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A Cellar of Fine Vintages / Re: Card Patents from 1800s - National Playing Card Company
« on: March 21, 2024, 09:35:13 AM »
This is incredible information. Thanks.
It'll take me awhile to think about this and to follow up with the "Virtual Card Catalog" which I did not know anything about.
Right now, I'm just trying to understand the card and what it means.
Do you know exactly what was being patented? Was it the ace of spades? I would have thought the aces were just trademarked.
Also, is there any more info that can be retrieved about the patent?
Copyright Assignor: U.S. Playing Card Company - (New Jersey)
Full house poker playing cards, no. 555
Spanish cards, no. 95.
Trophy whist playing cards
New poker deck, National Meth (rev) dup, whist
Assigned to | U.S. Playing Card Company - (Ohil).
Original proprietor | U.S. Playing Card Company.
Original entry | 1895: No, 65923 _ 5927, inv.
Assignment recorded | Assignment book v 78 p. 9,
It'll take me awhile to think about this and to follow up with the "Virtual Card Catalog" which I did not know anything about.
Right now, I'm just trying to understand the card and what it means.
Do you know exactly what was being patented? Was it the ace of spades? I would have thought the aces were just trademarked.
Also, is there any more info that can be retrieved about the patent?
Copyright Assignor: U.S. Playing Card Company - (New Jersey)
Full house poker playing cards, no. 555
Spanish cards, no. 95.
Trophy whist playing cards
New poker deck, National Meth (rev) dup, whist
Assigned to | U.S. Playing Card Company - (Ohil).
Original proprietor | U.S. Playing Card Company.
Original entry | 1895: No, 65923 _ 5927, inv.
Assignment recorded | Assignment book v 78 p. 9,