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Steph

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Posts posted by Steph

  1. Bump because Jack got me thinking about BC's. Jack, this thread was originally for non-Jabo buttcracks, but some Jabos wriggled in as they are wont to do.

    I'm still hoping for some good Ravenswood and Heaton pix. I'm sure we can get BC's there. And I have a Jackson BC which I hope to get a pic of.

    Here are some Mid-Atlantic BC's PlanB posted. Made in 2001.

    post-37-1171508714.jpgpost-37-1171508788.jpg

  2. I meant the ones with the champagne base. I guess. I haven't seen the base color on all of them, but I presume it's champagne. I said red white blue because I focused on the ribbon colors. Some of the transarent red ribbons there are where I found lutz hiding. I'm not sure I've found it all. Need to change the setting. Put them on white paper instead of the more reflective bubble wrap.

  3. 1910?

    Is this the catalog mentioned above?

    M. F. Christensen booklet:

    (click to enlarge)

    MFCBooklet1cover-1.jpg . . . MFCBooklet2SummaryOfLine-1.jpg

    MFCBooklet3RegularPacking-1.jpg . . . MFCBooklet4pp2_3-1.jpg

    MFCBooklet5pp4_5-1.jpg . . . MFCBooklet6pp6_7-1.jpg

    MFCBooklet7pp8_9-1.jpg . . . MFCBooklet8pp10_11-1.jpg

    "Remember the name Christensen's. Known and used the world over."

    bonus material :-)

    A possible "travelers' sample box" recently sold on ebay. Found in an estate sale in Kentucky, across the Ohio river from Cincinnati, for $5. The 5/8" marble is missing but would fit perfectly if present.

    290277508752_ahfan60_g.jpg290277508752_ahfan60.jpg

    290277508752_ahfan60_e.jpg290277508752_ahfan60_f.jpg

  4. 1910

    I think this is most of an article on MFC which appeared in a Canadian trade journal, Bookseller and Stationer. Volume 26, which I think was from 1910. Google Books only wanted to give me one "snippet" but I tickled it until it gave me three. A complete copy of the page should be available from Princeton by interlibrary loan through your local library. (Maybe I'll get one someday.)

    1910_or_so_MFC_Bookseller_Stationer.jpg

    (source)

  5. 1909

    Martin Christensen advocating for increased tariffs to protect the infant American glass marble and caster ball industry. E. Strobel arguing against.

    Tariff Hearings Before the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, Sixtieth Congress, 1908-1909, Vol. VIII, pp. 7881 - 7883

    1913

    Tariffs again. Martin Christensen contributes information.

    62nd Congress, 3rd Session, December 2, 1912 - March 4, 1913, House Documents, Vol. 131, pp. 5205 - 5230

    1917

    This might be a reference to MFC. It's some company which makes marbles and caster balls, and exports some of their product.

    The Glass Industry: Report on the cost of production of glass in the United States, p. 392

    There are other marbles references on other pages.

  6. 1948

    Marble making machinery is mentioned in connection with the William J. Miller Company in Golden Progress: History and Official Program of the 50th Anniversary Celebration of Swissvale, Pennsylvania, 1898-1948. I hadn't realized he had his own company. Was he also affiliated with any particular marble manufacturer?

    The book online is broken into parts. The marble mention is on p. 81, found in Part 7.

    Title page: Part 2

    (click to enlarge)

    1948_GoldenProgress_WmJMillerCo_-1.jpg

    Mr. Miller had many patents on glass. Plugging in the keywords, miller, glass and swissvale at the Google patents page pulls up many entries.

    http://www.google.com/patents?q=miller+glass+swissvale

    Leave out the word "glass" and you get bunches more. He apparently did a lot of work with pottery also. And had a "pottery engineering company", also in Swissvale?

    Here, I believe is the patent for what we call the Miller machine:

    Machine for Manufacturing Marbles and Similar Articles

    Patent number: 1601699

    Filing date: Dec 12, 1924

    Issue date: Sep 28, 1926

    Which if any of his other patents might be connected with marble making?

    This one was a big deal, right? This is the famous Hartford-Empire patent?

    Process and Apparatus for Feeding Glass

    Patent number: 1942035

    Filing date: Dec 20, 1929

    Issue date: Jan 2, 1934

  7. hi Griff, are you upset? well let Grandma soothe your brow. and you know that its always "because I sais so" with Mama. you know as much about marbles as anyone just dont "beat a dead horse". you ID it then drop it and go on. and besides, got you movin huh? :) :) :) :)

    Yeah, Griff, don't beat a dead horse. Just ID the marble three times (Post #7, #9, #12), then drop it and start another thread where you call people babies and idiots. You could learn a lot from Mama.

  8. Yah, I think we're looking at most or all Master here.

    Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm under the impression that there were no black pelt bananas. With black, I'd look at master or bogard. I don't know if Bogard did that grape shade of black. Master did though.

    Master also did white, light blue, pale green, yellow and various red and orange shades. Maybe others.

    Some of Master's bananas got stringy.

  9. Here's a bit about Daudt. Don't know if it's the best avaiable. Just did a quick google. :-)

    1901: Christopher Daudt's home in Toledo.

    1908: Tariff Hearings, p. 4046

    1910: Memoirs of Lucas County and the City of Toledo, p. 593

    1917: A History of Northwest Ohio, p. 1124

    In 1919, a Michigan Bureau of Labor report said they employed 4 men and 10 women.

    I haven't yet tried to reconcile the crockery and "agate" prices with anything else. that would require focus ! I'm not up to that at the moment. :blush:

  10. 1950

    This March 1950 ad is the latest of any sort I've seen for Akro so far -- not counting the one for the sale of the property.

    1950_03_AkroAgate_Playthings.jpg

    Note the reference to a N.Y. showroom.

    A showroom is mentioned in a 1938 ad also, with a different room number. (So this isn't necessarily a holdover from an earlier ad.)

  11. Late 1940's

    1948

    Lots of info in this article. Different versions were found in various papers around the country. I don't recall how complete this version is but offhand I think it looks pretty good. I'll compare others as I come across them again.

    (click to enlarge)

    1948_04_25_pD4_AkroHeatherington_15.jpg

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