Hobbies connect to our inner ten year old and on some level when we collect we attempt to recreate that world. This is one of the reasons why collectors of every generation have rarely been happy with newer issue stamps. But most of the fuss over the Columbians had to do with the face value of the stamps. The face value of $16.34 was a high percentage of a working man’s wage in 1893 and very few people could afford the stamps. Higher value Columbians continued to sell at a discount from face value for years in the trade due to low demand. If it wasn’t for the use of dollar value Columbians on controlled mail (where the sender could get the used stamps back from the recipient-such as interbank post of money and documents) the oversupply of mint dollar values might have lasted decades. (In a controlled mail situation a collector can use a $1 stamp that cost him $1.25 on a package if he knows he can sell the used stamp for 50c.) Like most things philatelic, time has been the great healer and the stamps that in Earl Apfelbaum’s childhood people held their nose at are today among the most popular of sets and the cornerstone of every United States stamp collection.