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#1
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I was wondering what the prevalence of certain individual players are in the Curtis Ireland candy set and how common are the cards. I understand that in theory, all players in the V100 Willard's Chocolate set should exist in Curtis Ireland. However I was reading last night that the cards were issued in increments and that the complete set may not have been issued. Also cards that were turned in to the company for the prize were to have been stamped as used and returned to the senders after the contest. Has anyone ever seen a cancelled card? Does anyone have a list of the cards actually issued? I have seen a few individual cards here and there. Nobody has ever discussed owning a complete set. Comments?
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#2
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 12-02-2011 at 02:58 PM. |
#3
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Leon,
Nice card and interesting on the Curtis company. Some of the reading said that Curtis was eventually bought up by Nestlé. I also read that Curtis was the manufacturer of Baby Ruth and Butterfinger. Those eventually became Nestlé products. On the subject of cards, did you ever actually see an Elmer Miller E 123 card? Last edited by kmac32; 12-02-2011 at 03:03 PM. |
#4
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Hi Ken
I don't remember if I have seen an Elmer Miller card or not. LL
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#5
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Never hurts to ask to see if the card even exists. Figured that somebody on the board might know in my quest to collect as many variations of Miller.
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#6
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No Miller info, but about 3-4 years ago Lew Lipset had quite a few in one of his auctions. I don't remember the exact amount, but he had several lots with perhaps 30 to 40 total different cards? I remember being impressed by the quantity, as normally you only see these individually or in very small groupings.
Brian |
#7
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I have told this story before but here it is again.
Back in the mid-1990's, I found a stack of cards at an antique show. The dealer was from St Louis and the stack consisted of American Caramel and Curtis Ireland cards. There were about 20 Curtis Ireland cards including a Ty Cobb with a vertical crease down the middle of the card and at least 30 or more of the caramel cards. The dealer wanted $1200 for the stack of cards and didn't really want to break them up and sell them separately. Being that I was just out of college, had just started a new job and had bills to pay, I couldn't afford those cards (and my parents wouldn't loan me ANY money for cards because they were afraid I would have to also hit them up for a loan to pay some bills). Anyway, I told a long time collector (who was my mentor at the time) about the cards and he came to the antique show, looked through the stack of cards and put 10 $100 dollar bills on the table and told the dealer to take it or leave it. The dealer looked through the cards, looked at the money, looked around and then agreed to the deal. My mentor gave me a common American Caramel card and a Curtis Ireland card of E. H Sheely as a finders fee and kept the rest for himself. Later, as he was downsizing his collection, he kept a St Louis card for himself (he is a HUGE Cardinals fan) and consigned the cards to Lipset to auction. As far as I know and from what I have been told, "my" find was and still is the largest group of Curtis Ireland cards known. That find is also one of the things that I regret missing out on as far as collecting goes. David Last edited by ctownboy; 12-02-2011 at 06:21 PM. |
#8
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David,
Great story!!! |
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#10
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kmac,
Thank you. David |
#11
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Nice topic, Ken. I won a group of 11 in an obscure auction about 5 years ago. Whether they're considered "rare" or merely "scarce" is just a matter of semantics. They, along with their 20s brethren E122, are very difficult and under-appreciated. For those who doubt, compare the pop reports for these two against those of the vaunted and highly sought after E107s. Yes, I understand that there are many more raw 20s cards than E107, but the numbers are still remarkable.
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#12
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I'd agree with everyone else - they're definitely on the scarce side - finding an individual player my take you a long time, but you can usually find an instance of the card without too much looking.
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#13
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Had I known at the time, that would be the only one I'd see in 5+ years, I'd have been more active that last day of bidding, rather than just sitting there slack jawed and disappointed as the price climbed. Regards, Richard. |
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