2jakes
I'll Lock Up
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- Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
(To be fair, if you get a weenie under the stands, it comes off a roller grill. Only the roving vendors still have the steam boxes.)
Roller grill are L7 weenies!
(To be fair, if you get a weenie under the stands, it comes off a roller grill. Only the roving vendors still have the steam boxes.)
So are you a collector of old baseball equipment? I have a few old gloves that I've managed to get my hands on, but not a serious collector or anything. I really love old equipment, especially the gloves. I'm not much of a collector of things, but that's one thing I can see myself getting in to.
Using a few internet inflation calculators, $5.5 in 1919 translates into anywhere from $77 to $140 today (I'd bet the high number is closer to reality).
Purely for curiosity sake, I did an internet search and face value for box seats for last year's World Series was ~$450.
Hence, World Series tickets have greatly outstripped inflation - no shock there.
It's probably even worse if one could compare the scalped prices.
The basic, standard Kayem Fenway Frank at Fenway Park is $5.25. You can finish it in three bites.
The basic, standard Kayem Fenway Frank at Fenway Park is $5.25. You can finish it in three bites.
The story of Babe Ruth's 1925 collapse went down in history as the "Big Belly Ache," but that was, alas, a sanitized story created by the media. In reality, the Big Fellow's problem was a few inches below the belly -- he had a severe case of gonorrhea.
Hot dogs today are actually far more sanitary and wholesome than those of a century ago. Pre-Pure Food laws, anything went for sausage -- sawdust, abattoir floor sweepings, gristle, blood, you name it. Hot dogs had a poisonous reputation in the early years of the 20th century as an adulterated, substandard food, and many people avoided them even into the 1920s for just that reason. The proprietors of the Nathan's stand at Coney Island went so far as to hire pitchmen to dress up in surgeon's smocks and eat hot dogs on the street so the public would think they were "doctor approved."
The story of Babe Ruth's 1925 collapse went down in history as the "Big Belly Ache," but that was, alas, a sanitized story created by the media. In reality, the Big Fellow's problem was a few inches below the belly -- he had a severe case of gonorrhea.