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The second time Parilli came back it was him, Bart, and Pinapple Joe Francis.
All us kids were pulling for the Hawaiian with the cool name.
Francis came in with a pretty good draft class...


Francis was selected in the fifth round of the 1958 NFL draft, 51st overall, by the Green Bay Packers.[3] This was one of the top drafts by a team in NFL history; ahead of Francis, the Packers selected linebacker Dan Currie (3rd), fullback Jim Taylor (15th), linebacker Ray Nitschke (36th), and guard Jerry Kramer (39th).[11]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Francis_(American_football)

Not really.....Topps NFL cards from that era are pretty inexpensive still...nothing compared to the baseball card market of that era----plus there was such poor quality control, mistakes were very common.

The most expensive cards I own are Hornung and Starr '57 rookie cards...I paid about $125 for each. Have a look at what a Hank Aaron rookie card goes for...

You can buy a  lot of neat Packer cards from the 50's on EBay for under $15.

SD....No problem.

Mrs. Blair Kiel is not too thrilled with my hobby. I have a goal of collecting every Milwaukee Brave card from 1953-65...every Packer card from 1948-75 and every Brewer card from 1970-82.

That includes specialty sets  (and coins and pins)like Johnston Cookies, Salada tea coins, Milwaukee Police cards, Post Cereal cards, Bazooka gum cards, Spic n'span cards (yeah, the dry cleaners) and Kahn's meats.....

It's quite a task.

I'm 97% there...some things are just too scarce or too expensive (i.e Aaron rookie card)

Last edited by Blair Kiel
Blair Kiel posted:

SD....No problem.

Mrs. Blair Kiel is not too thrilled with my hobby. I have a goal of collecting every Milwaukee Brave card from 1953-65...every Packer card from 1948-75 and every Brewer card from 1970-82.

That includes specialty sets  (and coins and pins)like Johnston Cookies, Salada tea coins, Milwaukee Police cards, Post Cereal cards, Bazooka gum cards, Spic n'span cards (yeah, the dry cleaners) and Kahn's meats.....

It's quite a task.

I'm 97% there...some things are just too scarce or too expensive (i.e Aaron rookie card)

Nerd.

You rock Timmy! The Topps cards are the easy ones to get....full sets from the 70's are still pretty reasonable. It's the specialty sets of things like stamps, pins, Kelloggs 3-D cards ( the ones they put out in the 70's were really beautiful) Bazooka panels, bottle caps ...they are a challenge. I just finished the  set of 1969 Sunoco pins (yeah, made in "69, for the '70 season) I'll post a picture tonight....see? Now you have something to look forward to...

Last edited by Blair Kiel
Blair Kiel posted:

You rock Timmy! The Topps cards are the easy ones to get....full sets from the 70's are still pretty reasonable. It's the specialty sets of things like stamps, pins, Kelloggs 3-D cards ( the ones they put out in the 70's were really beautiful) Bazooka panels, bottle caps ...they are a challenge. I just finished the  set of 1969 Sunoco pins (yeah, made in "69, for the '70 season) I'll post a picture tonight....see? Now you have something to look forward to...

Bottle caps...

Wow, that brings me back.  It must have been the early 70's when I collected Packer bottle caps (the plastic inside the cap).  I am 99% sure it was Coca Cola.  They had some folder or something you could paste them on.  If you got them all, which I did, you could redeem the set for a red white and blue football.

I remember that football though now I'd much rather have the bottle cap collection!

My first recollection of bottle caps was when Pepsi put letters (printed on the plastic part) in them. You had to collect enough letters to spell out some phrase that was related to Pepsi (The Pepsi Generation, perhaps?). They made a card or booklet of some kind you could glue them to to redeem them.
My Dad was a mechanic at a garage then, and he showed me how to use his magnetic retriever to get the caps out of the 'box' they fell into when you used the built-in opener on the machine.
I'd empty it out regularly, but never won anything. Dad probably appreciated that it kept me out of his hair for a while...

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