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PDF of Aug 15 Results
Huggins and Scott's August 6, 2015 Auction Prices Realized SALE LOT# TITLE BIDS PRICE 1 Incredible 1911 T205 Gold Borders Near Master Set of (221/222) SGC Graded Cards--Highest SGC Grade Average!5 $ [reserve - not met] 2 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Cap Anson SGC 55 VG-EX+ 4.5 22 $ 3,286.25 3 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Jocko Fields SGC 80 EX/NM 6 4 $ 388.38 4 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Cliff Carroll SGC 80 EX/NM 6--"1 of 1" with None Better 8 $ 717.00 5 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Kid Gleason SGC 50 VG-EX 4--"Black Sox" Manager 4 $ 448.13 6 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Dan Casey SGC 80 EX/NM 6 7 $ 418.25 7 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Mike Dorgan SGC 80 EX/NM 6 8 $ 448.13 8 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Sam Smith SGC 50 VG-EX 4 17 $ 776.75 9 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Joe Gunson SGC 50 VG-EX 4 6 $ 239.00 10 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Henry Gruber SGC 40 VG 3 4 $ 155.35 11 1887 N172 Old Judge Cigarettes Bill Hallman SGC 40 VG 3 6 $ 179.25 12 1888 Scrapps Die-Cuts St. Louis Browns SGC Graded Team Set (9) 14 $ 896.25 13 1909 T204 Ramly Clark Griffith SGC Authentic 6 $ 239.00 14 1909-11 T206 White Borders Sherry Magee (Magie) Error--SGC Authentic 13 $ 3,585.00 15 1909-11 T206 White Borders Bud Sharpe (Shappe) Error--SGC 45 VG+ 3.5 10 $ 1,912.00 16 (75) 1909-11 T206 White Border PSA Graded Cards with (12) Hall of Famers & (6) Southern Leaguers 16 $ 2,987.50 17 1911 T206 John Hummel American Beauty 460 --SGC 55 VG-EX+ 4.5 14 $ 358.50 18 Incredible 1909 S74 Silks-White Ty Cobb SGC 84 NM 7 with Red Sun Advertising Back--Highest Graded Known8 from$ 5,078.75 Set! 19 (15) 1909-11 T206 White Border SGC 30-55 Graded Cards with Jimmy Collins 15 $ 597.50 20 1921 Schapira Brothers Candy Babe Ruth (Portrait) SGC 40 VG 3 18 $ 448.13 21 1926-29 Baseball Exhibits-P.C. -
November 13, 2010 Prices Realized
SCP Auctions Prices Realized - November 13, 2010 Internet Auction www.scpauctions.com | +1 800 350.2273 Lot # Lot Title 1 C.1910 REACH TIN LITHO BASEBALL ADVERTISING DISPLAY SIGN $7,788 2 C.1910-20 ORIGINAL ARTWORK FOR FATIMA CIGARETTES ROUND ADVERTISING SIGN $317 3 1912 WORLD CHAMPION BOSTON RED SOX PHOTOGRAPHIC DISPLAY PIECE $1,050 4 1914 "TUXEDO TOBACCO" ADVERTISING POSTER FEATURING IMAGES OF MATHEWSON, LAJOIE, TINKER AND MCGRAW $288 5 1928 "CHAMPIONS OF AL SMITH" CAMPAIGN POSTER FEATURING BABE RUTH $2,339 6 SET OF (5) LUCKY STRIKE TROLLEY CARD ADVERTISING SIGNS INCLUDING LAZZERI, GROVE, HEILMANN AND THE WANER BROTHERS $5,800 7 EXTREMELY RARE 1928 HARRY HEILMANN LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTES LARGE ADVERTISING BANNER $18,368 8 1930'S DIZZY DEAN ADVERTISING POSTER FOR "SATURDAY'S DAILY NEWS" $240 9 1930'S DUCKY MEDWICK "GRANGER PIPE TOBACCO" ADVERTISING SIGN $178 10 1930S D&M "OLD RELIABLE" BASEBALL GLOVE ADVERTISEMENTS (3) INCLUDING COLLINS, CRITZ AND FONSECA $1,090 11 1930'S REACH BASEBALL EQUIPMENT DIE-CUT ADVERTISING DISPLAY $425 12 BILL TERRY COUNTERTOP AD DISPLAY FOR TWENTY GRAND CIGARETTES SIGNED "TO BARRY" - EX-HALPER $290 13 1933 GOUDEY SPORT KINGS GUM AND BIG LEAGUE GUM PROMOTIONAL STORE DISPLAY $1,199 14 1933 GOUDEY WINDOW ADVERTISING SIGN WITH BABE RUTH $3,510 15 COMPREHENSIVE 1933 TATTOO ORBIT DISPLAY INCLUDING ORIGINAL ADVERTISING, PIN, WRAPPER AND MORE $1,320 16 C.1934 DIZZY AND DAFFY DEAN BEECH-NUT ADVERTISING POSTER $2,836 17 DIZZY DEAN 1930'S "GRAPE NUTS" DIE-CUT ADVERTISING DISPLAY $1,024 18 PAIR OF 1934 BABE RUTH QUAKER -
Hrizonhhighways February • 1951
HRIZONHHIGHWAYS FEBRUARY • 1951 . THIRTY-FIVE CENTS , l /jJI I\fj Spring has a good press. The poets make much ado about birds, bees, flowers and the sprightliness of the season. They neglect such mundane subjects as spring house cleaning and overlook the melancholy fact that armies with evil intentions march when the snow melts. We hope our only concern is with flowers, bees and birds and things like that. As for spring house cleaning, just open the doors and let the house air out. Why joust with vacuum cleaners and mops when spring beckons? Spring does a good job of beckoning in the desert land. It is our pleasure to show you some panoramas of the desert and desert plateau country when nature's fashion calls for spring dress. We wish we could promise the most colorful spring ever but the effiorescence of spring depends on the rainfall. We have had a darned dry "dry spell" hereabouts, broken only by a good rain in late January. If the rains keep on, then we can predict a real pretty March, April and May, but who the heck is going to be silly enough to try to tell whether it'll rain. Anyway, we'll promise you grand weather. An Arizona spring can't be beat. The weather had better be perfect! Sometime this month a group of wonderfully agile and extremely well paid young men who answer to the roll call of the Cleveland Indians, and another group of even more agile and even better paid young men who form the New York Yankees baseball team arrive in Tucson and Phoenix for spring training, the latter to get ready to defend the World's Championship, the former to try to bring it to Cleveland. -
Baseball Cyclopedia
' Class J^V gG3 Book . L 3 - CoKyiigtit]^?-LLO ^ CORfRIGHT DEPOSIT. The Baseball Cyclopedia By ERNEST J. LANIGAN Price 75c. PUBLISHED BY THE BASEBALL MAGAZINE COMPANY 70 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY BALL PLAYER ART POSTERS FREE WITH A 1 YEAR SUBSCRIPTION TO BASEBALL MAGAZINE Handsome Posters in Sepia Brown on Coated Stock P 1% Pp Any 6 Posters with one Yearly Subscription at r KtlL $2.00 (Canada $2.00, Foreign $2.50) if order is sent DiRECT TO OUR OFFICE Group Posters 1921 ''GIANTS," 1921 ''YANKEES" and 1921 PITTSBURGH "PIRATES" 1320 CLEVELAND ''INDIANS'' 1920 BROOKLYN TEAM 1919 CINCINNATI ''REDS" AND "WHITE SOX'' 1917 WHITE SOX—GIANTS 1916 RED SOX—BROOKLYN—PHILLIES 1915 BRAVES-ST. LOUIS (N) CUBS-CINCINNATI—YANKEES- DETROIT—CLEVELAND—ST. LOUIS (A)—CHI. FEDS. INDIVIDUAL POSTERS of the following—25c Each, 6 for 50c, or 12 for $1.00 ALEXANDER CDVELESKIE HERZOG MARANVILLE ROBERTSON SPEAKER BAGBY CRAWFORD HOOPER MARQUARD ROUSH TYLER BAKER DAUBERT HORNSBY MAHY RUCKER VAUGHN BANCROFT DOUGLAS HOYT MAYS RUDOLPH VEACH BARRY DOYLE JAMES McGRAW RUETHER WAGNER BENDER ELLER JENNINGS MgINNIS RUSSILL WAMBSGANSS BURNS EVERS JOHNSON McNALLY RUTH WARD BUSH FABER JONES BOB MEUSEL SCHALK WHEAT CAREY FLETCHER KAUFF "IRISH" MEUSEL SCHAN6 ROSS YOUNG CHANCE FRISCH KELLY MEYERS SCHMIDT CHENEY GARDNER KERR MORAN SCHUPP COBB GOWDY LAJOIE "HY" MYERS SISLER COLLINS GRIMES LEWIS NEHF ELMER SMITH CONNOLLY GROH MACK S. O'NEILL "SHERRY" SMITH COOPER HEILMANN MAILS PLANK SNYDER COUPON BASEBALL MAGAZINE CO., 70 Fifth Ave., New York Gentlemen:—Enclosed is $2.00 (Canadian $2.00, Foreign $2.50) for 1 year's subscription to the BASEBALL MAGAZINE. -
Division Iii Baseball Records
DIVISION III BASEBALL RECORDS Individual Records 2 Individual Leaders 6 Annual Individual Champions 23 Team Records 33 Team Leaders 36 Annual Team Champions 49 Wininngest Teams by Decade 56 Final Collegiate Baseball Division III Polls 59 INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Official NCAA Division III baseball records began Season with the 1974 season and are based on informa- Hits 15—Luke Olin, St. Scholastica, 2006 (43 games) tion submitted to the NCAA statistics service by Inning institutions participating in the statistics rankings. 3—12 times, most recent: Jeff Moore, York (PA) Career Career records of players include only those years vs. Gallaudet, March 24, 2002 38—Matt Gelotti, Southwestern (TX), 1997- in which they competed in Division III. Annual indi- 2000 (192 games) vidual champions in runs, bases on balls, toughest Game to strike out and saves were added in 1990, along 8—Mike Murphy, Misericordia vs. Polytechnic with annual team champions in home runs, triples, (NY), March 14, 2009 Triples Per Game doubles, stolen bases, slugging percentage and Season double plays. Individual hit by pitch and sacrifice Season 0.45—Glenn Bass, Clark (MA), 1975 (five in 11 hits were added in 2004. In statistical rankings, 103—Sean Risley, Marietta, 1986 (63 games) games) the rounding of percentages and/or averages may indicate ties where none exists. In these cases, the Career numerical order of the rankings is accurate. 327—Matt Gelotti, Southwestern (TX), 1997- Home Runs 2000 (192 games) Inning 2—Many players BATTING Hitting Streaks Game Consecutive Games 4—16 times, most recent: David May, Merchant Games 60—Damian Costantino, Salve Regina, April 1, Marine vs. -
National Baseball Hall of Fame Library Guide to the Sporting Life Cabinet Card Collection, 1902-1906
National Baseball Hall of Fame Library Guide to the Sporting Life Cabinet Card Collection, 1902-1906 Descriptive Summary Repository: National Baseball Hall of Fame Library 25 Main Street Cooperstown, NY 13326 Creator: Sporting Life Publishing Company (Philadelphia, Pa.) Title: Sporting Life Cabinet Card Collection (W600) Language: English Location: Photo Archive Abstract: Collection of baseball cards issued as premiums by the Sporting Life Publishing Company of Philadelphia from 1902 to 1911. The cards contain bust-length portraits of professional baseball players, dressed in uniform and street clothes, who were active during the issuing period. The set is comprised entirely of monochromatic, photomechanical prints mounted on cardboard measuring 5 x 7 1/2 inches. Extent: 281 items in 2 boxes Access: Available by appointment, Monday-Friday 9AM to 4 PM. Copyright: Individual researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with both copyright law and any donor restrictions accompanying the materials. Preferred Citation: Sporting Life Cabinet Card Collection, National Baseball Hall of Fame Library, Cooperstown, NY Acquisitions Information: The collection was given to the National Baseball Hall of Fame by two donors, William A. Merritt of Lowell, Massachusetts in 1952 and Peter Stebbins Craig in 1969. Processing Information: Described by Carlos Pearman, Photo Archive intern, July 2009. Additions and editing by Jenny Ambrose, Assistant Photo Archivist. Biographical Sketch Founded by former baseball player and famed sportswriter Francis C. Richter, the Sporting Life Publishing Company of Philadelphia published Sporting Life, a weekly newspaper devoted to “base ball, trap shooting and general sports” from 1883 to 1917, and from 1922 to 1924. Richter also edited the Reach baseball guides from their inception in 1901 until his death in 1926. -
Sporting Goods Dealers in the City Chicago, 111., May 12
BASE BALL, TRAP SHOOTING AND GENERAL SPOKLTS Vol. 51 No. 10 Philadelphia, May 16, 1908 Price 5 Cents CHICAGO CHEER LATEST NEWS ONE CLUB AT LEAST HIGH IN AN IMPORTANT NATIONAL COM A RACE. MISSION RULING, The Cubs Away in Front in the No Leniency for Players Who National League Race The Play With Teams Containing White Sox Down, But Showing Ineligible Players Boston Signs of Rapid Improvement* Loses Services of Thoney, Etc, BY W. A. PHELON. SPECIAL TO "SPORTING LIFE." Chicago, 111., May 9. Editor "Sporting Cincinnati, O., May 12. The National Life." Getting in a game here and there Base Ball Commission has handed down a whenever the beastly weather will allow it decision in which a fine of $200 will be the Cubs and Sox continue placed on all players who on the lively base ball trail. leave a team having title to The rain gets in its deadly their- services and play with work ever and anon, much teams that harbor ineligiblfe to the disgust of the ardent players. A similar fine will fans, who either go out to be inflicted on clubs whose the park and get frozen, or managers negotiate for such stay around the fire and players before they are re think unutterable things. instated and fined by the Nevertheless, an occasional Commission. In case the mill is pulled off, and the player is a major league bugs are given enough hap player, the fines will re piness to keep them alive vert to the Commission, and till summer coir.es again. if he is a minor league The invincible Cubs remain A. -
Alwaysiwelcome for (9
PAUI* GLOBE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1902. THJf ST. \u25a0 BREWERS' STRONG LIST CANNOT INQUIRE People Who Gather Trading Stamps The News of the Sport World. CANTILLON SIGNS FAST MEN FOR . AS TO GOAL TRUST : 1903 MILWAUKEE TEAM WORTH :iPJREE« : ,; ;..^.- ONE OR TWO LEADING POINTS Manager 'of,- Stein Grabbers Picks the Cut this coupon but* and bring it. to the . Hub Clothing Store, make DETROIT LOSES FICHT Best : of -, the \u25a0 California- ! League— , DECIDED BY THE STRIKE HEAD \u25a0 ! ORDERS LOFTUS TO purchase of or more, any time and HICKEY a sOc between now * Xmas and we will • Cling man's Name [ss} Missing From COMMISSION r R^fe.OO This Reported: Line-Up—Ung- give $2 worth ofTrading Stamps inaddition to stamps entitled you on YOUNG CORBETT AND M'GOVERN Last WORK NEW YORK TEAM laub to Respect Contract, your purchase. give Trading in STOPPED '\u25a0\u25a0 Decides We Stamps all our departments. WILL NOT BATTLE THERE i ' > m^,,m .-.-..\u25a0' ''- -' • • J .'.->! • • - .'* MILWAUKEE, Wis;, Dec. 15.—Man- DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE H« WASHINGTON MANAGER TO BE ager Joe Cantillon, of< the: Milwaukee 'AMERICAN ASSOCIATION LEADER Con6idine Knew This When Posted blub, PRESENTED BY MINERS PRESIDENT OF NEW AMERI- American association has made a IS THROUGH WAITING ON Forfeit and at That Tim« Planned greater sweep of the California league Pull Off Contest at Windsor, Ont., CAN LEAGUE CLUB ST. PAUL to in his search for players ;than the lo- HUB CLOTHING CO. & Possi- Just Across the Line—Small cal magnates had iantieipated. He fife nt? 4. a «. o + 1 t t bility of Interference. -
Bee Gee News October 5, 1949
Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 10-5-1949 Bee Gee News October 5, 1949 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "Bee Gee News October 5, 1949" (1949). BG News (Student Newspaper). 907. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/907 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. LIBRARY Migrate Welcome, To liee, Cjee : Delta Toledo Upsilon Official Student Publication \'tl Bowling Green Slat* University. Bowling Green. Ohio VoL34 Telephone 2631 Wednesday. October 5. 1949 No. 2 Pi Theta Accepted As Delta Upsilon Installation Ceremonies Robert Shaw Chorale Opens BG Season Scheduled For Nov. 17 Delta Upsilon, national social fraternity, will be installed at Of Artist Programs Tomorrow Evening Bowling Green, Nov. 17, 18, and 19 it was announced today by Ed Merry, President of local Pi Theta. 32 Voice Choir The derision to accept l'i Theta as the tiSth chapter of Delta Up- Smith And Capron silon was unanimously approved at the 11 5 th National ('(invention On Second Tour held recently at Miami University. The Robert Shaw Chorale will Get 'Antigone" Leads Delta Upsilon will be the oldest open the 1949-60 Artist Series to- national fraternity on the Bowling morrow evening at 8:10 p.m. -
Topeka Enters the Minor Leagues, 1886–1887: Bud Fowler and Goldsby’S Golden Giants
Fort Hays State University FHSU Scholars Repository Monographs 2020 Topeka Enters the Minor Leagues, 1886–1887: Bud Fowler and Goldsby’s Golden Giants Mark E. Eberle Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.fhsu.edu/all_monographs Part of the History Commons Topeka Enters the Minor Leagues, 1886–1887: Bud Fowler and Goldsby’s Golden Giants Mark E. Eberle Topeka Enters the Minor Leagues, 1886–1887: Bud Fowler and Goldsby’s Golden Giants © 2020 by Mark E. Eberle Cover image: Cabinet card produced from photographs taken by George Downing in April 1887 of the minor league baseball club in Topeka, Kansas known as Goldsby’s Golden Giants (the 3 G’s), champions of the Western League. Recommended citation: Eberle, Mark E. 2020. Topeka Enters the Minor Leagues, 1886–1887: Bud Fowler and Goldsby’s Golden Giants. Fort Hays State University, Hays, Kansas. 41 pages. Topeka Enters the Minor Leagues, 1886–1887: Bud Fowler and Goldsby’s Golden Giants Mark E. Eberle Beginning in 1865 with the Frontier Base Ball Club (BBC) in Leavenworth, teams were organized in most Kansas towns at some point during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Clubs composed of businessowners and others who could enjoy leisure activities on workday afternoons soon gave way to town teams, and in some instances, amateur teams gave way to semipro teams.1 Twenty years after the Frontiers participated in the first intercity matches with clubs in Kansas City, the first professional minor league teams represented cities in Kansas when Leavenworth and Topeka became members of the Western League in 1886 (Table 1). -
Division III Baseball Records
Division III Baseball Records Individual Records .................................................................. 2 Individual Leaders .................................................................. 3 Annual Individual Champions .......................................... 17 Team Records ........................................................................... 24 Team Leaders ............................................................................ 25 Annual Team Champions .................................................... 35 2011 Most Improved ............................................................. 39 Winningest Teams by Decade ........................................... 40 Collegiate Baseball Division III Final Polls ..................... 42 2 2012 NCAA DIVISION III BASEBALL RECORDS THROUGH 2011 Official NCAA Division III baseball records began Consecutive Games Reaching Base Season with the 1974 season and are based on informa- 60—Damian Costantino, Salve Regina, April 1, 2001- 121—Tim Jorgensen, Wis.-Oshkosh, 1995 (44 games) tion submitted to the NCAA statistics service by March 10, 2003 Career institutions participating in the statistics rankings. DOUBLES 293—Drew Caravella, Ohio Wesleyan, 1999-2002 (197 Career records of players include only those years Game games) in which they competed in Division III. Annual in- 5—Stephen Archer, Oglethorpe vs. Franklin, Feb. 20, RUNS BATTED IN PER GAME 2009; Aaron Dalton, East Tex. Baptist vs. LeTourneau, Season dividual champions in runs, bases on balls, tough- March 30, 2007 -
PDF of Thornley Article
^ "r_ M Ï xVWfiBfIjlp I i*tWP|| ¿í«2fc» J& É ' i-irir^l ar < Ramsey County History P u blished by the RAMSEY COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Editor: Virginia Brainard Kunz Contents The American National Bank And the Bremer Brothers By Thomas J. Kelley - Page 3 Guild of Catholic Women and Their Volume 23 ‘Constant Effort to Brighten Lives . Number 1 By Virginia Brainard Kunz - Page 13 George H. Trout and the Corner Grocery Store By Karl Trout - Page 17 Pay Days: The Millers and Saints By Stew Thornley - Page 21 ISBN 0-934294-55-0 Ramsey County History is published several times a pear and ON THE COVER: Benjamin Baer’s office in the American copyrighted 1988 by the Ramsey County Historical Society, 323 National Bank was typical of banking in that period just after Landmark Center, 75 West Fifth Street, St. Paul, Minnesota the turn-of-the-century. The Jacob Schmidt Brewing Com 55102. Membership in the Society carries with it a subscription to pany (small photograph) was linked with the bank through Ramsey County History. Single issues sell for $3. Correspondence much o f the bank’s history. concerning contributions should be addressed to the editor. The Society assumes no responsibility for statements made by contrib ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: All photographs used in this utors. Manuscripts and other editorial material are welcomed. All issue o f Ramsey County History are from the Audio-visual articles and other editorial material submitted will be carefully read Library of the Minnesota Historical Society. and published, if accepted, as space permits. 2 Lexington Ball Park, May, 1931.