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Miles,
Got nowhere with a patent search, am I reading the # correctly as 136330?
In the US, for this time period, it is one digit too many for a design patent and one digit too few for a utility patent.
I suspect that it is British patent # with the added info that a patent has also been applied for in the US. Can one look up British patents online?
Yes, you can, at http://www.ipo.gov.uk/types/patent/p-os ... number.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
but search for GB0136330 fetched this result: No Computerised record exists for case some paper records may exist.
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Patent GB 136330 was issued 12/18/1919 to David Aloysius Martin for a hanging ink-pot with a gravity-seal push plunger type mechanism, other intended uses were for "scent, or other liquids, granulated substances, or the like". The illustration shows a different shape item, but perhaps the design was adapted for a novelty dispenser for one of the substances mentioned?
Not a bell, I'm afraid. Yes, Cheryl, I think it's a scent/aftershave dispenser. The bell fills up, and releases one drop when the pusher is depressed.
May I ask how you found the patent info?
I'm still after the name of the maker; I think one of the Bs could be bell, considering the shape of the mark.
Nice work, Cheryl, patent sites seem to confound me every time.
Bell Brothers is the obvious conclusion, but the nearest firm of that name that I could find was a retail watchmakers & goldsmiths located in Doncaster.
Heh, it's my secret source! ;-) Actually, it's the worldwide database of the European Patent Office, accessed from the IPO site. I spend wayyy too much time wandering through patent and book sites.....
The book "The Silversmiths of Birmingham and their Marks", edited by Kenneth Crisp Jones, shows this mark was entered at Birmingham in September of 1919 by the Bell Bros.