. |
#36
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
I missed that post back in January...thanks for sharing it with me. Quite fascinating and mysterious. |
#37
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Posted By: Jon Canfield
NYHighlanderFan... that is an interesting theory regarding Ty Cobb (that Cobb gave the card out). As Ted notes in the thread referenced above, I don't think it was contemplated that Cobb, himself, may have given the card out before that add came to light a month back (it was contemplated before that tobacco purchasers handed the card out when people purchased the Ty Cobb product). |
#38
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Posted By: Richard Dwyer
NYHighlanderFan: How much did you pay for the pouch? |
#39
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Posted By: Marty Ogelvie
Cobb handing out his Ty Cobb Back cards, that would be cool.. not likely but definately something to think about. marty |
#40
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Posted By: J Hull
One thing that's struck me since we had that discussion of the Cobb tin is that the Ty Cobb backed cards have the factory information on them, Factory 33, 4th District NC. Which matches the information on the surviving Ty Cobb tins. For me, that's some evidence to link the two. But it also raises the point that if the cards were designed as handouts and were not intended to be packed in a tobacco product, why would that say the factory number on them? Perhaps they were designed to be placed in the tins, but then for some reason were not? Or perhaps they really were placed in some small number of tins? Or both? |
#41
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Posted By: Ted Zanidakis
I think Federal Tobacco laws required that "Factory 33 4th Dist. N.C." was printed on the Ty Cobb back in |
#42
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Posted By: Shawn
Not sure this helps any, but I thought it was an interesting read... |
#43
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
$25...a looonnnng time ago |
#44
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Posted By: Shawn
You guys smack me when you want me to stop posting this kind of stuff! |
#45
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
Old man Drummond was shut up before he said too much!!...they were probably all loaded off scotch. |
#46
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Posted By: Richard Dwyer
NYHighlanderFan: Then open the pouch! Call your local TV station and open it on the news. If the news shows a card in it, I'll give you $25! |
#47
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Posted By: NYHighlanderFan
LoL...maybe I should go to all the TV stations in the area and see who I can broker a half hour of air time from...then turn around and sell advertising spots for the event. Maybe I can get Miller High Life to buy a one second ad from me! |
#48
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Posted By: Hal
The March/April 1997 Vintage & Classic Baseball Collector (#10) has an article entitled "Anatomy Of A Find" on page 40 which discussed a find of five of the Ty Cobb back cards (lots 14-18 in REA's June 1997 auction, the description in the catalog also contains some useful info). The VCBC article included a letter the consignor wrote to Rob Lifson in which he stated that his grandfather "was the one who smoked ... the Ty Cobb Tobacco". This would seem to suggest that the cards were somehow related to the Ty Cobb tobacco tins, and were probably available only in Georgia. What do you guys think? |
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