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#1
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2 days ago I sent you a photo of the Hit and Run game, I do not remember if I sent it earlier, you told me that sometimes days go by and because of your complications you do not enter the thread, now you have the complete set of 40 Vasallo cards, when you see it, let me know,
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#2
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The collection of the 1928 Billiken and La Moda cigars with the Cincinnati players is very rare, now I show you a small part of the photo used for one of the cards of that collection, the ad is shown in the rubber stamp stamped in the photo original file.
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#3
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Yesterday I showed part of a photo that was used to print the 1928 Billiken cards, now you will see one of the sheets of my catalog where this collection appears, below a propaganda photo of the series that measures 8x10 inches, I ask those who see this Thread that they publish the cards they have from this rare collection, I would appreciate it if you would.
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#4
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Hola de nuevo, Roland! Nuestras disculpas por mantenerlo esperando. Lamentamos saber de los problemas de salud
en su familia, pero nos complace saber que se están recuperando. ¡Usted administra su tiempo mucho mejor que nosotros! Le sugerimos que podría quedarse sin cosas para mostrar sólo como una broma amistosa, debido a la cantidad de cosas maravillosas que ya ha demostrado! ¡Esperamos que nuestra traducción computarizada no te haya dado una mala impresión! Gracias por el anuncio de Hit & Run! No habíamos visto ni sabido nada de este juego. ¿Tienes más de eso para mostrar? Muchas gracias también por el vistazo al juego completo de las tarjetas de Café Vassallo! ¡Fascinante! Saludos cordiales --
__________________
-- the three idiots at Baseball Games https://baseballgames.dreamhosters.com/ https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/baseballgames/ Successful transactions with: bocabirdman, GrayGhost, jimivintage, Oneofthree67, orioles93, quinnsryche, thecatspajamas, ValKehl Last edited by Butch7999; 08-16-2021 at 01:55 PM. |
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#5
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B7999, don't worry, I immediately realized that it was a friendly joke, just like when I was wrong and I posted a photo of the Dodgers and I put one of my 1954 Dodge car, and you said that you were half an hour looking for the team, that It made me laugh, thanks for worrying about the health of my family, it is getting better little by little, every day I have to take her to the hospital for a treatment, a few minutes ago I came back, as for the game Hit and Run I don't have much, Now you will see some small cards with the names of some players, I got them a long time ago and for something that I found out at that time I put the plastic box where I keep that name, but perhaps it was that they really belong to that game, now you will see some with the names, when you see it, let me know so you can see more, greetings.
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#6
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Now I show you another Hit and Run group.
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#7
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Hola Roland, gracias de nuevo por un vistazo a estas pequeñas partes peculiares del juego!
Sería muy interesante saber cómo se jugó el juego. ¡Nos complace escuchar que la Sra. Roland está mejorando! Le deseamos lo mejor a ella y a usted. También nos preocupaba que tú no pudieran continuar su conversación aquí -- leímos en las noticias esta mañana que hay una nueva ofensiva contra Internet en su país. Nos complace verte todavía aquí! (¿O no estás donde hemos inferido que realmente estás ubicado?) Saludos cordiales --
__________________
-- the three idiots at Baseball Games https://baseballgames.dreamhosters.com/ https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/baseballgames/ Successful transactions with: bocabirdman, GrayGhost, jimivintage, Oneofthree67, orioles93, quinnsryche, thecatspajamas, ValKehl Last edited by Butch7999; 08-18-2021 at 04:41 PM. |
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#8
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From the Cuban baseball memorabilia you will now see a table lamp from the Almendares.
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#9
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Last night I sent these cards to my friend the expicher Pedro Ramos and a few minutes ago I connected to my emails and the answer was: "Not only do I not have it but I have never seen it" in the other thread I published other cards before that I show him and Ramos' response.
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#10
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Quote:
__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 09-12-2021 at 10:33 AM. |
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#11
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Leon, I always try to please everyone and those players that I saw play in Cuba in the 50s, and I know they feel happy seeing their things that has happened to everyone, on a regular occasion of Monte Irvin's visits to my house Each time for more than 5 hours, they saw things that they had never seen, Max Manning's daughter saw on their tours that they did not talk about her father and she thought that no one knew him in my house, show a lot of her father, photos, balls signed, autographs, cards etc and she got excited every time she saw something, and was happy to see that I took care of her things, that has happened with all the players of that time, some deceased, others are still alive, but they all became great my friends. Ramos wrote me yesterday the following "Thank you for saving those memories because otherwise we would be forgotten, thank you, thank you." Now I will show a weekly program and score card from 1959-60 that I show Ramos along with others of him, I remember that when I entered the Stadium my father always bought them and gave them to me, I keep many of them.
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#12
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Now I show you a photo of Cienfuegos when they won the May 1955-56 championship on the back signed by all the players.
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#13
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This is a cover photo of Cinema magazine announcing the movie "Honor y Gloria" played by Roberto Ortiz, one of the best hitters in Cuban baseball.
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#14
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From the memorabilia of Cuban baseball I show you 2 bucaros from Las Bailarinas, I have those from the 4 teams, they are rare.
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#15
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Late response but that's pretty cool, Roland.
Quote:
__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
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#16
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This entire thread is filled with amazing photos of so many different types of collectibles and so much history.
Easy to get distracted from your collections with so many other great items and history out there. Keep Them coming we enjoy seeing it
__________________
Thanks all Jeff Kuhr https://www.flickr.com/photos/144250058@N05/ Looking for 1920 Heading Home Ruth Cards 1920s Advertising Card Babe Ruth/Carl Mays All Stars Throwing Pose 1917-20 Felix Mendelssohn Babe Ruth 1921 Frederick Foto Ruth Rare early Ruth Cards and Postcards Rare early Joe Jackson Cards and Postcards 1910 Old Mills Joe Jackson 1914 Boston Garter Joe Jackson 1911 Pinkerton Joe Jackson |
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#17
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Leon, I thank you for the answer since you are very busy in the responsibility of this wonderful forum, greetings. Jeffrey, I'm so glad you like what I'm showing and thank you for expressing it. Now you will see 2 programs of the American Series in La Tropical from the years 1941 and 1942.
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#18
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This is a very rare pennant with the face of Conrafo Marrero from the Almendares team.
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#19
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Conrado E. "Connie" Marrero Ramos. Pitcher for the Washington Senators in 1950-1954. 39 wins and 3 saves in 5 MLB seasons. 1951 All-Star. After long and successful career in Cuba, he made his MLB debut at age 38 in 1950. His best season was 1952 as he posted a 11-8 record with an ERA of 2.88 in 184.1 innings pitched. When he died in 2014, he was the oldest living MLB player.
From Marrero's SABR biography: To aging North American fans, Marrero is remembered exclusively for his five brief seasons with the American League also-ran Washington Senators, the team he joined in 1950 as a grizzled 39-year-old rookie. It has often been reported that Washington owner-manager Clark Griffith erroneously believed Marrero was born in 1919 instead of 1911 when he signed him on, but that part of the legend is probably only apocryphal. Marrero was nonetheless anything but a novelty act during his Washington years, featuring one of the league’s most devastating curves and claimed repeatedly by manager Bucky Harris to be the most valuable “stopper” on an otherwise lamentable Washington mound corps. “Connie Marrero had a windup that looked like a cross between a windmill gone berserk and a mallard duck trying to fly backwards,” once noted Dominican slugger Felipe Alou. But it was always the issue of his age (more even than his huge cigars or funky delivery) that remained the Cuban’s most notable calling card. For stateside partisans whose memories stretch back a full half-century, it is nearly impossible to separate Marrero from nostalgic memories of one of the Fabulous Fifties’ most charismatic yet inept teams. Marrero seemed, in fact, to epitomize Clark Griffith’s entire stable of sad sack Washington Senators. There was plenty of raw talent to be sure in the magical arm of the fire-plug-shaped Cuban right-hander—as there was in those of fellow countrymen and Washington teammates Camilo Pascual and Pedro Ramos—but the more entertaining story for beat writers and their readers was always in the end his oversized Havana cigars, his laughter-provoking slaughtered-English phrases, and his whirling-dervish high-kicking delivery while launching the league’s most tantalizing slider and curveball. The stogie, the thick Spanish accent and the elaborate windmill windup were trademark realities that merged rapidly into all-too-familiar stereotypes. In the large scheme of things Conrado Marrero was little more than a blip on the screen of baseball’s golden age fifties so dominated by names like Mantle, Musial, Williams, Spahn, Mays and Banks. But from yet another perspective, the American League Washington Senators and the whole enterprise of big league baseball were themselves, in turn, but a mere blip in the baseball-playing career of the seemingly ageless and remarkably durable Conrado Marrero. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1633688884 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1633688888 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1633688892 |
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#20
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George very good what you published Conrado Marrero. You can write a lot about Marrero, he was an idol in amateur baseball and also in professional baseball in Cuba, in MLB, I think that if he had played in better teams his record would have been better, he also started at 39 years old, he said that The first time he faced Ted Williams strikeouts, he was the manager of Almendares, he lived 102 years, now I show you the first Marrero card from the collection La Ambrosia 1943 played for the Cienfuegos amateurs team.
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#21
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This is card # 6 of the manager of the Cubans of Havana, Oscar Rodríguez from the album HC Helados Hatuey 1948, very rare.
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#22
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This is the 2nd series of postage stamps featuring baseball and boxing.
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#23
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Beisbol should not be regarded as one centavo less valuable than boxing.
__________________
-- the three idiots at Baseball Games https://baseballgames.dreamhosters.com/ https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/baseballgames/ Successful transactions with: bocabirdman, GrayGhost, jimivintage, Oneofthree67, orioles93, quinnsryche, thecatspajamas, ValKehl |
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