thunderw21
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,044
- Location
- Iowa
Yesterday I bought what appeared to be an original December 7th 1941 Honolulu Advertiser newspaper at a local antique shop for $45, more than I would have like but oh well. After a quick examination at the shop it appeared to be correct but upon reading through it back home I found that it was a 1974 reprint. The only evidence of this was "Pacific Film Corp. 1974" in tiny, almost unreadable print under the heading on the front page. I wasn't too happy.
So, I took it back to the antique shop, new information in hand, to see if the seller would want to sell it for less, otherwise I was going to get a full refund. The manager calls the dealer who proceeds to say "of course it's a reproduction, everyone knows that" and "an original would be in a musuem". He would not accept my offer for a lower price so I returned it and got a refund. Nowhere on the seller's price tag did it state that the newspaper was a reprint, leading me to believe that either the dealer did not know it was a reprint until we told him or he knew and was trying to screw us over. Either way, he said he is going keep the newspaper and frame it.
Be careful where ever you buy militaria/antiques.
Regards,
Will
So, I took it back to the antique shop, new information in hand, to see if the seller would want to sell it for less, otherwise I was going to get a full refund. The manager calls the dealer who proceeds to say "of course it's a reproduction, everyone knows that" and "an original would be in a musuem". He would not accept my offer for a lower price so I returned it and got a refund. Nowhere on the seller's price tag did it state that the newspaper was a reprint, leading me to believe that either the dealer did not know it was a reprint until we told him or he knew and was trying to screw us over. Either way, he said he is going keep the newspaper and frame it.
Be careful where ever you buy militaria/antiques.
Regards,
Will