Not too long ago I took a look at the 1969 Baseball Cello packaging. Well, Friend o'the Archive John Moran turned up another version of the display box that has a splash panel for the 1969 Deckles to complement the Magic Rub-Offs version already on file, so here ya go:
Saturday, May 25, 2024
Cello, I Must Be Going
Saturday, May 18, 2024
Membership Has Its Privileges
Back at it kids, with more peeks at Topps Sports Club news today!
The cover of Issue #3 had confused me when I first encountered it as I wasn't sure if there was, in addition to the Bobby Clarke 8x10, one of Dave DeDusschere. Now that I have the full issue in hand, thanks to Friend o'the Archive David Eskenazi, I can see why I was confused as it took some time for me to grok that only the Guest Columnist (who most certainly did not pen the words of wisdom in each issue) got the photo insert honors. Double D was so prominently featured that I thought he might have a glossy as well but I was, after a full review of the issue, quite shockingly, wrong. Anyhoo, here we go.
The aforementioned page 1:
This came with two inserts I think. The Clarke 8x10 was of course in there:
Saturday, May 11, 2024
How Ya Doin' Sport?
Friend o'the Archive David Eskenazi has been sending me all sorts of goodies over the past several months and the barrage continues with two editions of the Topps Sports Club News plus a neat little extra that rode along. In addition to being cool little items in their own right, these newly arrived issues have me re-thinking a few things.
Newly arrived are Vol. 1 No. 1 and Vol. 1 No 3, which have been added to my personal collection. The first issue was a four-pager, quite well produced.
Saturday, May 4, 2024
Hey, Mr. Spaceman
Friend o'the Archive Jason Liebig sent along a couple of amazing scans a little while back and they are, quite, literally out of this world. Check this bad boy out:
First of all, kudos to Topps for showing the Emily Post approved pinky extension on our intrepid space explorer as he squirts a stream of sugary "something" into his gaping maw! However, the lack of a visor on the helmet is pretty alarming but I'd say we can overlook it.
There's a partial scan of the box sides and bottom (the images were from a long time ago and they are as presented, with no enhancement possible):
Of interest, 60 units at two cents each yielded the standard $1.20 Topps retail priced box of this era! Looks like one or two sprung a leak at some point
The bottom indicia is cut off and there's no way to tell if there was a date shown there but look at the side panel ad here:
"National Pro Football" was a slogan only used for the 1962 Football set, which handily dates this sucker. Check it out:
1962 makes a ton of sense as John Glenn was not only the first American astronaut to orbit Earth, he was the first to consume food and drink in space, which occurred on February 20, 1962. Topps clearly was milking the Space Race for all it was worth and these drinks must have been introduced in the late Summer or Fall of '62. I find it hard to believe the drink lasted very long after that given the obscurity of the product today.
I have been unable to find anything else after searching a bit online and suspect this was a product that was more a box than a pouch, like the old milk cartons at fast food restaurants but possibly flatter. The first juice boxes were also being developed around this time and may have debuted in 1963, albeit without the crucial little bendy-straws affixed. The Topps carton must have been tiny though, to fit 60 in one retail box.
Check out Jason's fabulous Collecting Candy website: http://collectingcandy.com/wordpress/
Or his more current Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/collectingcandy/?hl=en
Better yet, see him on History Channel's "The Foods That Built America" and "The Mega-Brands That Built America" on a screen of your choosing!