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#1
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Well now, I think I'm not done...
I figure I owe you, Peter, and Corey, a beer. One good pint of a nice hefeveisen certainly would have helped us all fine tune this discussion. Peace, guys! And I see there's no super-right, ultimate-fair answer. A thief certainly does compound things when he sells his stealings. |
#2
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And the screw turns. The Boston Herald has a new angle on the story of theft and baseball's beginings: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/reg...7&format=email
"Dead Bronx Bomber minority owner Barry Halper sold Boston Red Caps’ player E.B. Sutton’s 1879 contract, which paid the player a whopping $30 for a season, in a 1999 auction. An unknowing California collector paid $4,000 for the document, but according to a newly discovered 1953 letter obtained by the Herald, it was part of a baseball scrapbook swiped from the New York Public Library." |
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