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  J.M. Secord Baseball Themed Get This Ink Blotter
 
  • Circa -  1940s
  • Advertiser - J.M. Secord
  • Size - 3.75" x 6.25"
  • Price Guide - $10.00- $15.00 (EX-NM)
 
 
NOTES:
 
   Joseph Parker & Son of New Haven, Conn., made the first modern blotting paper in the late 1850s. Blotters with advertising on the back started appearing in the United States around 1876. Ink blotters, like trade cards, were a good way to attract potential customers. Because people kept them on their desks, the advertiser’s message would always be in front of them, and generate way more advertising ‘impressions’ than many of the conventional trade cards. Ink blotters were popular in the days of fountain pens. They are typically thicker than your standard trade card as they were used to help wipe the excess ink from the tips of the pen.

 J.M Secord, an entrepreneur in the Buffalo, NY area, published "Calendars and Advertising Novelties of All kinds." - "Fine Merchandise for Re-Sale" included items such as ink blotters. Advertising novelty companies would take out ads in the classified section of newspapers across the country looking for salesmen to sell their products. The "Get This" baseball themed ink blotter was a sales tool, issued by J.M Secord of Ebenezer N.Y., to attract potential advertisers.

 In 1914, J. M. Secord publisher, offered boys and girls the chance to earn extra money during their spare time by selling 16"x 20" etched copies of the Declaration of Independence.


 
 
J.M. Secord Baseball Themed Get This Ink Blotter Back

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