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US Market Testing

Each month I bid on United States lots at five or six major American and overseas auctions. I bid on a small variety of nineteenth century, twentieth century and back of the book items. I don’t do this because we need the stamps or to make a profit reselling what I buy. I do it

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Stamps for Sale

I just went to the Ebay site and added up the items for sale in the four main philatelic categories. They were over 1.2 million different offerings. Adding in the smaller categories would give you over 1.5 million. Stamp Wants (another web auction service) has a staggering 3 million philatelic items for sale. When I

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End of Year Sale

We posted today our annual end of the year sale with over a million dollars of inventory, all at 60% of its original price. Go to our web site and click and you will find value like never before. And Apfelbaum full satisfaction guarentee applies.

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Changes

Last year Philly Stamp Company moved out of Philly to a new home in suburban New Jersey. We moved out of Philadelphia seven years ago and center city now has only one stamp dealer- Alfred Capelli- whose signage boasts trains and hobbies as well as stamps. In the 1950’s Philly had over 20 stamp shops.

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Mauritius

“Mauritius” is a play by Theresa Rebeck that played on Broadway in 2007. In the play, a young woman inherits a stamp collection that contains the two Post Office Mauritius stamps which together have a catalog value of nearly $2 million. She appears to have no idea what she has and takes the stamps to

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The Bannister Conundrum

In 1954 Roger Bannister accomplished a feat that many sports observers had never thought was possible. He ran a mile in under 4 minutes. Within six weeks Bannister’s own record was broken. Running faster than a four minute mile became the norm among world class runners though previously the record had held for centuries (the

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Plate Block Collecting

Plate numbers were put in the margins of United States sheets so that later the printer would know which sheets were printed from which plates so that plate wear and damage could be monitored. Collectors noticed the marginal numbers and began at first collecting single stamps with the selvedge attached as an adjunct to their

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