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William Marbles

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Posts posted by William Marbles

  1. Hey Chris, well after an hour search (last bag in the box) I found them.

    15 in all, all came together in a vintage lot.

    --i didn't wipe them off---

    clearmoonielike.JPG

    send me an email. all for one price

    +1/2" to -11/16, factory mint 1 has the typical peltier blowout

    remember I thought these were Koko's.

    William

  2. Nice Roger and Bob!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Here's a few more that was gettting ready to get bagged for storage.

    MMlookalikes.JPG

    Check out the face below the butterscotch one...LOL

    The poke-a-dotted one my not be one of these types...???.. It's not developed right anyway, so it stays there.

    I'm glad I'm not the only one stashin' some away for the future.

    William

  3. Here's my bag.

    BrownMfgCo.JPG

    The Game of Chinker-Chek

    The following was pieced together from various newspaper articles recently received on the life of Lawrence W. Brown and his invention of Chinker-Chek.

    Lawrence W. Brown of Brown manufacturing company, Clinton, Missouri, experimented with a variation of Chinese chess starting in 1935.

    The game he came up with allowed one to six players to be involved. In 1937 sales of this new game were limited to the Midwest and western states.

    At that time, Ohio was the furthest state to the East that was supplied.

    The boards were manufactured by Brown manufacturing company while the marbles used on the boards came in 100 lb. cartons and by the car load from one of the marble companies in West Virginia.

    At one point Brown manufacturing was turning out 4,000 Chinker-Chek boards a day. The game board was manufactured with a patent pending but they were unable to obtain a full patent, for some unstated reason.

    When the 7 year patent pending period ran out, other toy companies began making the game. Chinker-Chek is more commonly known as Chinese checkers.

    Mr. Brown was born in 1881, East of Clinton, Mo. and died tragically in a gas explosion at his factory on April 4, 1960.

  4. Here's some that are often forgotten about.....

    Horsehair Oxbloods.........thinking Champion/Alley's made them.

    OxBlood.JPG

    Pretty sure the center is a Road n' Tunnel CA w/Oxblood shoulders

    GREAT OXBLOOD examples everyone!!!!!!!!!! Supernice stuff..

    -William

  5. Bloody.JPG

    Hmmm, Thanks Alan. But what color shoud it florece? One on left is bright green. But the other two have Pink/orange/red shade and "purple, btw; is the first time I've ever seen a black light make this color. "

    Good tip!

    What about electric yellow slag's? Mine glow a great yellow under UV.

  6. Ok, you guys made me open my display table....

    First let me say this, these are not my normal format for pic's trying something new.....

    With that said....let's see some bricks..

    Purple Brick.

    b1.JPG

    red and white

    b3.JPG

    and I'll throw this one in as well, if you notice the cut mark......green..but this is a slag.

    (i was getting a reflection on the right column, sorry)

    b2.JPG

    Enjoy....

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