US2008829A - Turntable tray for card games - Google Patents

Turntable tray for card games Download PDF

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Publication number
US2008829A
US2008829A US749722A US74972234A US2008829A US 2008829 A US2008829 A US 2008829A US 749722 A US749722 A US 749722A US 74972234 A US74972234 A US 74972234A US 2008829 A US2008829 A US 2008829A
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turntable
cup
panels
cups
depressed
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US749722A
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Henry M Israel
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63FCARD, BOARD, OR ROULETTE GAMES; INDOOR GAMES USING SMALL MOVING PLAYING BODIES; VIDEO GAMES; GAMES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • A63F1/00Card games
    • A63F1/06Card games appurtenances

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a trayfor use in conjunction with a card game, and it has for its principal'object the-provision of a rotatable turntable, made preferably of a single" piece, which is provided with a plurality of depressed token receiving cups and depressed and divided panels and playindicating panels.
  • One of the'main advantages of'the present de vice is that it is made up into a single member, though it may have plural parts, and is rotatable,
  • The-present turntable is especially adapted to act as a playing adjunct to the game of Michigan rummy.
  • Fig. 1 is a plan View ofthe present improve I of the cups showing a modified form of construction.
  • the turntable comprises a circular disc, generally denoted by A the plane surface of which forms the main plane of the turntable, and from which plane surface all other depressions and beads are developed.
  • the turntable is preferably made of sheet metal, blanked and stamped to desired form.
  • the turntable has a centrally disposed circular depression I i therein, as viewed in Figs. 1 and 2, and the depression or cup I I is surrounded by an adjacent upraised, endless bead 5.
  • the turntable at its outer perimeter is pro vided with an integral down turned flange 2, and on the plane l, adjacent the flange 2, the turntable is provided with an upraised circular bead 3.
  • the circular bead 3 is connected to inner circular bead 5 by four radially and equally spaced, upraised beads 4--4-44.
  • a second set of secondary depressed panels such as E6'6t, one for each of the four'prirnary depressed panels, these panels t being depressed slightly below plane l, and'the bottom thereof being parallel to the plane surface, as in Fig. 3.
  • These panels 5 are preferably of elongate rectangular formation, of about'the dimensions of a standard playing card. These panels may be omitted and instead maybe substituted by imprinted-facsimiles of playing cards as noted below.
  • the panels 5 are preferably imprinted with a [symbol or facsimile representationof a playing card, not shown, but understood, a different card being shown in each panel 6.
  • the upper left hand panel-5' may have the representation of the queen of clubs
  • the panel 6 to the right thereof mayha-ve the representation of the ace of diamonds
  • the lower right hand panel ii may have the represen tation of the ace of spades
  • the-lower left hand panel 6 may have the representation -of king of hearts.
  • each of the'facsimile cards may have imprinted external thereto butadjacent the lower right hand side as at'a, b, c, d, Fig. 1, the symbol of such cards, as'above enumerated.
  • the cardsymbols are so positioned that when the turntable is in play on the card table, the facsimile card S-in front of each of the four players seated, at the table and its adjacent symbol are in readable position, the length of the card, and its panel, beingparallel to the beads 4, all of the' panels 6 being equally spaced about the center of the turntable in symmetrical position.
  • each of the four primary panels and symmetrically located with reference to each other are located four preferably circularly formed depressions I, 8, 9 and lil, these forming a third set of depressed portions, in the form of cups.
  • These cups are formed as shown and described to permit the easy manual removal of tokens or markers therefrom, during'play.
  • the bottoms of the cups 6, l, 8 and 9 and the bottom edge of the flange 2 are all arranged to terminate in a single bottom plane, as indicated by the dotted line I 2, Fig. 2.
  • the central depressed circular cup II also so formed for the purposes set out for cups 1, 8, 9 and M, is deeper drawn than the other four cups and accordingly, the apex M of its curved bottom extends slightly below plane [2, as at l3, Fig. 2,
  • tokens are placed in the various cups, or extracted therefrom, depending on the run of cards held by each player.
  • Fig. 4 illustrates a modified form of cup construction. While it is preferably intended to make the herein turntable of suitable thickness of sheet material such as tin, sheet iron, aluminum and the like, which may be drawn up in one piece, as in Figs. 1, 2 and 3, other forms of material such as fibre board or even sheet metal, may be used and the plane surface I of the turntable blanked with holes at the cup positions with a slightly angled circular flange l5 thereabout, and a sep arately formed, flanged cup I6 set into the flange l5 and suitably afiixed thereto, by known means.
  • sheet material such as tin, sheet iron, aluminum and the like
  • other forms of material such as fibre board or even sheet metal
  • tokens such as may be used with the game of Michigan rummy are segregated in their proper, related postions to the card players, without loss and intermixing, until taken up by the players, thus insuring facility of play and increased pleasure in playing.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a table, a token receiving cup in the center of said table, a plurality of token receiving cups circumferentially arranged about said central cup, and means provided upon said central cut to act as a pivotal point upon which to rotate said turntable.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a table divided into plural panels, a token receiving cup in the center of said table, a plurality of token receiving cups circumferentially arranged about said central cup, and means provided upon said central cup to act as a pivotal point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a table divided into plural panels, a token receiving cup in the center of said table and a plurality of token receiving cups arranged one in each panel and about said central cup, the central cup being larger than the cups in said panels whereby it may act as a pivotal point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a table divided into plural panels by upraised beads, a token receiving cup in the center of said table, and a plurality of token receiving cups circumferentially arranged about said central cup, one cup for each panel, said cups being smaller than the central cup, whereby said central cup may act as a pivotal point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a flanged table, having upraised beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel and a depressed cup in said central portion, said cup in said central portion being deeper than the said cups and forming a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a flanged, circular disc, having upraised, merged straight and circular beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central circular portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel, symmetrically arranged with reference to one another and a depressed cup in said circular portion, said cup in said circular portion being larger than said cups and forming a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a flanged table, having upraised beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel, a depressed cup in said central portion, said cup in said central portion forming'a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable, and a plurality of facsimile playing cards imprinted, one each adjacent each panelled cup.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a flanged table, having upraised beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel, a depressed cup in said central portion, said cup in said central portion forming a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable, a rectangular panel adjacent each panelled cup and an imprint of a game card in each said rectangular panel.
  • a turntable game tray comprising a table of stamped sheet metal having depressed panel surfaces dividing the table top into a plurality of equal areas, depressed cups in said panels, one cup for each panel, a depressed cup in the central portion of said table, a depressed rectangular panel in each panel surface adjacent each panelled cup and an imprint of a game card in each said rectangular panel, said central cup being deeper than the panelled cups to form an extended rotating apex for the table.

Description

July 23, 1935'. H. M. lSRAEL,
TURNTABLE TRAY FOR CARD GAMES Filed 001;. 24, 1954 INVENTO R,
fienryM/sraei;
MM MZ Patented July 23, 1935 UNITED STATES moans PATENTv OFFICE The present invention relates to a trayfor use in conjunction with a card game, and it has for its principal'object the-provision of a rotatable turntable, made preferably of a single" piece, which is provided with a plurality of depressed token receiving cups and depressed and divided panels and playindicating panels.
One of the'main advantages of'the present de vice is that it is made up into a single member, though it may have plural parts, and is rotatable,
upon a card table, on its central token receiving cup so that during card play, that portion of the turntable away-from the player may be brought around to the player, thus obviating thenecessity of the player reaching across the card table or the turntable.
The-present turntable is especially adapted to act as a playing adjunct to the game of Michigan rummy.
The foregoing features, and other advantages,-
will appear as the herein description proceeds; and it is obvious that modifications may be made in the herein structure without departingfrom the spirit hereof or the scope of the appended claims.
In the drawing,
Fig. 1 is a plan View ofthe present improve I of the cups showing a modified form of construction. I
As in Fig. 1 the turntable comprises a circular disc, generally denoted by A the plane surface of which forms the main plane of the turntable, and from which plane surface all other depressions and beads are developed. The turntable is preferably made of sheet metal, blanked and stamped to desired form.
The turntable has a centrally disposed circular depression I i therein, as viewed in Figs. 1 and 2, and the depression or cup I I is surrounded by an adjacent upraised, endless bead 5.
The turntable at its outer perimeter is pro vided with an integral down turned flange 2, and on the plane l, adjacent the flange 2, the turntable is provided with an upraised circular bead 3.
The circular bead 3 is connected to inner circular bead 5 by four radially and equally spaced, upraised beads 4--4-44.
As thus described the upraised beading 3, 4 and 5-act to create a plurality of four divided, primary depressed panels, of which the plane surface l forms the bottom. There is provided a second set of secondary depressed panels such as E6'6t, one for each of the four'prirnary depressed panels, these panels t being depressed slightly below plane l, and'the bottom thereof being parallel to the plane surface, as in Fig. 3. These panels 5 are preferably of elongate rectangular formation, of about'the dimensions of a standard playing card. These panels may be omitted and instead maybe substituted by imprinted-facsimiles of playing cards as noted below.
The panels 5 are preferably imprinted with a [symbol or facsimile representationof a playing card, not shown, but understood, a different card being shown in each panel 6. For instance asviewed in i, the upper left hand panel-5' may have the representation of the queen of clubs, the panel 6 to the right thereof mayha-ve the representation of the ace of diamonds, the lower right hand panel ii may have the represen tation of the ace of spades and the-lower left hand panel 6 may have the representation -of king of hearts. I
1 Further, each of the'facsimile cards may have imprinted external thereto butadjacent the lower right hand side as at'a, b, c, d, Fig. 1, the symbol of such cards, as'above enumerated. The cardsymbols are so positioned that when the turntable is in play on the card table, the facsimile card S-in front of each of the four players seated, at the table and its adjacent symbol are in readable position, the length of the card, and its panel, beingparallel to the beads 4, all of the' panels 6 being equally spaced about the center of the turntable in symmetrical position.
In each of the four primary panels, and symmetrically located with reference to each other are located four preferably circularly formed depressions I, 8, 9 and lil, these forming a third set of depressed portions, in the form of cups. These cups are formed as shown and described to permit the easy manual removal of tokens or markers therefrom, during'play.
The bottoms of the cups 6, l, 8 and 9 and the bottom edge of the flange 2 are all arranged to terminate in a single bottom plane, as indicated by the dotted line I 2, Fig. 2.
The central depressed circular cup II, also so formed for the purposes set out for cups 1, 8, 9 and M, is deeper drawn than the other four cups and accordingly, the apex M of its curved bottom extends slightly below plane [2, as at l3, Fig. 2,
and thus acts as a peg or spinning point upon which the turntable A may be rotated upon the card table top by the player, from time to time, as the play proceeds, so that the desired section of the turntable is made conveniently accessible to any player without undue reaching.
As the card play proceeds tokens are placed in the various cups, or extracted therefrom, depending on the run of cards held by each player.
Fig. 4 illustrates a modified form of cup construction. While it is preferably intended to make the herein turntable of suitable thickness of sheet material such as tin, sheet iron, aluminum and the like, which may be drawn up in one piece, as in Figs. 1, 2 and 3, other forms of material such as fibre board or even sheet metal, may be used and the plane surface I of the turntable blanked with holes at the cup positions with a slightly angled circular flange l5 thereabout, and a sep arately formed, flanged cup I6 set into the flange l5 and suitably afiixed thereto, by known means.
By the construction herein, tokens such as may be used with the game of Michigan rummy are segregated in their proper, related postions to the card players, without loss and intermixing, until taken up by the players, thus insuring facility of play and increased pleasure in playing.
Having thus described the invention what is claimed is: V a
1. A turntable game tray, comprising a table, a token receiving cup in the center of said table, a plurality of token receiving cups circumferentially arranged about said central cup, and means provided upon said central cut to act as a pivotal point upon which to rotate said turntable.
2. A turntable game tray comprising a table divided into plural panels, a token receiving cup in the center of said table, a plurality of token receiving cups circumferentially arranged about said central cup, and means provided upon said central cup to act as a pivotal point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
3. A turntable game tray comprising a table divided into plural panels, a token receiving cup in the center of said table and a plurality of token receiving cups arranged one in each panel and about said central cup, the central cup being larger than the cups in said panels whereby it may act as a pivotal point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
4. A turntable game tray comprising a table divided into plural panels by upraised beads, a token receiving cup in the center of said table, and a plurality of token receiving cups circumferentially arranged about said central cup, one cup for each panel, said cups being smaller than the central cup, whereby said central cup may act as a pivotal point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
5. A turntable game tray comprising a flanged table, having upraised beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel and a depressed cup in said central portion, said cup in said central portion being deeper than the said cups and forming a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
6. A turntable game tray comprising a flanged, circular disc, having upraised, merged straight and circular beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central circular portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel, symmetrically arranged with reference to one another and a depressed cup in said circular portion, said cup in said circular portion being larger than said cups and forming a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable.
7. A turntable game tray comprising a flanged table, having upraised beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel, a depressed cup in said central portion, said cup in said central portion forming'a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable, and a plurality of facsimile playing cards imprinted, one each adjacent each panelled cup.
8. A turntable game tray comprising a flanged table, having upraised beading on its upper surface, dividing said surface into a plurality of equally spaced panels and a central portion, depressed cups in said panels, one for each panel, a depressed cup in said central portion, said cup in said central portion forming a central point upon which to horizontally rotate said turntable, a rectangular panel adjacent each panelled cup and an imprint of a game card in each said rectangular panel..
9. A turntable game tray comprising a table of stamped sheet metal having depressed panel surfaces dividing the table top into a plurality of equal areas, depressed cups in said panels, one cup for each panel, a depressed cup in the central portion of said table, a depressed rectangular panel in each panel surface adjacent each panelled cup and an imprint of a game card in each said rectangular panel, said central cup being deeper than the panelled cups to form an extended rotating apex for the table.
HENRY M. ISRAEL.
US749722A 1934-10-24 1934-10-24 Turntable tray for card games Expired - Lifetime US2008829A (en)

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Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2624582A (en) * 1949-10-22 1953-01-06 Ruth F Molinar Interlocking card tray and card holder
US3143348A (en) * 1961-02-24 1964-08-04 Carsen & Son Ltd Card game for amusement and educational purposes
US3232622A (en) * 1963-02-26 1966-02-01 Mahlon W Lambert Spinner-type card game apparatus
US4302012A (en) * 1980-02-25 1981-11-24 Augustine Di Giovanni Rotary gameboard with removable compartments
US5364104A (en) * 1988-04-18 1994-11-15 D&D Gaming Patents, Inc. Apparatus for progressive jackpot gaming
US5364105A (en) * 1988-04-18 1994-11-15 D & D Gaming Patents, Inc. Method of progressive jackpot twenty-one
US5377973A (en) * 1988-04-18 1995-01-03 D&D Gaming Patents, Inc. Methods and apparatus for playing casino card games including a progressive jackpot
US5544893A (en) * 1988-04-18 1996-08-13 Progressive Games, Inc. Apparatus for progressive jackpot gaming
US5577731A (en) * 1995-07-24 1996-11-26 Progressive Games, Inc. Method of progressive jackpot twenty-one wherein the predetermined winning arrangement of cards include two aces, three aces and four aces
US5725216A (en) * 1995-10-13 1998-03-10 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of playing poker games
US5743798A (en) * 1996-09-30 1998-04-28 Progressive Games, Inc. Apparatus for playing a roulette game including a progressive jackpot
US5836818A (en) * 1988-04-18 1998-11-17 Progressive Games, Inc. Coin acceptor including multi-state visual indicator apparatus and method
US6336859B2 (en) 1993-03-31 2002-01-08 Progressive Games, Inc. Method for progressive jackpot gaming
US6375189B1 (en) 1997-11-20 2002-04-23 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods for providing a jackpot component in a casino game in which an initial set of cards and additional cards are dealt
US6729620B2 (en) 1995-07-24 2004-05-04 Donald W. Jones Methods for providing a jackpot component in a casino game in which an initial set of cards and additional cards are dealt
US20080224402A1 (en) * 2007-03-14 2008-09-18 Shuffle Master, Inc. Bad beat side bet on house-banked casino card games
US20090295091A1 (en) * 2002-05-20 2009-12-03 Abbott Eric L Poker games with player qualification
US8590900B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2013-11-26 Shfl Entertainment, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games
US9183705B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2015-11-10 Bally Gaming, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games
US9373220B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2016-06-21 Bally Gaming, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games and related apparatuses
US10357706B2 (en) 2002-05-20 2019-07-23 Bally Gaming, Inc. Four-card poker with variable wager over a network

Cited By (35)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2624582A (en) * 1949-10-22 1953-01-06 Ruth F Molinar Interlocking card tray and card holder
US3143348A (en) * 1961-02-24 1964-08-04 Carsen & Son Ltd Card game for amusement and educational purposes
US3232622A (en) * 1963-02-26 1966-02-01 Mahlon W Lambert Spinner-type card game apparatus
US4302012A (en) * 1980-02-25 1981-11-24 Augustine Di Giovanni Rotary gameboard with removable compartments
US5913726A (en) * 1988-04-18 1999-06-22 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of progressive jackpot gaming
US5794964A (en) * 1988-04-18 1998-08-18 Progressive Games, Inc. Apparatus for progressive jackpot gaming
US5377973A (en) * 1988-04-18 1995-01-03 D&D Gaming Patents, Inc. Methods and apparatus for playing casino card games including a progressive jackpot
US5544893A (en) * 1988-04-18 1996-08-13 Progressive Games, Inc. Apparatus for progressive jackpot gaming
US6312330B1 (en) 1988-04-18 2001-11-06 Progessive Games, Inc. Methods of progressive jackpot gaming
US5626341A (en) * 1988-04-18 1997-05-06 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of progressive jackpot gaming
US6073930A (en) * 1988-04-18 2000-06-13 Progressive Games, Inc. Apparatus for progressive jackpot gaming
US6070878A (en) * 1988-04-18 2000-06-06 Progressive Games, Inc. Apparatus for progressive jackpot gaming
US5795225A (en) * 1988-04-18 1998-08-18 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of progressive jackpot gaming
US5364105A (en) * 1988-04-18 1994-11-15 D & D Gaming Patents, Inc. Method of progressive jackpot twenty-one
US5836818A (en) * 1988-04-18 1998-11-17 Progressive Games, Inc. Coin acceptor including multi-state visual indicator apparatus and method
US6234895B1 (en) 1988-04-18 2001-05-22 Daniel A. Jones Methods of progressive jackpot gaming
US5364104A (en) * 1988-04-18 1994-11-15 D&D Gaming Patents, Inc. Apparatus for progressive jackpot gaming
US6045130A (en) * 1988-04-18 2000-04-04 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of progressive jackpot gaming
US6336859B2 (en) 1993-03-31 2002-01-08 Progressive Games, Inc. Method for progressive jackpot gaming
US6729620B2 (en) 1995-07-24 2004-05-04 Donald W. Jones Methods for providing a jackpot component in a casino game in which an initial set of cards and additional cards are dealt
US5577731A (en) * 1995-07-24 1996-11-26 Progressive Games, Inc. Method of progressive jackpot twenty-one wherein the predetermined winning arrangement of cards include two aces, three aces and four aces
US5964464A (en) * 1995-10-13 1999-10-12 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of playing poker games
US6206374B1 (en) 1995-10-13 2001-03-27 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of playing poker games
US5725216A (en) * 1995-10-13 1998-03-10 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods of playing poker games
US5743798A (en) * 1996-09-30 1998-04-28 Progressive Games, Inc. Apparatus for playing a roulette game including a progressive jackpot
US6375189B1 (en) 1997-11-20 2002-04-23 Progressive Games, Inc. Methods for providing a jackpot component in a casino game in which an initial set of cards and additional cards are dealt
US6402150B1 (en) 1997-11-20 2002-06-11 Progressive Ggames, Inc. Methods for providing a jackpot component in a casino game in which an initial set of cards are dealt
US20090295091A1 (en) * 2002-05-20 2009-12-03 Abbott Eric L Poker games with player qualification
US10357706B2 (en) 2002-05-20 2019-07-23 Bally Gaming, Inc. Four-card poker with variable wager over a network
US8590900B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2013-11-26 Shfl Entertainment, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games
US9183705B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2015-11-10 Bally Gaming, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games
US9373220B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2016-06-21 Bally Gaming, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games and related apparatuses
US9898896B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2018-02-20 Bally Gaming, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games and related systems
US10339766B2 (en) 2004-09-10 2019-07-02 Bally Gaming, Inc. Methods of playing wagering games and related systems
US20080224402A1 (en) * 2007-03-14 2008-09-18 Shuffle Master, Inc. Bad beat side bet on house-banked casino card games

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