I don't know but I have the same book. Bought an old chest of drawers and found the signed piece face down like they were using it as a drawer liner.
Either and live event, or at an autograph signing
Well probably you could go to one of her concerts and she will probably be signing autographs for free absolutely no charge.
it depends on if you have proof of an authentic autograph. You would need a certificate of authenticity to get its full value of $150-300. If you had a picture of the signing it would also be usefull.
Many of the autographed baseballs are valued in price close to $40 each. The amount will vary depending upon the condition they are in and which team he was with at the time of the signing.
For the US the war ended with the signing of the "Paris Peace Accord" in 1973. For South Vietnam, the war ended in 1975, when it fell to North Vietnam.
Yes if you don't have a photo of her she can still send you a autographed photo. But if you go to one of her CD signings, she will give you an autographed photo. But please don't ask me when or where her next CD signing is because I don't keep track of all those things.
No clue. I heard that he (Favre) was not signing anymore because people make copies and sell them
A standard supply function: stand in line, and the man is issued a weapon, signing for it of course.;
A) America bombed North Vietnam to the peace tableB) North Vietnam forced the US to accept it could not win and it sought peaceTake your pick depending on your point of view. Either way, the war ended with the signing of a peace agreement on January 27th 1973.--ANSWER--It is not really "who ended the Vietnam war?" but "how did the Vietnam war end?" in which case i do not have the answer too.
You can't. Not anymore. They integrated it with Facebook awhile back.
Yes I have a picther of babe ruth and also have his signiture
A dead give away is when a promoter is selling balls from, lets say, a Joe DiMaggio. The seller has sometimes hundreds of balls and actually has a signed designation on it, something to the effect of 56/300. Really. Can you see DiMaggio signing 300 baseballs and writing a designation on it. Blatant fraud, and not very well thought up. Look at the ball. Is it pure white or faded over time? And, believe it or not, was it a ball used during the time when DiMaggio still graced us here on earth, or, with a president of the American League that may have started his tenue, just a few years ago. Look for someone who personally had a story or had a picture done with the player to prove it. Most of these signatures are from dealers. You're better off just staying away.