A Scion Society of The Baker Street Irregulars
Five Japanese Sherlockian Themed Phone Cards
“At last, I can put my cards on the table.”
– The Valley of Fear (VALL)
A 50 unit phone card for the Sapporo Snow & Ice Festival
Many of the visitors to this website probably recall the days when pay phones were a common site when walking down a city sidewalk or inside a hotel lobby. You would drop a few coins into the phone, dial the number and make your call. Perhaps you would use a calling card if you were making a long distance call. In the mid 1990’s, there started to appeared prepaid calling cards by some enterprising companies, such as AmeriVox. These prepaid calling cards would generally have 50 call units that would be redeemed at a fixed ratio as the call progressed, until the card would have no remaining call units.
In Asia, prepaid calling cards are quite prevalent and frequently used to promote products or services. Public phones are equipped with card readers. A user would insert the prepaid card into the reader, make the phone call and when finished remove the card. The card reader would punch a small hole into the card, prior to its removal, showing approximately how many call units remain, if any.
In this post, we have five different designs of phone cards from Japan. We have been unable to determine who issued these cards and offer up no suggestions.
Your editor would be very grateful to be contacted by any Japanese Sherlockians, who could translate these and other Japanese phone cards.
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