![Enlarge photo 1](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ruth.jpg) 1 1921 Exhibit Babe Ruth. This uncharacteristic fielding pose is one of my favorites from the innagural ESCO baseball issue.
| ![Enlarge photo 2](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%20advertisement.jpg) 2 This advertising header for an ESCO machine solves one of the mysteries of Exhibit boxing card collecting. ESCO issued cards in sheets of 32. The 1921 set, which this card advertises, has 58 known boxers. Where are the other 6 has long bedeviled collectors. This broadside answers the question: the other 6 are wrestlers! Note the header is printed on scrap stock--its back is a partial sheet of postcard back art.
| ![Enlarge photo 3](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20ODoul%20Vance.jpg) 3 Ca. 1931 or 1932 4 on 1 arcade card with postcard back. Dated based on O'Doul's October 14, 1930 trade to Brooklyn from Philly. Only a few known cards and only a few known examples of each.
| ![Enlarge photo 4](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/upload%204%20on%201%20Gehrig%20Grove%20Cochrane%20Donahue.jpg) 4 1931-32 4 on 1 PC backed card with Gehrig, Cochrane, Grove. The key to this elusive issue. No one knows much about them. They used images from the earlier individual PC-backed sets. I have only seen a few different cards from the set.
| ![Enlarge photo 5](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/zzz%204%20on%201%20Judge%20Waner%20Kamm%20Jackson.jpg) 5 Here is another. For more info and images please see my page dedicated to these cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 6](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20a_1.jpg) 6 Babe Ruth-Rogers Hornsby-Mickey Walker-Georges Carpentier
An earlier group of 4 on 1's are shown on this and the next four images. These are multisport, covering baseball and boxing, and there are also entertainment cards and entertainment-baseball mixed cards, and are drawn from images used in the 1925 issue of the postcard-backed Exhibit set.
| ![Enlarge photo 7](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20b_1.jpg) 7 Walter Johnson-Al Simmons-Gene Tunney-Benny Leonard
| ![Enlarge photo 8](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20c.jpg) 8 Eugene Criqui-Dave Shade-Joe Judge-Ty Cobb
|
![Enlarge photo 9](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20d%20Harris%20Groh%20Dempsey%20Kansas.jpg) 9 Jack Dempsey-Rocky Kansas-Heinie Groh-Bucky Harris
Note the back: it has a "not to be used in exhibit machines" notation and a coupon, proving that this is indeed an ESCO issue.
| ![Enlarge photo 10](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/zzz_4_on_1_judge_cobb_chaplin_prevost.jpg) 10 Here is a blended subjects (baseball and entertainment) card. Note the two ink colors and the upside down printing.
| ![Enlarge photo 11](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20Criqui%20Shade%20Keaton%20Lloyd.jpg) 11
| ![Enlarge photo 12](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4_on_1_Lloyd_Keaton.jpg) 12 Here is an uncatalogued (until now) 4 on 1 from the same batch that has rare baseball-boxing-entertainment mixed cards. It has Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, and two no-name actors. The Keaton image tends to narrow the date on the card issue. It is a still from a 1925 film called "Go West." Since the Cobb is shown with Detroit and drawn from the PC back set issued in 1925-1926, a 1925-1926 date is likely for the four on 1 issue as well.
| ![Enlarge photo 13](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20movie%20composite.jpg) 13
| ![Enlarge photo 14](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/W-Unc%20Cobb.jpg) 14 Ty Cobb strip card made from the same art as the 4 on 1s
| ![Enlarge photo 15](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bohneproof.jpg) 15 Original art for Sammy Bohne arcade card. Photograph and ink on board. Bohne ne Cohen was an early Jewish player from California. Bohne was traded to Brooklyn late in 1926 and was out of the majors by 1927, indicating that this image was created in 1925 or 1926.
| ![Enlarge photo 16](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bohne2.jpg) 16 Here is the actual card, purple ink variation. Note that the field of the card is smaller than the field of the image
|
![Enlarge photo 17](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925-31%20Speaker%20Art.jpg) 17 Original art for the Speaker card. Note the whited out logo on the sleeve.
| ![Enlarge photo 18](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Speaker%20green.jpg) 18 1928 PC backed Tris Speaker. Cobb and Speaker rigged a game in 1926. Judge Landis did not ban the men but their teams traded the aging stars. Speaker went to Washington for 1927 then on to the A's for 1928 where he joined Cobb in the outfield.
| ![Enlarge photo 19](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/PC%20Back%20original%20art%20Heilmann.jpg) 19 Original art for the Harry Heilmann card.
| ![Enlarge photo 20](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Heilmann_1.jpg) 20 The card.
| ![Enlarge photo 21](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925-31%20Waner%20Art.jpg) 21 Original art for the first-run Waner card
| ![Enlarge photo 22](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Waner%201.jpg) 22 There are three versions of Paul Waner's card in the PC-Backed issue. The first shows Waner batting.
| ![Enlarge photo 23](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Waner%202.jpg) 23 ESCO cut away the background to produce this silhouette image of Waner batting.
| ![Enlarge photo 24](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Waner%203.jpg) 24 The last of the PC-Backed Waner cards shows an unsmiling Waner in portrait. It is the most common of the three.
|
![Enlarge photo 25](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Waner%20port.jpg) 25
| ![Enlarge photo 26](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hartnett.jpg) 26 Gabby Hartnett, background removed variation. On 8 of the Postcard-backed baseball cards, the company cut away the background and kept the player silhouette. This is a prime example. Very tough to find in any condition.
| ![Enlarge photo 27](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hartnett%20bg.jpg) 27 Here is what it looks like with the background
| ![Enlarge photo 28](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hornsby%20Boston.jpg) 28 ca. 1928 Rogers Hornsby. On 5 of the postcard-backed baseball cards, to reflect player trades the issuer pasted a label over the legend on the original art and ran new cards. Hornsby, Cobb, Rouch [sic], Frisch and Peckinpaugh have this rare variation. Hornsby was traded twice in three seasons because he was an obnoxious jerk.
| ![Enlarge photo 29](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hornsby%202.jpg) 29 The last of 3 Hornsby cards in the PC back set, this one is the most elusive.
| ![Enlarge photo 30](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rixey.jpg) 30 I really liked the color on this Eppa Rixey card.
| ![Enlarge photo 31](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Pinelli.jpg) 31 Ralph Pinelli in a tougher yellow with orange print variety.
| ![Enlarge photo 32](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rouch%203.jpg) 32 Edd Roush PC backed card with correction label. They still managed to misspell both of his names!
|
![Enlarge photo 33](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Cobb.jpg) 33 ca. 1927-28 Ty Cobb. As noted in the correction label, Cobb finished his career with the A's in 1927-28.
| ![Enlarge photo 34](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ruth_2.jpg) 34 ca. 1928-29 Babe Ruth. Definitely the best Ruth Exhibit pose. A classic Ruth pose that has found its way onto posters.
| ![Enlarge photo 35](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Gehrig_1.jpg) 35 PC-backed Lou Gehrig batting. There are two versions of this card; one with the background removed and this one. The portrait card of Gehrig uses the image on card #3 above, as does the W517
| ![Enlarge photo 36](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Copy%20of%20Gehrig%20bat%20silhouette%20upload.jpg) 36
| ![Enlarge photo 37](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Copy%20of%20Gehrig%20portrait.jpg) 37
| ![Enlarge photo 38](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Johnson.jpg) 38 ca. 1926 Walter Johnson. The greatest pitcher of all time.
| ![Enlarge photo 39](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/ODoul%20pc.jpg) 39 ca. 1929 or 1930 Lefty O'Doul, dated by team designation (he was traded to the Phillies October 29, 1928 and to the Dodgers October 14, 1930).
| ![Enlarge photo 40](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Foxx_1.jpg) 40 Rookie card of HOFer Jimmie [sic] Foxx, this PC backed card dates to about 1927-28.
|
![Enlarge photo 41](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wilson_%20Hack.jpg) 41 Hack Wilson from the PC-Backed set. A moderately difficult one to locate.
| ![Enlarge photo 42](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Exhibit%20Tom%20Mix%20and%20his%20baseball%20team.jpg) 42 Very rare Exhibit card of Tom Mix, western star, who had a semi-pro baseball team. I learned from one of Mix's biographers that the team was composed of movie folks and competed in a league of movie people that was organized for fun, not for charity or publicity.
| ![Enlarge photo 43](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/8%20on%201%20Ruth%20Dempsey%202.jpg) 43 This 8 image card from 1929 is part of a series of cinema star cards. In addition to Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey is depicted (both starred in lousy movies). Also comes in red print on a pink stock. The other subjects of the card are the cream of the ESCO subjects at the time: Chaplin, Jolson, Lindbergh, Mix, Lloyd and Fairbanks.
| ![Enlarge photo 44](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Movie%20Star%20Stamps%20Chaney.jpg) 44 The 2nd most sought-after Exhibit 8 image movie star stamps card, an undated version with Lon Chaney as a vampire in London After Midnight.
| ![Enlarge photo 45](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Star%20Picture%20Stamp%20Chaney-Fields-Cantor.jpg) 45 Another Chaney card, not as sought after since he is not in make-up. Also has WC Fields and Eddie Cantor.
| ![Enlarge photo 46](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Movie%20Star%20Stamps%20Rascals.jpg) 46 Another desirable card, this one depicting several of the Little Rascals.
| ![Enlarge photo 47](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Star%20Picture%20Stamps%20Keaton.JPG) 47 This one features silent star Buster Keaton.
| ![Enlarge photo 48](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/PCL%20Rhyne.jpg) 48 Very rare 1928 Pacific Coast League Exhibit of Hal Rhyne. PCL Exhibits are among the scarcest of Exhibit issues. Key cards in the 32-card set are Earl Averill and Jimmy Reese. Only a few sets are known.
|
![Enlarge photo 49](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/upload%20PCL%20averill.jpg) 49 Here is the 1928 PCL Exhibit Earl Averill. It is the key card in the set. I'd say it is one of the two or three most sought after Exhibit baseball cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 50](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Neale.jpg) 50 1921 Exhibit of Earl "Greasy" Neale. Not many people realize that Mr. Neale is in the Hall of Fame. The Football Hall of Fame. Along with other former MLB players Ernie Nevers and Jim Thorpe.
| ![Enlarge photo 51](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Groh.jpg) 51 Heinie Groh shows his famous bottle bat. One of my favorite images. 1921 Exhibit card. According to many collectors of the set this is one of the toughest 1921s to locate.
| ![Enlarge photo 52](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Schalk.jpg) 52 Ray Schalk's 1921 Exhibit card. The PC sized medium is a great way to view old players and equipment.
| ![Enlarge photo 53](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Frisch.jpg) 53 Perhaps my alltime favorite image from an Exhibit card. 1928 Frankie Frisch, the Fordham Flash.
| ![Enlarge photo 54](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Kerr.jpg) 54 1921 Dickie Kerr. One of the honest Black Sox, Kerr was the stopper of the series for the Sox. Look at his expression; I like to think it was in reaction to a question about his teammates' betrayal.
| ![Enlarge photo 55](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Heilmann.jpg) 55 Another of my alltime favorite poses, Harry Heilmann on the 1922 card. This image is used in several other sets but it is best shown on the PC-sized Exhibit card.
| ![Enlarge photo 56](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wood.jpg) 56 1922 Exhibit Joe Wood. One of my favorite cards because of the history. Wood had two careers in baseball. In his first incarnation as Smoky Joe Wood, he had a few seasons as one of the finest pitchers in history. "Can I throw harder than Joe Wood? Listen, my friend, there's no man alive can throw harder than Smoky Joe Wood."---Walter Johnson. Wood blew out his arm, went back to the minors, and restructured his career as an outfielder. He is shown here on his only Exhibit card.
|
![Enlarge photo 57](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Young.jpg) 57 1922 Exhibit Ross Youngs [sic]. Considered one of his rookie cards, the ill-fated HOF outfielder died young and suddenly.
| ![Enlarge photo 58](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Speaker.jpg) 58 1922 Eastern Exhibit Company Tris Speaker. The Eastern Exhibit Company was absorbed by the "regular" Exhibit Supply Company and put out only 1 set of cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 59](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1922%20Eastern%20Exhibit%20Bancroft%20Phila%20address.jpg) 59 1922 Eastern Exhibit Supply Dave Bancroft. There are two versions of each arcade card, one with the eastern company's Philadelphia address and one with the Philly address blocked out and replaced with the Chicago ESCO address.
| ![Enlarge photo 60](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bohne.jpg) 60 1922 Exhibit Sammy Bohne. Another tough and popular card of the Jewish star.
| ![Enlarge photo 61](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hartnett_1.jpg) 61 1923 Gabby Hartnett. While reputed to be the toughest of the major league baseball series from the 1920s, in actuality the 1926 set is even more difficult.
| ![Enlarge photo 62](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Sewell.jpg) 62 1923 Joe Sewell
| ![Enlarge photo 63](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Simmons.png) 63 1923 Al Simmons. Considered Bucketfoot Al's rookie card.
| ![Enlarge photo 64](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Alexander.jpg) 64 1927 Grover Cleveland Alexander, towards the tail-end of his illustrious career.
|
![Enlarge photo 65](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1931%20PC%20Back%20Thorpe%20comparison.jpg) 65 Another of my alltime favorite cards. This Indian chief is none other than Jim Thorpe, making a living in the early 1930s in bad westerns playing...an Indian. A very rare PC-backed card from a set of movie stars issued approximately 1931. There is a set of strip cards, very rare, in the same style and with some of the same images. I can confirm Thorpe cards in all three sizes of the strip cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 66](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/W%20Unc%20Thorpe%20comparison%20sizes%20for%20site.jpg) 66 Here is the Exhibit Thorpe side by side with three of the four types of strip cards made with the same art, the large strip card (middle right) the tab-sized (middle left), and the monotone small card (left). The size not shown is the same height as the tab sized but a bit wider. The cards are approx. to scale. The tab sized cards were issued with a lettered tab at the bottom that could be cut off for redemption (I suspect in an arcade or candy store). The other small strip cards came in vertically oriented strips. I am not sure of the orientation of the larger cards; I suspect vertical strips of 3 like W517.
| ![Enlarge photo 67](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/ms-tabs-4%20thorpe.jpg) 67 Here is the Thorpe with tab intact.
| ![Enlarge photo 68](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Thorpe_exhibit_2.jpg) 68 This card shows cowboy actor William Desmond. The Indian chief on the left is Jim Thorpe. This is the second Thorpe pose from the set. The other Indian in the image went by the stage name "Chief Thunderbird" (real name Richard Davis Thunderbird). The card helps narrow down the issue date. Thorpe, Thunderbird and Desmond appeared together in the 1931 film "Battling With Buffalo Bill."
| ![Enlarge photo 69](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Portrait%203.jpg) 69 This Jack Dempsey card relates to Jack's movie career. Probably issued around the time of his 1920 serial "Daredevil Jack". I suspect that this card is Dempsey's true "rookie" card.
| ![Enlarge photo 70](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Dempsey%20Valentino%20Delmont.jpg) 70 A very rare card of star Rudolph Valentino working out with pro boxer Gene Delmont and Jack Dempsey. There are a few candid type cards of stars and athletes together.
| ![Enlarge photo 71](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tom%20Mix%20and%20Newsboy%20Brown.jpg) 71 Another rarity, this one Tom Mix working out with boxer Newsboy Brown. Note the big Star of David on Brown's shorts; he is one of many Jewish boxers.
| ![Enlarge photo 72](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/upload%201931-32%20Ruth.jpg) 72 1931-32 Babe Ruth card from a set of movie-related Exhibit cards. One of the rarest Exhibit cards of Ruth and definitely one of the most desirable. He appeared in 5 films in 1932, all as himself.
|
![Enlarge photo 73](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Portrait.jpg) 73 Jack Dempsey looking dapper, probably from another movie set.
| ![Enlarge photo 74](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tunney%20in%20The%20Fighting%20Marine%202.jpg) 74 Shortly before his late 1926 fight with Jack Dempsey, light-heavyweight champ Gene Tunney went to Hollywood and filmed an atrocious western called "The Fighting Marine". A few Exhibit cards relating to the film were issued.
| ![Enlarge photo 75](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/jeffriesmovie.bmp.jpg) 75 Jim Jeffries was the heavyweight champion until 1904, when he retired undefeated. He came out of retirement in 1910 and lost to Jack Johnson. He then settled in Burbank, California, near the film studios, and ran many businesses including a boxing venue. Jeffries Road in Burbank pays tribute to him. He played a ref in this Monte Blue vehicle.
| ![Enlarge photo 76](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Jeffries%20and%20Blue%20II.jpg) 76
| ![Enlarge photo 77](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Benny%20Leonard%20in%20Flying%20Fist%20composite.jpg) 77 1925 Benny Leonard in Flying Fist [sic; Fists]. Leonard made a serial in New York while at the height of his popularity.
| ![Enlarge photo 78](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lytell%20Lewis%201.jpg) 78 There are numerous boxing-themed Exhibit movie cards--the trick is tracking down the names of the participants. When I saw the nose on this opponent I knew he had to be a real pug. I researched it and discovered that it is HOFer Ted "Kid" Lewis.
| ![Enlarge photo 79](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lytell%20Lewis%202.jpg) 79 Another movie card featuring Kid Lewis.
| ![Enlarge photo 80](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/McLaglen.jpg) 80 1930s Victor McLaglen. Many people do not realize that McLaglen was a professional boxer who fought Jack Johnson in 1909 in a six-round exhibition match in Vancouver. His fight with fellow former pug John Wayne in "The Quiet Man" has quite a bit more grit and realism than most film fights of the era, which remind me of ladies swinging pocket books at each other.
|
![Enlarge photo 81](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/upload%201926%20Exhibit%20Red%20Grange%20in%20One%20Minute%20To%20Play.jpg) 81 1926 Red Grange in "One Minute To Play". The Galloping Ghost went Hollywood for a dreadful film about a collegiate footballer. There are a few cards known from the film including a nice action shot.
| ![Enlarge photo 82](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/2008%2003%2007%20a.jpg) 82 1926 Red Grange in "One Minute To Play" in-action shot. Grange is kicking.
| ![Enlarge photo 83](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Exhibit%20Red%20Grange%20In%20One%20Minute%20to%20Play%203.jpg) 83
| ![Enlarge photo 84](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Miller.jpg) 84 1928 Exhibit Ray Miller, #1 lightweight contender. The only man who KO'd Jimmy McLarnin. Ray is my first cousin twice removed. Exhibit boxing cards from the 1920s generally have biographies, fight records and copyright dates on the backs. The next four show some of the variety available in the 1928 set.
| ![Enlarge photo 85](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Miller%205.jpg) 85
| ![Enlarge photo 86](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Miller%20orange%20coupon%20%20back.jpg) 86
| ![Enlarge photo 87](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Miller%204.jpg) 87
| ![Enlarge photo 88](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Miller%203.jpg) 88
|
![Enlarge photo 89](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Miller%202.jpg) 89
| ![Enlarge photo 90](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/World%20Fair.jpg) 90 This Dempsey card is from a set of world champions issued in 1923 or 1924. For many years it was misattributed to the 1932 World's Fair. I researched the subjects in the cards and it is clear that the set was from the mid 1920s, as many of the athletes were long retired or replaced as champions by 1932.
| ![Enlarge photo 91](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Anders%20Haugen.jpg) 91 1923-4 Champions Anders Haugen. Another from this scarce and diverse series. Check out the skis; they look like 2 x 4 lumber!
| ![Enlarge photo 92](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Sarazen.jpg) 92 1923-4 Champions Gene Sarazen. A very desirable early golfing card and 1 of only 2; the other is a 1948 Ben Hogan (Max Schmeling's card with his golf bag doesn't count).
| ![Enlarge photo 93](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Paddock.jpg) 93 1923-4 Champions Charlie Paddock. Called the fastest man in the world, he was the 100m champion at the 1920 Olympics and finished 2nd at the 1924 Olympics.
| ![Enlarge photo 94](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Gourdin.jpg) 94 Edward O. Gourdin is a African/Native American (Seminole/Cherokee) and has one of the most remarkable backstories in sports. He is one of the first athletes of color on a sports card outside of boxing. He was a long jumper for Harvard University in the 1920s. After graduating he medaled in the 1924 Olympics, practiced law, was appointed as an Assistant US Attorney, commanded the 372nd (Colored) Infantry in WWII as a colonel, became only the second man of color appointed a full time judge in Massachusetts, and served as president of the United States Olympians Association.
| ![Enlarge photo 95](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Weismuller.jpg) 95 In addition to being Tarzan in Hollywood, Johnny Weissmuller won 3 gold medals in the 1924 Olympics for swimming. This and a number of other cards in the series led me to the realization that the 1932 date on this set was dead wrong. So many of the athletes achieved fame in the 1924 Olympics and were long-gone to other professions by 1932.
| ![Enlarge photo 96](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Lewis.jpg) 96 Strangler Lewis.
|
![Enlarge photo 97](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Thompson.jpg) 97
| ![Enlarge photo 98](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Palmer.jpg) 98
| ![Enlarge photo 99](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Blouin.jpg) 99
| ![Enlarge photo 100](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Stinson_%20Al.jpg) 100 Anyone have any idea who this guy was? None of the hockey afficionados I checked with could tell me a thing about him, yet he made it into the 1923-4 Exhibit Champions issue.
| ![Enlarge photo 101](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Champions%20Hoff.jpg) 101
| ![Enlarge photo 102](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Kish.jpg) 102
| ![Enlarge photo 103](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Champions%20Passaic%20with%20Blood.jpg) 103
| ![Enlarge photo 104](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Ruth.jpg) 104
|
![Enlarge photo 105](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Canutt%20Jones%201.jpg) 105 Yakima Canutt from a western issue, ca 1928. This issue is printed on two-sided stock and has different people on each side. Note the coupon at the bottom. kids could obtain premiums for the coupons. Many cards are found with corners lopped off as a result.
| ![Enlarge photo 106](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/doubleheaders%202.jpg) 106 Here are both sides of a westerns doubleheader from the late 1920s.
| ![Enlarge photo 107](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20a.jpg) 107 Another really innovative 1920s issue, this western card and the next one have 4 portraits on one side and 4 action shots on the reverse. I wish they'd done these with baseball cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 108](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20b.jpg) 108 1920s 8 image western card. I'd not seen this format of card before acquiring the two depicted here at the National.
| ![Enlarge photo 109](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20actors%20and%20animals%20exhibit%20card_1.jpg) 109
| ![Enlarge photo 110](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20actors%20and%20Animals%202.jpg) 110
| ![Enlarge photo 111](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Western%20Matching%20Game%201%20Hart.JPG) 111 One of the first cut-apart game sets from ESCO, this copyrighted 1928 issue pictures the same western star four times on each card, presumably to be cut up for some kind of card game. I have seen numbers as high as 28 so I assume there were at least 32 issued.
| ![Enlarge photo 112](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Western%20Matching%20Game%202%20Gibson.JPG) 112
|
![Enlarge photo 113](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Western%20Matching%20Game%203%20Roosevelt.JPG) 113
| ![Enlarge photo 114](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Western%20Matching%20Game%204%20MacDonald.JPG) 114
| ![Enlarge photo 115](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibits%20cut%20outs%20game%20group%20of%204.JPG) 115
| ![Enlarge photo 116](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Chips%20Perrin%20and%20Steele.jpg) 116 One of the innovative designs for western cards from ESCO. With the start of the Great Depression ESCO began issuing cards that could be cut up for game playing. This 1929 series (dated on front) has instructions to cut out the "chips" for playing. Not a lot of these cards survived as a result.
| ![Enlarge photo 117](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Chips%20Cody-Sullivan.jpg) 117
| ![Enlarge photo 118](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20baseball%20cut%20out%20card.JPG) 118 Another of the thoroughly annoying "cut 'em up" issues from ESCO. This one was intended to be made into three ballplayers on stands. Rare card; I've only seen a few.
| ![Enlarge photo 119](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Exhibit%20Cut%20Outs%20Sailor.JPG) 119
| ![Enlarge photo 120](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Exhibit%20Cut%20Outs%20Turtle.JPG) 120
|
![Enlarge photo 121](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cutouts%20locomotive.JPG) 121 This and the next several are more from the cut-up series.
| ![Enlarge photo 122](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cutouts%20shooter.JPG) 122
| ![Enlarge photo 123](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cutouts%20elephant.JPG) 123
| ![Enlarge photo 124](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cut%20Out%20Windmill.jpg) 124
| ![Enlarge photo 125](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dog%20and%20cat.JPG) 125
| ![Enlarge photo 126](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cutouts%20cardinal%20and%20cage.JPG) 126
| ![Enlarge photo 127](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cut%20Out%20Race%20Car.JPG) 127
| ![Enlarge photo 128](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cut%20Out%20Wheelbarrow.JPG) 128
|
![Enlarge photo 129](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cut%20Out%20Chickens.JPG) 129
| ![Enlarge photo 130](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Exhibit%20Cut%20Outs%20Cow.JPG) 130
| ![Enlarge photo 131](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Cut%20Out%20Horsey.jpg) 131
| ![Enlarge photo 132](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Tenderfoot%2013%20Barton.jpg) 132 1929 Exhibit Tenderfoot Buzz Barton. This is an innovative, attractive, thoroughly maddening set to collect. There are 31 cards that look like this one and a header card with a picture of the "tenderfoot" [actually, an actor in a western; see next image for a film card using the same picture] and the rules. Basically, it was a matching game. 31 paired cards made by cutting apart tbe base cards and one oddball--the Tenderfoot--made by cutting down the header card. The one who gets stuck with the Tenderfoot lost. Needless to say, very few survive intact.
| ![Enlarge photo 133](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tenderfoot%20film.JPG) 133 The original Tenderfoot movie image
| ![Enlarge photo 134](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Tenderfoot%204%20Chandler.jpg) 134 1929 Exhibit Tenderfoot. Another example.
| ![Enlarge photo 135](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Tenderfoot%2019%20Buffalo%20Bill%20Jr.JPG) 135
| ![Enlarge photo 136](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Tenderfoot%209%20Padjan_%20Jack.jpg) 136
|
![Enlarge photo 137](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mix%202.jpg) 137 Tom Mix from a 1929 set devoted to him. Another innovative ESCO design for western cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 138](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Holt%20J.jpg) 138 Jack Holt from yet another ESCO innovative design, depicting famous Hollywood gunslingers as playing cards. There are also cards depicting a "hand" with multiple images.
| ![Enlarge photo 139](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Hand%201.jpg) 139 Here is an example of the Western poker hand card. Cards are also known with actors in a "fan".
| ![Enlarge photo 140](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Cooper%20western%20aces.jpg) 140 ESCO revived the playing card idea in the 1960s. Use of additional graphics was a way for ESCO to recycle older images. The Gary Cooper image shown here dates to roughly the High Noon period.
| ![Enlarge photo 141](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ruth_1.jpg) 141 1961 Wrigley Field Exhibit Babe Ruth. ESCO was headquartered in Chicago. I am surprised it took 40 years for them to think of a promo with the Cubs.
| ![Enlarge photo 142](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/cobb.jpg) 142 1961 Wrigley Field Cobb. The set consists of 24 alltime greats, sometimes found with postcard backs, sometimes with blank backs. They are pretty tough to find given that they were ballpark premiums.
| ![Enlarge photo 143](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wagner.jpg) 143 1961 Wrigley Field Honus Wagner. By 1961 with the rise of TV and decline of amusement arcades, ESCO was in serious trouble. I suppose the baseball promo link was an effort to expand a dying business.
| ![Enlarge photo 144](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Gehrig.jpg) 144 1961 Wrigley Field Gehrig.
|
![Enlarge photo 145](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Johnson_1.jpg) 145 1961 Wrigley Field Walter Johnson
| ![Enlarge photo 146](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Williams%209%20shows.jpg) 146 Exhibit Salutations Ted Williams #9 shows. Beginning in 1939 ESCO issued a series of cards depicting ballplayers with nice "salutations" on the front (sincerely, best wishes, etc.; I suppose nowadays they's say stuff like "no comment" or "I didn't know it was a steroid"). This Williams is one of the short printed cards and is a set key.
| ![Enlarge photo 147](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/DiMaggio.jpg) 147 Salutations DiMaggio. Nominally given a date of 1939-47, in reality some of the Salutations cards were issued for only a year or two, some were issued into the 50s or even 60s. Joe D's card was one that was issued into the early 1950s and is easier to find than most other cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 148](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Foxx.jpg) 148 Jimmy Foxx played just long enough to merit inclusion in the set's early versions. Given the relative scarcity of the card, I suspect it ran for 3 or 4 years. One of my favorite poses of the man they called The Beast.
| ![Enlarge photo 149](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Gehringer.jpg) 149 HOFer Charlie Gehringer is one of the toughest short prints, probably issued no more than a year or two. Given the spillover into the 50s and 60s, I hesitate to call the Salutations a separate set from the 1947-66 grouping. It makes more sense to treat them as series, as in the case of T206's different printings.
| ![Enlarge photo 150](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Greenberg%20TY.jpg) 150 One of the two Hank Greenberg Salutations cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 151](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Greenberg%20VTY.jpg) 151 Here is the short print Greenberg
| ![Enlarge photo 152](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hubbell.jpg) 152 "King" Carl Hubbell has a nice Salutation card. It falls in the middle of the pack in terms of rarity, again probably issued for a few years.
|
![Enlarge photo 153](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/vaughn.jpg) 153 HOF shortstop Arky Vaughan is one of the shorter prints in the Salutations cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 154](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dickey%20LL.jpg) 154 Print variations over the years created some scarcities over minute differences. This Bill Dickey and the next one have "MADE IN U.S.A." at different bottom corners.
| ![Enlarge photo 155](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dickey%20LR.jpg) 155 This Saluations Dickey has the inscription at the lower right.
| ![Enlarge photo 156](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Averill.jpg) 156
| ![Enlarge photo 157](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/salutations%20Rizzo.jpg) 157
| ![Enlarge photo 158](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Salutations%20Hartnett.jpg) 158
| ![Enlarge photo 159](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Klein.JPG) 159
| ![Enlarge photo 160](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Canadian%201954%20Alston.jpg) 160 1954 Canadian Exhibit Walter Alston. The 1950s Canada-only Exhibit issues use color and often depict players from the minor league teams in Canada. The Dodgers had a minor league team in Montreal that Alston managed before going to Brooklyn.
|
![Enlarge photo 161](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1953%20Canadian%20Musial.jpg) 161 Major league cards were also issued in the early 1950s Canada, using artwork from the postwar sets. The Musial here shows one format similar to the minor league cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 162](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Canadian%20Exhibit%20Irvin.jpg) 162 Canadian Monte Irvin. Cards 1-32 can be found in green or red and have numbers in a diamond; 33-64 are blue or red and have free-floating numbers.
| ![Enlarge photo 163](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/upload%201948-52%20Richard.jpg) 163 1948-52 Canadian "Exhibit" Maurice Richard. "Rocket" Richard, the 1st man to score 50 goals in a season, is the key to the set. There are 2 card of him, one with the stairs in the background, one without. I say "Exhibit" because ESCO did not issue these cards; they were copy cat arcade cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 164](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52Richardnosteps.jpg) 164 1948-52 Canadian Exhibit Maurice Richard, no stairs variation. I spoke with several Canadian hockey card dealers at the 2005 National who told me that this set is very scarce. I found only three cards for sale there from this set.
| ![Enlarge photo 165](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52%20Harvey.jpg) 165 1948-52 Canadian Exhibit Doug Harvey. A HOF defenseman for the Habs and then the Rangers, Harvey was considered the greatest of all until Bobby Orr came along.
| ![Enlarge photo 166](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Geoffrion.jpg) 166 "Boum Boum" Geffrion. I guess that is how they spell it in Quebec?
| ![Enlarge photo 167](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52%20Beliveau%201.jpg) 167
| ![Enlarge photo 168](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52%20Beliveau%202.jpg) 168
|
![Enlarge photo 169](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Newmar.jpg) 169 OK, I had to add this one. Julie Newmar, the ONLY Catwoman for me, in a late 50s Exhibit pin-up issue. I was able to secure her autograph on the card. What gams!
| ![Enlarge photo 170](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Monroe.jpg) 170 Late 1950s Marilyn Monroe, from a series of cheesecake Hollywood actresses. Schwingg!
| ![Enlarge photo 171](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Gardner_%20Ava.JPG) 171 Schwingg!
| ![Enlarge photo 172](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Grable_%20Betty.jpg) 172 Betty Grable in the most famous pin-up shot of WWII. Schwingg!
| ![Enlarge photo 173](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Marx.jpg) 173 1940s-1950s Groucho Marx, from a series of television and radio stars. Some of his best lines: I sent the club a wire stating, PLEASE ACCEPT MY RESIGNATION. I DON'T WANT TO BELONG TO ANY CLUB THAT WILL ACCEPT ME AS A MEMBER; Go, and never darken my towels again; I never forget a face, but in your case I'll be glad to make an exception; I've had a perfectly wonderful evening--but this wasn't it; A man's only as old as the woman he feels; Do you suppose I could buy back my introduction to you?; Here's to our wives and girlfriends...may they never meet!; Marriage is a wonderful institution...but who wants to live in an institution?; Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it and then misapplying the wrong remedies.
| ![Enlarge photo 174](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Exhibit%20Marx%20Bros.jpg) 174 1926 Exhibit Four Marks [sic] Brothers. This is the only Marx Brothers exhibit card I have ever seen. It is from a rare set of theatrical cards. The card mentions their stage work but not their films because they had not yet made a film. The Cocoanuts was their new play on Broadway and would not be filmed until after the silent film era ended. Why ESCO did not make more Marx Brothers cards is beyond me; I would love to see cards of them in their big films.
| ![Enlarge photo 175](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Exhibit%20Theater%20Willie%20Howard.jpg) 175 1926 theatrical issue Willie Howard.
| ![Enlarge photo 176](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Fields.jpg) 176 1926 theatrical issue W.C. Fields.
|
![Enlarge photo 177](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Exhibit%20Vaudeville%20Cantor_%20Eddie.jpg) 177 1926 theatrical issue Eddie Cantor.
| ![Enlarge photo 178](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lucy%20Desi.jpg) 178 Lucy and Desi. They don't need last names. This is the most desirable of the Lucy Exhibit cards, though not the toughest Lucy card to find, because it is the only one of them together. I do not know of a solo Desi card.
| ![Enlarge photo 179](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ball_%20Lucille%201.jpg) 179 The earliest of Lucy's cards, from her ingenue days before she and Desi made history.
| ![Enlarge photo 180](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lucy.jpg) 180 One of Lucy's portrait cards. She is likely the post-war star featured in the largest number of different Exhibit series. The following are some more of her cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 181](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ball%208.jpg) 181 More Lucy
| ![Enlarge photo 182](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ball_%20Lucille%203.jpg) 182
| ![Enlarge photo 183](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ball_%20Lucille%204.jpg) 183 This one I believe dates to around the time of her pregnancy.
| ![Enlarge photo 184](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ball_%20Lucille%205.jpg) 184
|
![Enlarge photo 185](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Connery%201.jpg) 185 Sean Connery, about the time Dr. No was made. There are two Exhibit Connery cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 186](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Connery%202.jpg) 186 Here is the other known Connery card. I'd say around the time of Thunderball.
| ![Enlarge photo 187](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Entertainment%20Bonanza.jpg) 187 The Bonanza crew, minus Pernell Roberts (Adam Cartwright), who left the show early on and is a short-printed card. From L to R: Dan Blocker (Hoss), Lorne Greene (Ben) and Michael Landon (Joe).
| ![Enlarge photo 188](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Roberts.jpg) 188 Here is the short printed Roberts. He played Adam Cartwright from 1959-1965.
| ![Enlarge photo 189](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1960s%20pack%20with%20James%20Arness.jpg) 189 A rare unopened pack of Exhibits from the 1960s. As part of its last gasp ESCO tried to sell cards in packs. They were not successful.
| ![Enlarge photo 190](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1960s%20pack%20with%20Lee%20Marvin.jpg) 190 Another example of the rare packs from the early 1960s, this one with Lee Marvin on the front.
| ![Enlarge photo 191](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Keaton%201928%20Steamboat%20Bill.jpg) 191 Buster Keaton in Steamboat Bill, Jr. (1928). Keaton and Chaplin were the two biggest comedic actors in the 20s. This film was parodied in "Steamboat Willie", a cartoon that featured a new character, Mickey Mouse.
| ![Enlarge photo 192](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Chaplin%20Charlie%20Chaplin%20In%20The%20Gold%20Rush.jpg) 192 Charlie Chaplin in his most famous role, the tramp, in his most famous silent film, The Goldrush (1925).
|
![Enlarge photo 193](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Chaplin%201928.jpg) 193 As one of the biggest stars of the silent era, Chaplin was fodder for many Exhibit cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 194](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Chaplin%20Charlie%20Chaplin%20Directing%20His%20Latest%20Picture.jpg) 194 Here is a neat behind-the-scenes image of Chaplin at the directorial helm for one of his mid-1920s films.
| ![Enlarge photo 195](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Chaplin%20no%20make-up%202.jpg) 195 Portraits of Chaplin without his makeup are tougher to find on Exhibits than are his images in character. Based on color and typeface, I'd say this one dates to the 1926-1928 period
| ![Enlarge photo 196](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Chaplin%20no%20make-up.jpg) 196 An early Chaplin card, ca 1920.
| ![Enlarge photo 197](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Chaplin.jpg) 197 The classic Little Tramp portrait of Chaplin, ca 1928
| ![Enlarge photo 198](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lloyd.jpg) 198 Another film comedic great, Harold Lloyd. His most famous role found him swinging from a ledge and the hands of a clock 9 stories above downtown Los Angeles.
| ![Enlarge photo 199](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Cooper%20Gary%20in%20The%20Last%20Outlaw.jpg) 199 Before he became the strong, silent archetypal hero, Gary Cooper starred in a number of silent westerns. This card is the earliest ESCO Cooper card I have found (1927).
| ![Enlarge photo 200](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hardy%20Babe%20Hard%20as%20a%20two%20gun%20sheriff.jpg) 200 The tubby sheriff in this scene is noneother than Oliver Hardy, pre Stan Laurel.
|
![Enlarge photo 201](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hardy_%20Babe%20in%20The%20Wizard%20of%20Oz.jpg) 201 Another Hardy card
| ![Enlarge photo 202](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hardy_%20Babe%20and%20Larry%20Semon.jpg) 202 Another, very difficult to find, Hardy card.
| ![Enlarge photo 203](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Laurel%20and%20Hardy%20II.jpg) 203 This is the first (and only so far) Laurel and Hardy Exhibit card. it comes from their very popular 1933 film Busy Bodies.
| ![Enlarge photo 204](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926-29%20PC%20back%20Cooper.jpg) 204 Gary Cooper from the ca. 1930 PC backed movie set.
| ![Enlarge photo 205](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926-29%20PC%20back%20Chevalier.jpg) 205 Maurice Chevalier from the ca. 1930 PC backed set. When asked how it felt to turn 80, Chevalier said: "considering the alternative..."
| ![Enlarge photo 206](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930%20Mix.jpg) 206 Tom Mix from the ca. 1930 PC backed set. These cards are really hard to find. I acquired all but two from the same seller, who had picked up an old collection at an estate sale.
| ![Enlarge photo 207](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930%20Wells.jpg) 207 Ted Wells from the ca. 1930 PC backed set.
| ![Enlarge photo 208](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930%20Holt.jpg) 208 Jack Holt from the ca. 1930 PC backed set. His son Tim was a well known character actor whose best role was in "Treasure of the Sierra Madre" opposite Bogart and Walter Huston
|
![Enlarge photo 209](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926-29%20PC%20back%20Brendel.jpg) 209 Elmer Goodfellow Brendle had a four-decade career as a character actor in movies and television. The ex vaudevillain used a Swedish accent for comedic effect. I have to admit, I thought he was a Hispanic star given the name on the card.
| ![Enlarge photo 210](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930%20Jones.jpg) 210 Buck Jones from the ca. 1930 PC backed set.
| ![Enlarge photo 211](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wunc%20cut%20out%20strips%20Jones%20Buck.jpg) 211 Here is the same Buck Jones image on a strip card that is about 1/4 the size of the PC backed card. W517 also has a rarer "mini" version that is closer in size to a standard strip card. Interesting how some of the PC backed baseball images show up as W517 and W517 minis and how some of the PC backed entertainers show up as strip minis. Now if only we had an intermediate sized card like W517 for the entertainment cards...
| ![Enlarge photo 212](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wunc%20cut%20out%20strips%20Haines%20large.jpg) 212 We do. This William Haines strip card is about 1/3 bigger than the preceding Buck Jones card.
| ![Enlarge photo 213](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ayres%20tab.jpg) 213 A while ago I acquired about 20 of these cards in a smaller format. I assumed they were trimmed. Turns out, they were issued differently. The narrower cards were issued singly with tabs at the bottoms. This Lew Ayres card shows the tab version on the left and the strip version on the right. As you can see, the strip version is wider.
| ![Enlarge photo 214](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wunc%20cut%20out%20strips%20McLaglen.jpg) 214 Victor McLaglen strip card.
| ![Enlarge photo 215](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wunc%20cut%20out%20strips%20Brown%20Joe%20E.jpg) 215 Joe E. Brown strip card. Brown reputedly said "A friend in need is a pest".
| ![Enlarge photo 216](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Entertainment%204%20on%201.jpg) 216 A 4 on 1 PC backed entertainment card. Appears to be the same issuer as a set of strip cards as well as the PC backed baseball and boxing sets.
|
![Enlarge photo 217](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mix%202_1.jpg) 217 Tom Mix from the PC-backed issue. The back of the card is identical right down to the printing flaws with what is found on some of the PC back baseball cards as well as the Blue Boxers.
| ![Enlarge photo 218](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mix%203.jpg) 218 Another PC backed Mix, this time in green
| ![Enlarge photo 219](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/W%20unc%20Tom%20Mix.jpg) 219 Here is one of the strip cards from the same images as the 4 on 1 just shown. Tom Mix boxing. It is about 1/4 the size of the 4 on 1. The cards came in vertically-oriented strips of 10.
| ![Enlarge photo 220](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Von%20Stroheim.jpg) 220 1922 Eric Von Stroheim. In 1921 and 1922 ESCO issued movie cards with the same format as their baseball cards from those years. While "von" was used to designate German aristocracy, in reality von Stroheim was an Austrian Jew.
| ![Enlarge photo 221](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Swanson.jpg) 221 1922 Gloria Swanson. Couldn't resist adding her in beside Von Stroheim given their "Sunset Boulevard" connection. "I'm ready for my close-up Mr. DeMille!" The top stars of the era made $10,000 a week before the income tax existed.
| ![Enlarge photo 222](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Valentino%201925.jpg) 222 Rudolph Valentino. A mega star in early Hollywood, Valentino had a number of ESCO cards. The Hollywood PCL baseball team was named the Sheiks in honor of his most famous role. He died on August 23, 1926. This card shows him in his next to last role as Count Rodrigo Torriani in the 1925 film "Cobra" (not to be confused with the Sylvester Stallone film of the same name; oh, if only Sly had been silent in that one...).
| ![Enlarge photo 223](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Hayakawa.jpg) 223 1920 Sessue Hayakawa. What a life this guy lived. He became the 1st Asian cinema star in the US with a scorching performance as the owner of a white sex slave in a lurid silent film (his branding her is the highlight), lost his career more or less and went overseas due to sound, and came back to be nominated for an Oscar for best supporting actor in 1957 as Col. Saito in Bridge On The River Kwai.
| ![Enlarge photo 224](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Arbuckle%201921.jpg) 224 1920 Fatty Arbuckle. In addition to being a movie star, Fatty owned a piece of the Vernon team in the PCL. Probably issued ca. 1920; his career was destroyed in 1921 by a sex scandal.
|
![Enlarge photo 225](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Our%20Gang.jpg) 225 1929 Our Gang card. The Hal Roach Studios children (if you were born after WWII, you know them from TV as the Little Rascals) had a nice series of tri-image cards from 1920. One of the tougher cinema issues.
| ![Enlarge photo 226](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Karloff.jpg) 226 Horror ace Boris Karloff. His Exhibit cards are tough to find and sell for around $50 when they surface, which is rarely.
| ![Enlarge photo 227](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Chaney_%20Lon%20exhibit%20card.jpg) 227
| ![Enlarge photo 228](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Entertainment%20Astronauts%201.jpg) 228 ESCO attempted to capitalize on the Mercury program's popularity with a series of cards of the astronauts, their equipment and some NASA conceptual drawings. Here is Alan Shepard, the first American to go up there.
| ![Enlarge photo 229](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lindbergh.jpg) 229 Noted aviator and anti-Semite Charles Lindbergh was the subject of a card issue of his own after his solo flight across the Atlantic.
| ![Enlarge photo 230](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Conn.jpg) 230 Exhibit cards are great vehicles for autographs by virtue of their large size. Here is Billy Conn, former lightheavyweight champion.
| ![Enlarge photo 231](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Pep.jpg) 231 Willie Pep autographed this late 1940s issue. Unfortunately, since the last Exhibit set originated in the early 60s, there are relatively few living boxers on the cards available to chase for autographs. Muhammad Ali, Carmen Basilio, Jake LaMotta and Gene Fullmer are the only ones still alive who come readily to mind, but there were many who lived while Exhibits were made and who signed them, so they can be found on the secondary market.
| ![Enlarge photo 232](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/upload%20Canzoneri.jpg) 232 Talk about rare! Tony Canzoneri, who died in 1959, signed this Blue Boxers card.
|
![Enlarge photo 233](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Jack.jpg) 233 Beau Jack was a title holder in the 1940s. He came up from the deep South the hard way, fighting Battle Royales where several young black fighters would be put into the ring together and the last one standing won. In later life he went back to shining shoes in Miami to make a living, where he was discovered and then became a fixture on the autograph circuit before he died.
| ![Enlarge photo 234](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Patterson%202.jpg) 234 Floyd Patterson signed inscribed Exhibit card. One of the nicest ex-champs ever, Patterson was a very accommodating signer.
| ![Enlarge photo 235](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Patterson%203.jpg) 235 Another Patterson.
| ![Enlarge photo 236](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Aaron.jpg) 236 I got Hammerin' Hank at a show and saved the ticket.
| ![Enlarge photo 237](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Appling.jpg) 237 Luke Appling was one of my favorite autograph guests ever. A very gregarious man, when I handed him this card he told about what a misery those uniforms were. Seems they were made of black wool and would absorb and hold a ton of sweat, making for truly miserable double-headers.
| ![Enlarge photo 238](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Boudreau.jpg) 238 I got this Lou Boudreau at a show in the early 1990s when he was the "door buster" free autograph.
| ![Enlarge photo 239](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dempsey%20tunney%20table.jpg) 239 Table of Comparisons, Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney. ESCO issued a small series of these cards comparing heavyweight rivals Dempsey, Tunney, and Wills. Not that hard to find but very desireable cards. One or the other of the vital stats is incorrect; Dempsey was born in 1895, Tunney in 1897. If I had to bet, I would guess that Tunney's age was incorrectly stated at the time the art was created; in 1925 he would have been 28 and Dempsey would have been 30.
| ![Enlarge photo 240](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Carnera%203.jpg) 240 Primo Carnera. In the late 20s and early 30s ESCO issued a series of cards depicting the main heavyweight contenders of the day in a variety of images. Oddball images like this one or the Schmeling with golf gear are prized. "Satchel Feet" was one of the worst fighters to become champion and was demolished by Max Baer in a title defense, being knocked down 11 times until finally KOd.
|
![Enlarge photo 241](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Carnera%201.jpg) 241 Carnera from the heavyweights series with the corner clipped, indicating a backside coupon was removed. He later wrestled professionally and owned a liquor store in Glendale, California. His mobbed-up career was source material for the 1956 film "The Harder They Fall".
| ![Enlarge photo 242](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Schmelling%202%203.jpg) 242 Max Schmeling with golf bag. Schmeling recently passed away, the last of the heavyweight champions of the 1930s to die. A controversial personality because of his German nationality in the 1930s (while not a Nazi supporter, he found it convenient to let them use him for propaganda), Max was a robust man into his 90s. Consequently, Schmeling autographs are pretty easy to find.
| ![Enlarge photo 243](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wills%205.jpg) 243 Harry Wills was signed to fight Dempsey for the heavyweight title in 1924. The racist outcry over letting a black man have a shot at the crown led Jack Kearns (Dempsey's manager) to call off the fight. Dempsey lost his New York boxing license as a result. Wills' cards in the heavyweight series are the hardest to find. I suspect he was removed from the issue relatively quickly. The typeface used on the card is similar to that of the 1926 baseball issue.
| ![Enlarge photo 244](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/47excut311081.JPG) 244 An uncut sheet of Exhibit cards ca. 1960 or 1961 at the earliest (Rocky Colavito is shown with Detroit, where he went after the 1959 season in a trade for Harvey Kueen). Next to Rocky is Ted Williams' Salutations card that supposedly was printed from 1939-47. As I said earlier, it is misleading to consider the postwar ESCO issues as distinct sets; the Salutations can cross over into the later cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 245](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Sullivan.jpg) 245 1921 Exhibit John L. Sullivan. The Great John L was the first great American world heavyweight champion. He would often enter a saloon and proclaim that he could lick any SOB in the place, and make good on the promise. A notorious partier in his youth, the old Sullivan became a crusader for temperance. Why ESCO chose to show him as an old, fat man is beyond me.
| ![Enlarge photo 246](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Corbett.jpg) 246 1921 Exhibit Jim Corbett. Gentleman Jim was the first winner of a gloved championship, defeating John L. Sullivan for the title. The 1921 set is the only "historical" set ESCO issued of boxers. From its boxing cards it is possible to find every heavyweight champ from Sullivan to Dempsey.
| ![Enlarge photo 247](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Fitzsimmons.jpg) 247 1921 Bob Fitzsimmons. Ruby Robert defeated Corbett and held the middleweight and heavyweight championships at the same time.
| ![Enlarge photo 248](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Jeffries.jpg) 248 1921 Exhibit Jim Jeffries. Jeffries defeated Fitszimmons and held the title until he retired in 1904. His July 4, 1910 comeback defeat at the hands of Jack Johnson touched off widespread race riots.
|
![Enlarge photo 249](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Johnson_2.jpg) 249 1921 Exhibit Jack Johnson. The first black heavyweight champion, his thrashing defeat of Jim Jeffries gave rise to the term "great white hope"
| ![Enlarge photo 250](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Willard.jpg) 250 1921 Jess Willard. The mountainous Kansan who defeated Jack Johnson and was in turn demolished in three rounds by Jack Dempsey, who broke Willard's jaw, knocked out a bunch of his teeth and generally beat the hell out of the much bigger man.
| ![Enlarge photo 251](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey.jpg) 251 1921 Exhibit Jack Dempsey. The then-reigning heavyweight champ, this card may be predated by the film card shown above.
| ![Enlarge photo 252](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ketchel.jpg) 252
| ![Enlarge photo 253](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Leonard.jpg) 253 1921 Exhibit Benny Leonard. Considered one of the greatest lightweights of all time, he held the title for seven years. Leonard was a product of the Lower East Side of New York and changed his name from Leiner so that his mother would not find out he was fighting.
| ![Enlarge photo 254](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1923%20Leonard.jpg) 254
| ![Enlarge photo 255](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Leonard.jpg) 255
| ![Enlarge photo 256](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tunney.jpg) 256 1922 Gene Tunney. The true "rookie" card of the lightheavyweight and future heavyweight champion.
|
![Enlarge photo 257](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%20horizontal.jpg) 257 1925 Exhibit Jack Dempsey, horizontal pose. There are four known poses in the 1925 Exhibit set for Dempsey.
| ![Enlarge photo 258](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%20seated.jpg) 258 1925 Exhibit Dempsey seated pose. The image is from a theatrical still (note the greasepaint make-up) and can be found in blank-backed format as part of a movie set as well as with the record back and 1925 copyright.
| ![Enlarge photo 259](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%201925.jpg) 259 1925 PC backed Dempsey. The issuer of the PC backed baseball set issued a series of boxing cards in 1925 with 1924 records on their backs. The series was revised and reissued with recordless backs in 1926 through the late 20s in multiple colors. Collectively, the group is called the "Blue Boxers" after one of the most distinct card colors.
| ![Enlarge photo 260](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%20Ex%20Champ.jpg) 260 2nd Blue Boxer type Dempsey. Two boxers have two cards in the set: Dempsey and Tunney. The 2nd cards reflect Tunney's late 1926 victory over Dempsey. As a consequence of the manner in which the Blue Boxers were issued, there are considerable short prints.
| ![Enlarge photo 261](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%20champ.jpg) 261 1925 PC back Dempsey without record back. This pose is found with the record back and with the PC only back. Given the new pose with the ex champ notation on the front, it appears that the Blue Boxers were issued in 1925 in the original record back format with 1924 record, reissued in 1926 with the PC backs, and modified thereafter with at least two new poses.
| ![Enlarge photo 262](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Leonard%201925.jpg) 262 1925 PC record backed Benny Leonard. The toughest Exhibit Leonard card.
| ![Enlarge photo 263](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Britton%20blue.jpg) 263 Blue Boxers Jack Britton. The next several images show some of the colors of Blue Boxers from the ca. 1926 and later printings of the set.
| ![Enlarge photo 264](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Burman.jpg) 264 Orange stock Joe Burman Blue Boxer
|
![Enlarge photo 265](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Britton%20red.jpg) 265 Blue Boxers Jack Britton
| ![Enlarge photo 266](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tremaine.jpg) 266 Blue Boxers Carl Tremaine. As you can see, some colors worked better with some images than others.
| ![Enlarge photo 267](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dundee.jpg) 267 Red stock Johnny Dundee Blue Boxer
| ![Enlarge photo 268](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Willard_1.jpg) 268 Blue Boxers Jess Willard
| ![Enlarge photo 269](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Firpo.jpg) 269 Blue Boxers Luis Firpo
| ![Enlarge photo 270](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Shade.jpg) 270 Pink stock Dave Shade Blue Boxer
| ![Enlarge photo 271](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Fitzsimmons%201.jpg) 271 Grey stock with blue ink Eddie Fitzsimmon. This card and the next two depict the most difficult color combos to find. I suspect that they were printed first among the colored issue and quickly replaced
| ![Enlarge photo 272](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Loughran%20sepia%201.jpg) 272 Blue Boxers Tommy Loughran sepia. One of the toughest colors to acquire.
|
![Enlarge photo 273](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lomski%202.jpg) 273 Blue Boxers Leo Lomski light blue tone. Another very tough color.
| ![Enlarge photo 274](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tendler%20yellow.jpg) 274 Yellow stock Lew Tendler Blue Boxer. I had considered trying a master set, but the numbers are potentially into the hundreds of cards. Here are several Lew Tendler cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 275](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tendler%201925.jpg) 275 Black and white Lew Tendler with record on back
| ![Enlarge photo 276](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tendler%20green%20gray.jpg) 276 Lew Tendler.
| ![Enlarge photo 277](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tendler%20blue.jpg) 277 Blue Boxers Lew Tendler
| ![Enlarge photo 278](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bell.jpg) 278 Blue Boxers Archie Bell. Here is a nice run of the blue tinted cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 279](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Canzoneri.jpg) 279 Blue Boxers Tony Canzoneri
| ![Enlarge photo 280](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Criqui.jpg) 280 Blue Boxers Eugene Criqui
|
![Enlarge photo 281](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Delaney.jpg) 281 Blue Boxers Jimmy Delaney
| ![Enlarge photo 282](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Heeney.jpg) 282 Blue Boxers Tom Heeney
| ![Enlarge photo 283](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mandell.jpg) 283 Blue Boxers Sammy Mandell
| ![Enlarge photo 284](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rosenberg%20blue.jpg) 284 Blue Boxers Dave Rosenberg
| ![Enlarge photo 285](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Sharkey%20blue.jpg) 285 Blue Boxers Jack Sharkey
| ![Enlarge photo 286](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Taylor.jpg) 286 Blue Boxers Bud Taylor
| ![Enlarge photo 287](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Uzcudun.jpg) 287 Blue Boxers Paolino Uzcudun
| ![Enlarge photo 288](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/White.jpg) 288 Blue Boxers Charlie White
|
![Enlarge photo 289](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Goldstein%201925.jpg) 289 1925 record backed Abe Attell Goldstein. The next few images depict some of the short prints in the set.
| ![Enlarge photo 290](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Friedman.jpg) 290 1925 Sailor Friedman
| ![Enlarge photo 291](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Goldman.jpg) 291 1925 Nate Goldman
| ![Enlarge photo 292](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Kansas.jpg) 292 1925 Rocky Kansas
| ![Enlarge photo 293](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Kaplan%20Kid.jpg) 293 1928 Exhibit Louis Kid Kaplan. The 1928 set is the largest of the sets, with over 140 known subjects. Nicknamed the Meriden Buzzsaw, Kaplan was a Russian-Jewish immigrant. He retired when he had trouble making weight, after turning down an offer to rig a fight for big money. As he moved up in weight class, he was denied a title shot out of fear of his ability.
| ![Enlarge photo 294](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Von%20Porat%201.JPG) 294
| ![Enlarge photo 295](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Boyle%201.JPG) 295
| ![Enlarge photo 296](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20OquDowd%20yellow%20back%201.JPG) 296
|
![Enlarge photo 297](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Fields.jpg) 297 1928 Exhibit Ruby Goldstein. Goldstein, a Benny Leonard protege, was a tremendous fighter who had a glass chin, and was later a well known referee. He was officiating when Benny "Kid" Paret was beaten to death by Emile Griffith on national tv in a 1962 fight. Paret had called Griffith a homosexual [actually, he used an extremely denigrating Spanish slang term] because Griffith was a florist who hung out in gay bars. Ironically, and sadly, Griffith was very badly beaten in New York a few years ago while coming out of a gay bar. The story of the fight and its impact on the fighters and their families was the subject of a recent documentary film.
| ![Enlarge photo 298](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/37.jpg) 298 Kid Chocolate, real name Eligio Sardinas, was a top fighter out of Cuba. This card, from the 1928 set, is very popular and rather hard to find.
| ![Enlarge photo 299](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948%20Champions.jpg) 299 1948 Exhibit Champions Jack Dempsey. Along with Joe Louis, Dempsey is one of 2 boxers in this popular multi-sport set.
| ![Enlarge photo 300](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Champions%20Riggs.jpg) 300 1948 Champions Bobby Riggs. Two decades before he became the poster-boy for male chauvanism, Bobby Riggs was a champion tennis player. He was also a heavy gambler and raconteur, which is how the whole Billie Jean King match came into being.
| ![Enlarge photo 301](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Jake%20LaMotta.jpg) 301 1940s-50s Jake LaMotta. The Salutations format was used by ESCO in a number of different personality sets. LaMotta's story is well known from the movie "Raging Bull" and he is a popular autograph guest.
| ![Enlarge photo 302](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Rocky%20Marciano.jpg) 302 1950s Exhibit Rocky Marciano. The Rock is the only undefeated heavyweight champ, retiring in early 1956 with a perfect record. A friend of his, fighter Sammy Luftspring, claims that Rocky (a notorious cheapskate) retired in part because he was incensed over being cheated by their co-manager.
| ![Enlarge photo 303](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/W517%20Terry.jpg) 303 This Bill Terry card is from a large-format strip set called W517 and commonly dated as a 1931 issue. I put it here because this set uses many of the same images as are used in the PC-backed exhibit set, without the circular card number. This raises the intriguing possibility that the same company made the PC set, W517, the ca. 1930 entertainment cards shown above and at least two strip sets that appear to be directly derived from the entertainment cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 304](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Terryproof.jpg) 304 Here is the original art for the Terry card. Photograph and ink on board. The small circular stain in the dirt appears to be where the #23 sticker appears in the finished card. It appears that the sticker fell off over time. Although this item was sold to me as a PC backed Exhibit image, it is clearly a W517. Sometimes the obvious smacks you in the face and you still miss it. The legend on the PC Back Exhibits and the W517 is handwritten by the same person.
|
![Enlarge photo 305](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bass%20BW.jpg) 305 ca. 1929 Fancy Script Bennie Bass. The Fancy Script issue is a small set named for its ornate legend. The cards are PC backed and dated based on the known subjects.
| ![Enlarge photo 306](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bass%20color.jpg) 306 Fancy Script Bennie Bass color variation. Black and White is the most encountered color but there are some colored variations as well.
| ![Enlarge photo 307](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Carnera.jpg) 307 Fancy Script Primo Carnera. One of the earliest Carnera cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 308](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Schmeling.jpg) 308 Fancy Script Max Schmeling. One of the earliest Schmeling cards, but not the earliest. Schmeling has a card in the 1928 Exhibit set and the 1927 York Caramel (E211) set.
| ![Enlarge photo 309](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Singer%20red.jpg) 309 Fancy Script Al Singer, red tone. Dig those groovy trunks, man!
| ![Enlarge photo 310](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Walker%20sepia.jpg) 310 fancy Script Mickey Walker sepia tone. First one of these I've seen in a sepia tone. Came from a new to the hobby find of PC backed exhibits which included multiple sepia and light blue cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 311](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dempsey%20tunney%201.jpg) 311 Dempsey v. Tunney II. In order to capitalize on the popularity of the Dempsey v. Tunney fights, ESCO issued a set devoted to the 2nd battle, the Long Count fight that took place in Chicago in 1927.
| ![Enlarge photo 312](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dempsey%20tunney%202.jpg) 312 The Long Count resulted from a rule change that Dempsey caused. Under old rules a fighter could hover over a downed opponent and hammer him the moment he stood up. Dempsey was notorious for this. As a result, the rules were changed to require a fighter to go to neutral corner in the event of a knock down.
|
![Enlarge photo 313](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dempsey%20tunney%203.jpg) 313 Dempsey downed Tunney and forgot the rule, resulting in the ref not starting the ten count until Dempsey went to the neutral corner.
| ![Enlarge photo 314](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dempsey%20tunney%204.jpg) 314 Tunney received at least 14 seconds to recover from the knockdown.
| ![Enlarge photo 315](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/dempsey%20tunney%205.jpg) 315 He got back up and resumed fighting. It is unclear whether he was hurt enough by the knockdown to have needed the extra time, but it certainly helped him.
| ![Enlarge photo 316](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%20Tunney%206.jpg) 316 Tunney, whose slashing, scientific style was tailored specifically to defeat Dempsey, resumed the fight and beat Dempsey for a second time to retain the title.
| ![Enlarge photo 317](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rat%20Pack%20Sammy.jpg) 317 The Rat Pack had some nice Exhibit cards. Here is Sammy Davis Jr.
| ![Enlarge photo 318](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rat%20Pack%20Dean.jpg) 318 How did all these people get in my room? Dino's Exhibit card.
| ![Enlarge photo 319](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rat%20Pack%20Sinatra.jpg) 319 The Chairman of the Board had at least three Exhibit cards that I know of.
| ![Enlarge photo 320](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Prima.jpg) 320 The great Louis Prima. When Sinatra and the rest of the boys finished at the Sands they would head for Prima's show. Easily the coolest show in Las Vegas history.
|
![Enlarge photo 321](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Smith%20Keely.jpg) 321 Keely Smith, Louis Prima's wife and lead singer.
| ![Enlarge photo 322](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Belafonte.jpg) 322 Harry Belafonte. Day-O!
| ![Enlarge photo 323](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Fitzgerald.jpg) 323 The greatest voice in the history of Jazz, Ella Fitzgerald.
| ![Enlarge photo 324](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Animals.jpg) 324 ESCO issued a number of series of cards devoted to pop stars in the 1960s in conjunction with Billboard, which provided the write-ups for the card backs. Here are the Animals.
| ![Enlarge photo 325](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Beach%20Boys.jpg) 325 The Beach Boys
| ![Enlarge photo 326](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Beatles.jpg) 326 The Fab Four.
| ![Enlarge photo 327](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Monkees.jpg) 327 The Prefab Four
| ![Enlarge photo 328](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rolling%20Stones.jpg) 328 The Rolling Stones in their mop-head stage.
|
![Enlarge photo 329](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Connors%201.jpg) 329 Chuck Connors played baseball for the Brooklyn Dodgers, basketball for the Boston Celtics, but was best known as Lucas McCain, "The Rifleman". He was a big, rangy 6'7" and a very fun autograph guest at card shows.
| ![Enlarge photo 330](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Western%20116.jpg) 330 Connors as The Rifleman. This card is from a series of western cards made by Nu-Card in the early 1960s. They were sold in packs and are frequently mistaken for Exhibit cards because they are the same size and in a similar format.
| ![Enlarge photo 331](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rifleman%20and%20son.jpg) 331 Connors and Johnny Crawford, the boy who played his son on the Rifleman.
| ![Enlarge photo 332](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Levin%202.jpg) 332 I could not believe this 1930s wrestling card when I saw it. While nationalities and home towns were frequent designations on card fronts, I have never seen a religious designation on a card front except on this card.
| ![Enlarge photo 333](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Londos.jpg) 333 1930s Jim Londos. Wrestling as both legitimate sport and scripted spectacle was a popular subject of ESCO sport issues from their inception to the end. This card of legitimate wrestler Jim Londos comes from a very tough 1930s issue, rarely seen, that surfaced on ebay in July 2005 from an old family collection, along with some boxers from the same era.
| ![Enlarge photo 334](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/nagurski%20exhibit.JPG) 334 1930s Bronko Nagurski. From a wrestling issue, he is best known as a HOF football player. Also had a couple of football cards in the 1930s and wrestling cards in the 1950s from Parkhurst.
| ![Enlarge photo 335](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Crabbe.jpg) 335 Larry "Buster" Crabbe won Olympic gold in the 1932 Los Angeles games and went on to star in various westerns and B serials, notably the Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers series.
| ![Enlarge photo 336](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Baer%20Buddy%20rare%20pose.jpg) 336 Here is a tough pose of heavyweight Buddy Baer. I had not ever seen this pose before July 2005 when I picked it up at the National. Ironically, a week later one more surfaced on ebay from an old family collection being broken by heirs. I've seen it a handful of additional times.
|
![Enlarge photo 337](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Martin_%20Andy.jpg) 337 This Andy Martin is from a 1928 style subgroup of blue print cards with blank backs. I'd seen one or two before a nice group surfaced on Ebay. Some new additions to the checklist for 1928, some already known.
| ![Enlarge photo 338](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dickey%20Lazzeri%20Pennock%20Coombs.jpg) 338 The first few years of baseball 4 on 1 issues were multi-colored. The next few cards are examples of the range of colors used.
| ![Enlarge photo 339](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Adams%20Bartell%20Traynor%20Sheely.jpg) 339 Red with black print wasn't a really good choice.
| ![Enlarge photo 340](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Foxx%20Cochrane%20Grove%20Haas%20ad%20back.jpg) 340 I like the orange ones. Tough color to find.
| ![Enlarge photo 341](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Manush%20Schang%20Kress%202%20sided%20stock.jpg) 341 This yellow card is printed on two-sided color stock. Very unusual for a baseball exhibit, which is why I bought it.
| ![Enlarge photo 342](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bogart%202.jpg) 342 Bogart, from the 1940s. This is the scarcer of the two Bogart salutations exhibits.
| ![Enlarge photo 343](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Henreid.jpg) 343 Paul Henried. One enjoyable and challenging way to collect Exhibit entertainment cards is to try and assemble "teams" of casts of famous films. We have Bogie, Henreid and Rains next. Anyone want to guess what film?
| ![Enlarge photo 344](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rains.jpg) 344 Rick: How can you close me up? On what grounds? Captain Renault: I'm shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here! [a croupier hands Renault a pile of money] Croupier: Your winnings, sir. Captain Renault: [sotto voce] Oh, thank you very much. [aloud] Captain Renault: Everybody out at once!
|
![Enlarge photo 345](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lorre_%20Peter.jpg) 345
| ![Enlarge photo 346](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Grove.jpg) 346 1926-29 PC Back Lefty Grove. Considered to be one of Grove's rookie cards, though not his first card (he had a minor league card).
| ![Enlarge photo 347](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Sauer%20Mutoscope%20Back.jpg) 347 1950s Hank Sauer with Mutoscope back.
| ![Enlarge photo 348](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Doby.jpg) 348 Three varieties of Larry Doby. No "An Exhibit Card"; "An Exhibit Card"; and scratched out "An Exhibit Card"
Look at the lower edge.
| ![Enlarge photo 349](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Holmes.jpg) 349 Salutations Tommy Holmes variations
| ![Enlarge photo 350](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/zzz%20Babe%20Ruth%20and%20Snookums.jpg) 350 This is not an Exhibit card. It is an arcade card from a rival issuer. There are several known cards of this format, all movie star cards from the era. They are very hard to find. A few have turned up in recent years in large, new to the hobby, groups of cards offered for sale. I will post a few more examples.
| ![Enlarge photo 351](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20anonymous%20arcade%20card.jpg) 351 Tom Tyler
| ![Enlarge photo 352](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Buzzy%20Barton%20arcade%20card.jpg) 352 Buzzy Barton (the kid) and two other hombres from the non-Exhibit issue.
|
![Enlarge photo 353](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Gibson%20arcade%20card.jpg) 353 Hoot Gibson from the Ruth-Snookums issue.
| ![Enlarge photo 354](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Robinson_%20Bojangles.jpg) 354 Bill Bojangles Robinson. Tough card to find.
| ![Enlarge photo 355](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Greenberg.jpg) 355 Autographed 1977 Exhibit Hank Greenberg. The reconstituted company made an extensive series of reprints and new prints using the Baseball's Great Hall of Fame theme in 1977.
| ![Enlarge photo 356](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Freaks%20Zip.jpg) 356 1925 Exhibit sideshow series card of Zip the pinhead. Very tough series with some truly disturbing sideshow acts in it.
| ![Enlarge photo 357](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Freaks%20Zip%202.jpg) 357
| ![Enlarge photo 358](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/__KGrHqF_exqkE-YoKnIiCBPoGtydseg__60_3.jpg) 358
| ![Enlarge photo 359](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Freaks%20The%20Seal%20Woman.jpg) 359
| ![Enlarge photo 360](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Freaks%20Grace%20Gilbert%20The%20Bearded%20Lady.jpg) 360
|
![Enlarge photo 361](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Freaks%20Lionel%20The%20Dog%20Faced%20Boy.jpg) 361
| ![Enlarge photo 362](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Freaks%20The%20PinHeaded%20Girl.jpg) 362
| ![Enlarge photo 363](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Freaks%20The%20Rubber%20Man.jpg) 363
| ![Enlarge photo 364](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Freaks%20Lady%20Tiny%20Earles.JPG) 364 Real name Elly Annie Schneider, she was one of 4 tiny performers who billed themselves as the Earles and as the Dolls. She had roles in "Freaks" and "The Wizard of Oz" as a munchkin.
| ![Enlarge photo 365](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Freaks%20Lilliputian.jpg) 365
| ![Enlarge photo 366](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Freaks%20Major%20Mite.jpg) 366
| ![Enlarge photo 367](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Freaks%20Paquito.jpg) 367
| ![Enlarge photo 368](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Freaks%20Aasen.jpg) 368
|
![Enlarge photo 369](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Freaks%20Lady%20Tattooed%20Man.jpg) 369
| ![Enlarge photo 370](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Clay%20green%202.jpg) 370 1960s Cassius Clay green variety
| ![Enlarge photo 371](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Clay.jpg) 371
| ![Enlarge photo 372](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Advertising%20Slick%20Clay.jpg) 372
| ![Enlarge photo 373](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Clay_1.jpg) 373
| ![Enlarge photo 374](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Veach.jpg) 374
| ![Enlarge photo 375](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Veach_2.jpg) 375
| ![Enlarge photo 376](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1923%20Ruth.jpg) 376
|
![Enlarge photo 377](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Canzoneri_1.jpg) 377
| ![Enlarge photo 378](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20actors%20and%20animals%20exhibit%20card.jpg) 378
| ![Enlarge photo 379](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%208%20on%201%20Cowboys%201.jpg) 379
| ![Enlarge photo 380](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Tom%20Mix%20and%20his%20baseball%20team.jpg) 380
| ![Enlarge photo 381](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Exhibit%20Fatty%20Arbuckle.jpg) 381
| ![Enlarge photo 382](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dempsey%209.jpg) 382
| ![Enlarge photo 383](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1931%20PC%20Back%20Entertainment%20Gibson_%20Hoot%20portrait%20arms%20folded.jpg) 383
| ![Enlarge photo 384](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1931%20PC%20Back%20Entertainment%20Maynard_%20Ken%20with%20puppies.jpg) 384
|
![Enlarge photo 385](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Fields_%20WC.jpg) 385
| ![Enlarge photo 386](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Karloff_%20Boris%20in%20Flaming%20Fury.jpg) 386
| ![Enlarge photo 387](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Pastor%20New%20York%20Canadian.jpg) 387
| ![Enlarge photo 388](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%20Detroit%20Canadian.jpg) 388
| ![Enlarge photo 389](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Wright%20Los%20Angeles%20Canadian.jpg) 389
| ![Enlarge photo 390](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Bass.jpg) 390
| ![Enlarge photo 391](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Braddock.jpg) 391
| ![Enlarge photo 392](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Robinson%20front.jpg) 392
|
![Enlarge photo 393](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Calloway%20II.jpg) 393
| ![Enlarge photo 394](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/9Canadian%201954%20Alston.jpg) 394 1954 Canadian Exhibit Walter Alston. The 1953-1954 Canada-only Exhibit issues use color and depict players from the minor league AAA Montreal Dodgers farm team in Canada including HOFers Walter Alston and Tommy Lasorda.
| ![Enlarge photo 395](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/91953%20Canadian%20Musial.jpg) 395 Major league cards were also issued in the 1953 Canada set, using artwork from the postwar sets. The Musial here shows one format similar to the minor league cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 396](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/9Canadian%20Exhibit%20Irvin.jpg) 396 Cards 1-32 can be found in green or red and have numbers in a diamond; 33-64 are blue or red and have free-floating numbers.
| ![Enlarge photo 397](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Terry.jpg) 397
| ![Enlarge photo 398](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Armstrong_%20Henry%20CA.jpg) 398
| ![Enlarge photo 399](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Gehringer.jpg) 399
| ![Enlarge photo 400](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Freigau.jpg) 400
|
![Enlarge photo 401](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Rigney.jpg) 401
| ![Enlarge photo 402](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Hornsby.jpg) 402
| ![Enlarge photo 403](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Ruth.jpg) 403
| ![Enlarge photo 404](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/PCL%20Jolly.jpg) 404
| ![Enlarge photo 405](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Stanwyck.JPG) 405
| ![Enlarge photo 406](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Dempsey%20tux.jpg) 406
| ![Enlarge photo 407](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mutoscope%20FB.jpg) 407
| ![Enlarge photo 408](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Exhibit%20Olympics%202.jpg) 408
|
![Enlarge photo 409](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Exhibit%20Olympics%203.jpg) 409
| ![Enlarge photo 410](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Exhibit%20Olympics%205.jpg) 410
| ![Enlarge photo 411](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Olympics%201.jpg) 411
| ![Enlarge photo 412](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Olympics%202.jpg) 412
| ![Enlarge photo 413](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Exhibit%20Olympics%206.jpg) 413
| ![Enlarge photo 414](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Exhibit%20Olympics%207.jpg) 414
| ![Enlarge photo 415](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Exhibit%20Olympics%208.jpg) 415
| ![Enlarge photo 416](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Olympics%20Crabbe.jpg) 416
|
![Enlarge photo 417](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Exhibit%20Olympics%20Didrikson.jpg) 417
| ![Enlarge photo 418](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1932%20Olympics%20Miyazaki.jpg) 418
| ![Enlarge photo 419](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Frisco_%20Star.jpg) 419
| ![Enlarge photo 420](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Rixey.jpg) 420 1927 Rixey with stamped back coupon
| ![Enlarge photo 421](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Nationalista.jpg) 421
| ![Enlarge photo 422](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Heathcote%20coupon%20back.jpg) 422
| ![Enlarge photo 423](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1955%20Exhibit%20Catalog%202.jpg) 423
| ![Enlarge photo 424](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930%20Exhibit%20Aviators%20Goebel.jpg) 424
|
![Enlarge photo 425](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930%20Exhibit%20Aviators%20Lindbergh.jpg) 425
| ![Enlarge photo 426](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930%20Exhibit%20Aviators%20Wright.jpg) 426
| ![Enlarge photo 427](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52%20FB%20Exhibit%20Albert%20green%20tint.JPG) 427
| ![Enlarge photo 428](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52%20FB%20Exhibit%20Comp%20green%20tint.JPG) 428
| ![Enlarge photo 429](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52%20Exhibit%20Luckman%20green.jpg) 429
| ![Enlarge photo 430](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Angott%20Yarosz%20Error.jpg) 430 This is Tommy Yarosz, not Sammy Angott. The error was caught and corrected early in the print run, making this one of the rarest boxing exhibit cards.
| ![Enlarge photo 431](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Jackson_%20Peter%20exhibit.JPG) 431
| ![Enlarge photo 432](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20sandwina.jpg) 432 Ted Sandwina's real name was Theodore Brumbach. He was the son of Katie Brumbach, a circus strongwoman who took the stage name Sandwina in honor of defeating strongman Eugene Sandow in a weightlifting contest in which she lifted a weight of 300 pounds over her head, which Sandow only managed to lift to his chest. Ted was strong but not skilled enough to become heavyweight champ.
|
![Enlarge photo 433](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Exhibit%20Red%20Grange%20in%20One%20Minute%20To%20Play%20collage.jpg) 433 Two cards of football great Red Grange in his Hollywood days
| ![Enlarge photo 434](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1920s%20Red%20Grange%20In%20One%20Minute%20to%20Play%203.jpg) 434 Another Grange. Tough as the others are this is the rarest of them all--a handfull of known examples.
| ![Enlarge photo 435](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Smith_%20Jeff.jpg) 435 1925 Jeff Smith; 2013 IBHOF inductee
| ![Enlarge photo 436](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Muesel.jpg) 436
| ![Enlarge photo 437](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Pipp%202.jpg) 437
| ![Enlarge photo 438](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%201.jpg) 438 In retrospect, the company's decision to make Mussolini the subject of a 16-card set was not a good idea...
| ![Enlarge photo 439](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%202.jpg) 439 Needless to say, the cards are quite difficult to find today. I assume that the vast majority were destroyed during WWII.
| ![Enlarge photo 440](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%203.jpg) 440
|
![Enlarge photo 441](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%204.jpg) 441
| ![Enlarge photo 442](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%205.jpg) 442
| ![Enlarge photo 443](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%206.jpg) 443
| ![Enlarge photo 444](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%208.jpg) 444
| ![Enlarge photo 445](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%209.jpg) 445
| ![Enlarge photo 446](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%2010.jpg) 446
| ![Enlarge photo 447](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%2011.jpg) 447
| ![Enlarge photo 448](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%2012.jpg) 448
|
![Enlarge photo 449](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%2013.jpg) 449
| ![Enlarge photo 450](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%2014.jpg) 450
| ![Enlarge photo 451](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%2015.jpg) 451
| ![Enlarge photo 452](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%2016.jpg) 452
| ![Enlarge photo 453](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mussolini%207.jpg) 453
| ![Enlarge photo 454](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20Rascals_1.jpg) 454 A very tough 4 on 1 Exhibit card from the 1920s with the Our Gang Little Rascals and Rin Tin Tin. How perfect is that?
| ![Enlarge photo 455](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lloyd_%20Harold%20in%20The%20Eastern%20Westerner.jpg) 455
| ![Enlarge photo 456](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Loughran.jpg) 456
|
![Enlarge photo 457](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Stribling.jpg) 457
| ![Enlarge photo 458](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Bivins.jpg) 458
| ![Enlarge photo 459](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%201948%20Champions.jpg) 459
| ![Enlarge photo 460](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%201948%20Champions%20green%20and%20black.jpg) 460
| ![Enlarge photo 461](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%20Detroit%20Canadian_1.jpg) 461
| ![Enlarge photo 462](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948%20Champions%20Louis%20Canadian.png) 462
| ![Enlarge photo 463](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%20front.jpg) 463
| ![Enlarge photo 464](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%20PC%20Back.jpg) 464
|
![Enlarge photo 465](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%20side.jpg) 465
| ![Enlarge photo 466](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Louis%20no%20HT%202.jpg) 466
| ![Enlarge photo 467](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Farr.jpg) 467
| ![Enlarge photo 468](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1923%20Dempsey%20Pose%202.jpg) 468
| ![Enlarge photo 469](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Foley.JPG) 469
| ![Enlarge photo 470](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Gehrig_2.jpg) 470
| ![Enlarge photo 471](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ruth%20bats.jpg) 471
| ![Enlarge photo 472](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Keeler.jpg) 472
|
![Enlarge photo 473](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Original%20Art%20Exhibit%201948%20Hall%20of%20Fame%20Keeler.jpg) 473
| ![Enlarge photo 474](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Nagurski%20Exhibit%202.JPG) 474
| ![Enlarge photo 475](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20OquDonnell.jpg) 475
| ![Enlarge photo 476](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Pafko_1.jpg) 476
| ![Enlarge photo 477](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Ring.jpg) 477
| ![Enlarge photo 478](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Levinsky.jpg) 478
| ![Enlarge photo 479](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1923%20OquDowd%20blank%20back%201.jpg) 479
| ![Enlarge photo 480](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Azteca_%20Kid.jpg) 480
|
![Enlarge photo 481](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Corbett_%20Young%20skip%20rope.jpg) 481
| ![Enlarge photo 482](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Schwartz.jpg) 482
| ![Enlarge photo 483](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1931%20PC%20Back%20Exhibit%20Desmond%20green%20background.jpg) 483
| ![Enlarge photo 484](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Kahanamoku%20exhibit%20card.jpg) 484
| ![Enlarge photo 485](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Dado.JPG) 485
| ![Enlarge photo 486](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1930s%20Exhibit%206%20on%201.jpg) 486
| ![Enlarge photo 487](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Wrestler%20Aberg.jpg) 487
| ![Enlarge photo 488](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Wrestler%20Caddock.jpg) 488
|
![Enlarge photo 489](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Wrestler%20Selva.jpg) 489
| ![Enlarge photo 490](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Wrestler%20Westergaard.jpg) 490
| ![Enlarge photo 491](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Wrestler%20Zbyszko_%20S.jpg) 491
| ![Enlarge photo 492](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Wrestler%20Zbyszko_%20W.jpg) 492
| ![Enlarge photo 493](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1951%20Yankees.jpg) 493
| ![Enlarge photo 494](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Rodeo%20Cowboy%20Riding%20Horse%20Through%20Loop%20of%20Lasso.jpg) 494
| ![Enlarge photo 495](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Rodeo%20Maynard_%20Kenneth.jpg) 495
| ![Enlarge photo 496](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Rodeo%20Cowboy%20Lassoing%20Horse.jpg) 496
|
![Enlarge photo 497](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Rodeo%20A%20Broncho%20Buster.jpg) 497
| ![Enlarge photo 498](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Exhibit%20Rodeo%20Martinson.jpg) 498
| ![Enlarge photo 499](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lassoer.jpg) 499
| ![Enlarge photo 500](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Rodeo%20001.jpg) 500
| ![Enlarge photo 501](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Mrs%20Skeeter%20Bill%20Trick%20Rider.jpg) 501
| ![Enlarge photo 502](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Champions%20Yakima%20Canutt.jpg) 502 1925 Rodeo Yakima Canutt. A champion rodeo rider, Canutt is the "patron saint" of Hollywood stuntmen.
| ![Enlarge photo 503](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Rodeo%20Garcia.jpg) 503
| ![Enlarge photo 504](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Alexander.jpg) 504
|
![Enlarge photo 505](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Calloway.jpg) 505
| ![Enlarge photo 506](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Exhibit%20poker%20royal%20flush.jpg) 506
| ![Enlarge photo 507](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Scalzo.jpg) 507
| ![Enlarge photo 508](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/10%20on%201%20Western%20Aces.jpg) 508
| ![Enlarge photo 509](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Berra%20AEC.JPG) 509
| ![Enlarge photo 510](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Kaplan_%20Phil.JPG) 510
| ![Enlarge photo 511](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Ward%201.jpg) 511
| ![Enlarge photo 512](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Ward%202.jpg) 512
|
![Enlarge photo 513](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Leonard_%20Benny%20in%20Flying%20Fist%204.jpg) 513
| ![Enlarge photo 514](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/002.jpg) 514
| ![Enlarge photo 515](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/009.jpg) 515
| ![Enlarge photo 516](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/PC%20Back%20White%20blank%20back.jpg) 516
| ![Enlarge photo 517](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Collins.jpg) 517
| ![Enlarge photo 518](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Exhibit%20Shade.JPG) 518
| ![Enlarge photo 519](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Genaro.JPG) 519
| ![Enlarge photo 520](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Heath.jpg) 520
|
![Enlarge photo 521](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Holmes_1.jpg) 521
| ![Enlarge photo 522](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Pollett.jpg) 522
| ![Enlarge photo 523](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Lombardi.jpg) 523
| ![Enlarge photo 524](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Page%20Comp.jpg) 524
| ![Enlarge photo 525](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rizzuto%20comparison.jpg) 525
| ![Enlarge photo 526](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Doby_1.jpg) 526
| ![Enlarge photo 527](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/sal%20boudreau%20variations.JPG) 527
| ![Enlarge photo 528](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Tenderfoot%20rules%20card%20copyright%20sample%201.jpg) 528
|
![Enlarge photo 529](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1929%20Exhibit%20Tenderfoot%20rules%20card%20copyright%20sample%202.jpg) 529
| ![Enlarge photo 530](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/exhibit%20back.jpg) 530
| ![Enlarge photo 531](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Jones.jpg) 531
| ![Enlarge photo 532](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948-52%20Exhibit%20Mastrangelo%20yellow%20stock.jpg) 532
| ![Enlarge photo 533](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Gehrig_3.jpg) 533
| ![Enlarge photo 534](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Roberts%201.jpg) 534
| ![Enlarge photo 535](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Angott.jpg) 535
| ![Enlarge photo 536](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Norfolk.JPG) 536
|
![Enlarge photo 537](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1936%20Lazzeri%20Gomez%20Gehrig%20Ruffing.jpg) 537
| ![Enlarge photo 538](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20McCoy.jpg) 538
| ![Enlarge photo 539](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1925%20Terris.jpg) 539
| ![Enlarge photo 540](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Sisler%20silhouette.jpg) 540
| ![Enlarge photo 541](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Page%20Comp_1.jpg) 541
| ![Enlarge photo 542](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1928%20Alexander.jpg) 542
| ![Enlarge photo 543](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1921%20Alexander_1.jpg) 543
| ![Enlarge photo 544](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Simmons%20side.jpg) 544
|
![Enlarge photo 545](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1947-66%20Exhibit%20Lindell%20Holloway%20Back%201.jpg) 545
| ![Enlarge photo 546](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1947%20Exhibits%20Appling%20Holloway%20SGC.jpg) 546
| ![Enlarge photo 547](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Table%20of%20Comparisons%20Tunney%20Sharkey.jpg) 547
| ![Enlarge photo 548](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Table%20of%20Comparisons%20Wills%20Dempsey.jpg) 548
| ![Enlarge photo 549](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Table%20of%20Comparisons%20Wills%20Tunney.jpg) 549
| ![Enlarge photo 550](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Cobb.jpg) 550
| ![Enlarge photo 551](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/4%20on%201%20Feller%20Trosky%20Pytlak%20Averill.jpg) 551
| ![Enlarge photo 552](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1948%20Exhibit%20Baseball%20HOF%20Slick%20Ruth.jpg) 552
|
![Enlarge photo 553](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Traynor.jpg) 553
| ![Enlarge photo 554](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Klein_1.JPG) 554
| ![Enlarge photo 555](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Teams%201956%20Dodgers.jpg) 555
| ![Enlarge photo 556](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Teams%201952%20Dodgers.jpg) 556
| ![Enlarge photo 557](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Teams%201948%20Indians%20AEC.jpg) 557
| ![Enlarge photo 558](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Rouch%20NY.jpg) 558
| ![Enlarge photo 559](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1926%20Greb%20no%20champ.jpg) 559
| ![Enlarge photo 560](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1927%20Lazzeri.jpg) 560
|
![Enlarge photo 561](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Banks.jpg) 561
| ![Enlarge photo 562](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Feller.jpg) 562
| ![Enlarge photo 563](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1947-66%20Exhibit%20Ashburn%201.jpg) 563
| ![Enlarge photo 564](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/1947-66%20Exhibit%20Ashburn%202.jpg) 564
| ![Enlarge photo 565](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Fake%20Musial.jpg) 565 This is a fake.
| ![Enlarge photo 566](https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibitman/interestingexhibitcards/icons/Fake%20Musial%20_2_.jpg) 566
| |