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  #1  
Old 01-11-2016, 07:55 AM
Baseball Bob Baseball Bob is offline
Eric S.
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Default 1929 Kashin R316: any examples of back stamps?

FURTHER TO THE THREAD....ANY EXAMPLES OF BACKSTAMPS LIKE LEON POSTED BELOW?

Howdy pre-war community! My name is Eric Schmidtke, and I am doing research on the above titled set.

I have done quite a bit of research, but at this stage I am stuck on several questions, and I need help. If you prefer to answer me via private message, my email is ericschmidtke@yahoo.com.

First of all, do you have any idea who Kashin Publications were? I can find no record of them anywhere in cyberspace. I have checked archives in NYC and basically searched all over with no results. Is it possible that they were a subsidiary of another company (say maybe Spalding)? They seem to have only existed for a couple of years. I am aware that they produced the R315 and probably the W554 and W553 sets, as well as the Movie Stars set. The Leader Novelty set may also be connected to them somehow since the photos used are essentially identical.

How were the cards sold, and for how much? This is a multi-part question, and it relates to the "short prints".
The colored boxes are clearly the primary mechanism used for marketing, but I have also heard allusions to sales in single card packs, and seen one example sold on the web that purported to be one of these, although the item had no identifying marks on it and looked hand-made to me. Were the cards marketed in the colored boxes on store shelves like that, or were they dispensed from a machine? I saw the example Leon posted on this website some time ago of the promotional stamp on one, so they seems to have had some use in that capacity. Have you ever seen any other forms of packaging? Would these cards perhaps have been sold mail-order, since the boxes are not printed with retail prices?

It seems to me that Kashin was a small enough outfit that they probably did not do the physical printing themselves. They probably obtained their images from a middleman press agency, as they are clearly not made from the original Conlon negatives. What do you think?

Do you know the geographic extent of the marketing? I know the "made in USA" stamps indicate they sold in Canada, but were sales limited to the Northeast?

Have you ever seen any print advertising for these cards in old newspapers or magazines?

I have done considerable research to constrain the issue timing and I think I have that nailed, but would like to hear you opinions.

Lastly, what do you know about the origin of the "short prints" Seibold, Haines, Hadley and Todt? I have read the "substitution theory"; that Kashin created a 100 card set with no Ruth, then decide to add a Ruth to each box and the short prints were the cards that got tossed. I have also seen the idea that the single card sales included the short prints and they were discontinued prior to the colored boxes being issued. I struggle to understand why a company selling baseball cards would even think of not including a Ruth card, so the substitution theory bothers me. I think it might have something to do with the printing and packaging processes, but I don't know enough about that yet.

Lastly, why would many of the greatest stars (say Pipgras, Sisler, Cochrane, etc.) be omitted in favor of lesser known players?

Wherever possible, if you can provide a reference(s) for your information that would be of great help to me. If you don't know the answer to a question but know someone who might, please pass me their contact info.

All the best to all of you out there who, like me, find this to be an awesome set!

Regards
Eric

Last edited by Baseball Bob; 01-22-2016 at 07:59 PM. Reason: Further request for help
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  #2  
Old 01-14-2016, 06:18 AM
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Hi Eric
As we discussed there is limited interest in the set but there are some neat cards in it. I will look up some more info soon but here is a scan from stuff from my last collection...
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File Type: jpg pr316master5x.jpg (71.7 KB, 367 views)
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  #3  
Old 01-15-2016, 11:36 AM
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Hope perhaps you can find further information as I am fond of the premiums and lesser regarded sets of the era.

My own example:
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Old 01-19-2016, 02:24 PM
Baseball Bob Baseball Bob is offline
Eric S.
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Thanks guys for your responses - anyone else out there have any info?
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Old 01-19-2016, 04:27 PM
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Sorry I don't have any background info on Kashin Publications, but there are indeed some neat cards in the set, including a Mel Ott rookie and early cards of other HOF'er's. The Ruth is a card that can be picked up for a reasonable price, as my info is that there were four times the Ruth's printed, compared to the other cards (the cards, per the Standard Catalog, came in a 25-card boxed set, with, I believe, 101 cards total, but there was a Babe in every such box).

Good luck on your endeavors with the set,

Larry

Last edited by ls7plus; 01-22-2016 at 08:42 PM.
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Old 01-19-2016, 05:19 PM
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Todd Schultz
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Have you checked with the folks on the non-sports vintage cards side? They may have developed info chasing the movie stars set. I note from a few minutes of google research that the movie star set for some reason contained 96 cards, distributed in four different colored boxes like the baseball players. Odd that they would not round up and include an additional 4 actors/actresses. I also saw where the boxes for that set can be found with "Kashin Publishing Company" on the back bottom instead of "Kashin Publications", and that the former likely came first and does not mention made in USA.
Good luck.
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Old 01-19-2016, 07:29 PM
Baseball Bob Baseball Bob is offline
Eric S.
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Default More on Kashins

Yes, it is true that the movie stars set is only 96 cards. I have pondered long and hard about why the set was limited to 25 baseball cards per box, and why the "short prints" were omitted from the listings on the box backs. Long story short, I have not yet found the Rosetta Stone that explains it. Still more research to do!
Some of the explanation may have to do with whether there really were single card sales prior to the boxed sales. I have seen one auction listing purporting to have a "single card holder" but the photo showed no company markings and it looked kind of home-made. If the cards were sold singly first, then the short prints could be better explained.
Thanks
Eric
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