LYCOS RETRIEVER
Baseball Cards
built 660 days ago
Attack of the Baseball Cards was an official store for 2004 National Trading Card Day and on April 3, 2005 celebrated the first anniversary of NTCD with SPORTSCARD DAY. Sponsored by all the major card companies, free sample cards were handed out all day! On Saturday, June 17, 2006, Attack of the Bcseball Cards was a participating store for the first ever, NATIONAL BASEBALL CARD DAY.
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Because the object of the game is to unite two camps of David, winning at Baseball Cards requires round-the-clock thinking skills. No player has these skills, and victory can only be achieved by cheating, and making Gawd angry enough to flip the game in one's favor. It is one of those games that people play to boast elitist philosophy, and at the same time try to come up with quotes they hope will be mimicked and memed on the internet.
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There are a few noticeable traits pertaining to the Topps 1952 baseball cards. Cards 1-80 can be found to have either Red Backs or Black Backs. The second series ( 311- 407 ) came out very late in the season and Topps had a hard time selling them. 1952 second series cards were even inserted into packs of 1953 Topps baseball cards sold in Canada. They still had so many left over that they chartered a boat and dumped thousands of these second series cards into the ocean. And yes, that included the Mantle cards.
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The first baseball cards appeared in Japan in the late 19th century. Unlike American cards of the same era, the cards utilized traditional Japanese pen and ink illustrations. In the 1920s, black and white photo postcards were issued, but illustrated cards were the norm until the 1950s. The 1950s brought about cards which incorporated photos of players, mostly in black and white. Menko cards ... became popular at the time.
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Topps Sterling Baseball served up some amazing memorabilia and autograph cards of an impressive lineup of baseball greats in 2006. The 2007 edition adds the best current players to the mix, including David Wright, Ryan Howard and David Ortiz.
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The American Tobacco Company decided to introduce baseball advertising cards into their tobacco products with the issue of the T206 White Border Set in 1909. The cards were included in packs of cigarettes and produced over a three-year period until the ATC was dissolved. The most famous, and most expensive card for the grade, is the Honus Wagner card from this set.[9]
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