Number one on my wish list is a Babe Ruth Signed baseball or Babe Ruth Signed vintage card. Heck, I would take a Babe Ruth signed sheet of scrap paper.
Which would you guys rather have - a signed baseball or signed vintage card? (Not that I'll be getting one in this lifetime, but I thought it was an interesting question).
<< <i>Sad to say I have no Babe Ruth items. BTW SCT don't worry about how to reach the Mods. I think they may contact you. >>
I'm going to be completely honest with you. If I'm the one who gets in any trouble for trying to get people to stop harassing me, then this isn't a place I want to frequent anyway and I would be better off. If PSA's policy is to harbor bullys and people who harass others, do you really think I care if I'm not allowed to be here any longer? If they side with the bad guys, then so be it, I'll know what's up with this place.
A quick story. A local guy in his 80's was telling me a story one day. Seems around 1938 or so he was working in a gas station.
Said he was around 14. A nice big car rolls in and a man gets out asks for gas etc. When paying for the service the man asks the kid if he wanted
an autograph. The kid said "why, who are you" (At this point I'm thinking he said YES!) Kid says no thanks sir. Only later did he discover who the man was!
I asked him, how in the world would you not know who Babe Ruth was in 1938? He said he didn't follow baseball and just had no idea then.
I've always been more interested in Ruth as a Red Sox pitcher than as a Yankee hitter. People usually forget what a great pitcher he was, he won almost 100 games pitching. He would have easily been a HOF pitcher if he had continued.
<< <i>A quick story. A local guy in his 80's was telling me a story one day. Seems around 1938 or so he was working in a gas station.
Said he was around 14. A nice big car rolls in and a man gets out asks for gas etc. When paying for the service the man asks the kid if he wanted
an autograph. The kid said "why, who are you" (At this point I'm thinking he said YES!) Kid says no thanks sir. Only later did he discover who the man was!
I asked him, how in the world would you not know who Babe Ruth was in 1938? He said he didn't follow baseball and just had no idea then.
I couldn't believe it. True story.
I still don't believe it.
Steve >>
regardless, that's a good story. I don't have any Babe Ruth stories, and I'm too young to really know anything about him other than his place in baseball and American history, also that the sandlot kids used one of his signed baseballs in a game...I think people my age are more fixed on the monetary value of his items, and not so much on the man himself.
My grandfather owned a gas station in Virginia from the 30's through the 70's...and I think I remember hearing my dad say he sold baseball cards...the building is an antique store, which my grandmother owns, haven't been there in years...I'll ask and see if he carried any, would be sort of neat to know
Edited to add: It's so hard to believe that THE BABE was only 2 years older than I am now when he died.
STAY HEALTHY!
Doug
Liquidating my collection for the 3rd and final time. Time for others to enjoy what I have enjoyed over the last several decades. Money could be put to better use.
Not exactly an original Babe Ruth item, but I do remember receiving in the mail (and I still have a copy as part of my almost complete 1988-96 Beckett baseball run, but not that same copy) of the Beckett Baseball issue commemorating the Babe's centennial (1995) at the time. Now the Babe would've been 115! Has it been that long ago already?
And it reminds me of this funny Step by Step quote where JT and Cody were doing "JT's World" (a version of Wayne's World) where Cody said this gem (not an exact quote though):
"I just went to see the movie, The Babe; total ripoff!! There wasn't a single babe in that movie worth looking at! Just two hours of that fat dude from Roseanne running the bases!"
I have a 'funny' Ruth story. My grandma is 95, and always lived in the MD/VA area. About 5-10 years ago I asked her about going to baseball games, as I was curious who she might have seen play. She said she went to baseball games only one time in her life - and it was a doubleheader b/w the Senators and the Yanks, and IIRC she said that both games went into extra innings. So although her ONE day of baseball included multiple games with Ruth and Gehrig she said she really disliked it (due mainly to the overall game length) so she never went to another game. Not a bad game to go to though. I believe it was 1934 or '35 - I recall tracking the box scores down before, but Baseball Reference doesn't seem to have 30's box scores anymore. I really get a kick out of the story - she's told it to me a few times now, and I always get a kick out of hearing her 'complaints' about the time she 'had to' watch Gehrig and Ruth play (and all the other HOFers too).
I did some further research on this photo. It has a date of July 14, 1934 on the back. On that date Babe Ruth hit home run number 700 off of Tommy Bridges as the Yankees defeated the Detroit tigers.
Comments
Which would you guys rather have - a signed baseball or signed vintage card? (Not that I'll be getting one in this lifetime, but I thought it was an interesting question).
Shane
BTW SCT don't worry about how to reach the Mods. I think they may contact you.
http://www.unisquare.com/store/brick/
Ralph
Steve
<< <i>Sad to say I have no Babe Ruth items.
BTW SCT don't worry about how to reach the Mods. I think they may contact you. >>
I'm going to be completely honest with you. If I'm the one who gets in any trouble for trying to get people to stop harassing me, then this isn't a place I want to frequent anyway and I would be better off. If PSA's policy is to harbor bullys and people who harass others, do you really think I care if I'm not allowed to be here any longer? If they side with the bad guys, then so be it, I'll know what's up with this place.
Said he was around 14. A nice big car rolls in and a man gets out asks for gas etc. When paying for the service the man asks the kid if he wanted
an autograph. The kid said "why, who are you" (At this point I'm thinking he said YES!) Kid says no thanks sir. Only later did he discover who the man was!
I asked him, how in the world would you not know who Babe Ruth was in 1938? He said he didn't follow baseball and just had no idea then.
I couldn't believe it. True story.
I still don't believe it.
Steve
<< <i>A quick story. A local guy in his 80's was telling me a story one day. Seems around 1938 or so he was working in a gas station.
Said he was around 14. A nice big car rolls in and a man gets out asks for gas etc. When paying for the service the man asks the kid if he wanted
an autograph. The kid said "why, who are you" (At this point I'm thinking he said YES!) Kid says no thanks sir. Only later did he discover who the man was!
I asked him, how in the world would you not know who Babe Ruth was in 1938? He said he didn't follow baseball and just had no idea then.
I couldn't believe it. True story.
I still don't believe it.
Steve >>
regardless, that's a good story. I don't have any Babe Ruth stories, and I'm too young to really know anything about him other than his place in baseball and American history, also that the sandlot kids used one of his signed baseballs in a game...I think people my age are more fixed on the monetary value of his items, and not so much on the man himself.
My grandfather owned a gas station in Virginia from the 30's through the 70's...and I think I remember hearing my dad say he sold baseball cards...the building is an antique store, which my grandmother owns, haven't been there in years...I'll ask and see if he carried any, would be sort of neat to know
Patrick
<< <i>Sad to say I have no Babe Ruth items.
BTW SCT don't worry about how to reach the Mods. I think they may contact you. >>
Now that's funny. Its sad but still funny.
Steve
My latest pickup - a Quaker cereal club premium:
mike
Edited to add: It's so hard to believe that THE BABE was only 2 years older than I am now when he died.
Doug
Liquidating my collection for the 3rd and final time. Time for others to enjoy what I have enjoyed over the last several decades. Money could be put to better use.
Some cards and stuff:
And it reminds me of this funny Step by Step quote where JT and Cody were doing "JT's World" (a version of Wayne's World) where Cody said this gem (not an exact quote though):
"I just went to see the movie, The Babe; total ripoff!! There wasn't a single babe in that movie worth looking at! Just two hours of that fat dude from Roseanne running the bases!"
And here's the clip (at 4:10): Cody's review of the movie "The Babe"
D's: 50P,49S,45D+S,43D,41S,40D,39D+S,38D+S,37D+S,36S,35D+S,all 16-34's
Q's: 52S,47S,46S,40S,39S,38S,37D+S,36D+S,35D,34D,32D+S
74T: 241,435,610,654 97 Finest silver: 115,135,139,145,310
73T:31,55,61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68,80,152,165,189,213,235,237,257,341,344,377,379,390,422,433,453,480,497,545,554,563,580,606,613,630
95 Ultra GM Sets: Golden Prospects,HR Kings,On-Base Leaders,Power Plus,RBI Kings
Nice array of Ruth cards and that newspaper page is incredibly framed! It almost looks laminated like a diploma.
Thanx
mike
<< <i>Ruth Death Newspaper:
Some cards and stuff:
Nice collection.
Shane
mike
Thanks for sharing.
Steve
A 1960s Standard Oil game stub -- something I see fmclaug11 has graded:
A 1960s calendar -- well enjoyed:
http://sports.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=714&Lot_No=81860&src=pr
Jonathan Scheier
Cataloger - Consignment Director
Heritage Auctions (www.HA.com)
JonathanS@HA.com
1-800-872-6467 X1314
Consign to auction at Consign to Heritage Auctions
Connect with Heritage at Connect with Heritage Auctions
Notice the centering on the stamp? This stamp would never be called 'mint'
This is what Storm has been explaining as of late.
Steve