North American Tiddlywinks Association

NATwA founded • 27 February 1966


Magazines and Periodicals Other than Newspapers and School Publications

Updated: 21 July 2022.

Toggle Showing All ReferencesEntries are ordered by publication name.
(unknown, BOAC or British Airways) (magazine)
associated with · 
BOAC/British Airways
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
562

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for (unknown, BOAC or British Airways).
published in · 
(unknown, BOAC or British Airways)
date · 
1960s or early 1970s
summary

About Prince Philip and tiddlywinks in the Olympics.

notes · 
Mentioned in NATwA’s Missing Wink, November 1976, pages 5, 9.
notability rating · 
potentially interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2371
Accountancy (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
534

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Accountancy.
published in · 
Accountancy
date · 
April 1988
title · 
Wink Wink
citation · 
section People
media type · 
photograph
media description

Photograph of Jonathan Mapley.

collection · 
original (CUTwC)
tw-ref-ID · 
2287
Advertising Age (magazine)
location · 
USA
website · 
tw-pub-ID · 
535

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Advertising Age.
published in · 
Advertising Age
date · 
10 September 1962
title · 
Rainier Beer’s Tiddlywinks Tourney Is Smashing Success
citation · 
page 30
summary

Oxford team playing in San Francisco

notes · 
http://tiddlywinks.org/bibliography/magazines-and-other-periodicals/advertising-age-10-september-1962/
keywords

1962 Oxford tour

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2288
published in · 
Advertising Age
date · 
16 October 2009
title · 
Anheuser-Busch to Advertise in Super Bowl, Sun to Rise in the East
by · 
Brian Steinberg
content

When in the last decade or more of Super Bowl advertising has Anheuser not been in the game? The CBS ad-sales team could spend its time playing tiddly-winks and still sell ad time for Bud and Bud Light ads

tw-ref-ID · 
2289
AGPC Quarterly (magazine)
associated with · 
Association of Game & Puzzle Collectors
publication ID · 
ISSN 1529-4706
location · 
Brookesville, Maryland, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
607

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for AGPC Quarterly.
published in · 
AGPC Quarterly
date · 
Summer 2008
title · 
Tiddlywinks
subtitle · 
A Royal Match
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
volume 10 • issue 2 • page 20 • column 1, 2
collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2437
The Albany Review (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
536

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Albany Review.
published in · 
The Albany Review
date · 
July 1907
title · 
The Cricket Fetish
by · 
Alfred Fellows
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 4 • page 431
content

Some of them no doubt enjoy the pleasures of anticipation or successful achievement; but these are pleasures which can be enjoyed in an arm-chair at any time and in respect of any game, ping-pong, tiddley-winks, and hop-scotch included.

tw-ref-ID · 
2290
All the Year Round—A Weekly Journal Conducted by Charles Dickens (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
537

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for All the Year Round—A Weekly Journal Conducted by Charles Dickens.
published in · 
All the Year Round—A Weekly Journal Conducted by Charles Dickens
date · 
18 March 1876
title · 
Skating and Drinking
citation · 
volume 16 • issue 381 • page 15
content

In the fourth volume of Punch, published in 1843, is an amusing account of a visit to the so-called Glaciarium, in Baker-street, where the artificial ice was surrounded by an elaborate mise en scène of Alpine or Arctic—it is not very clear which—character; but perhaps the balance of evidence is in favour of the Alps, as the lake was approached from a species of Swiss châlet. Punch’s contributor, who signed himself “Tiddledy Winks,” was very funny at the expense of the forlorn institution, in which he found himself alone save for the presence of one of the “natives, who rushed from a gorge of brown paper and whitewash at the extremity of the lake, and performed several savage evolutions upon its surface.” In the uncongenial atmosphere of Baker-street, the artificial ice lake soon melted away into the limbo of dead-and-gone speculations

notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2291
The Alpha Xi Delta (magazine)
associated with · 
Alpha Xi Delta
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
334

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Alpha Xi Delta.
published in · 
The Alpha Xi Delta
date · 
March 1925
citation · 
volume 22 • issue 2 • page 297
content

[...] faith and a clear conscience we gave a game of tiddledywinks as a booby prize. Would you believe it, that one set has started a craze for tiddledywinks among the fraternity men here that actually rivals the cross-word mania.

notes · 
Originally noted that as original (Drix/NATwA) but that is unlikely.
links · 
Google Books – digitized image (free) (tw-ref-link-id 972)
tw-ref-ID · 
1427
American Annals of the Deaf (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
538

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for American Annals of the Deaf.
published in · 
American Annals of the Deaf
date · 
February 1897
title · 
Paragraphs.—IV.
citation · 
volume 42 • issue 2 • page 114
content

Then again, the children are apt to think that the word “played” can be used with unvarying correctness. This may hold true in nine cases out of ten with regard to boxed games, but in out-door sports the verbs also differ. We play ball, we play marbles, but do we ever play rope? When the boys come in, fresh from some jolly romp and anxious to tell of it, yet wishing to speak correctly, you will find that a rapid glance will be given at the slate to see if the beloved sport is there, and if so, it will be with increased confidence that they begin their tale. Here are a few sentences for illustration:

  • We played tiddledy winks.
  • We played jack-straws.
  • I turned somersaults on the grass.
  • I played hop-scotch
  • The boys had a tug-of-war

[…]

tw-ref-ID · 
2292
The American Botanist (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
539

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The American Botanist.
published in · 
The American Botanist
date · 
May 1917
title · 
EDITORIAL
citation · 
volume 23 • issue 2 • page 70
content

It is a great pity that the general public which has to use the plant names does not refuse entirely to countenance this monkeying with nomenclature. If the name-tinkers must be employed, let them engage in a game of tiddledywinks or take up tatting as a pastime.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2293
The American Flint (magazine)
Official Magazine of the American Flint Glass Workers Union of North America
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
541

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The American Flint.
published in · 
The American Flint
date · 
November 1917
title · 
Toronto, Ont.
by · 
A. Mooney
citation · 
volume 9 • issue 1 • page 45
content

A. Lucas, W. O’Neill and G. Labadie have started to work on the Tiddley Winks shop here.

notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2296
Journal of American Folk-Lore (journal)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
540

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Journal of American Folk-Lore.
published in · 
Journal of American Folk-Lore
date · 
July 1893 to September 1893
title · 
Exhibit of games in the Columbian Exposition”/”Case II. Balls, Quoits, Marbles”
by · 
Stewart Culin
citation · 
volume 6 • issue 22 • page 209 • column 1
content

The comparatively new game “Tiddledy winks” follows, leading up to a recent German game called the “Newest War Game,” in which the men or “winks” are played upon a board upon which are represented two opposing fortresses.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2294
published in · 
Journal of American Folk-Lore
date · 
January 1961 to March 1961
title · 
Sixty Years of Historic Change in the Game Preferences of American Children
by · 
Brian Sutton-Smith & B. G. Rosenberg
citation · 
page 19, 20, 29, 35, 26, 42, 43
summary

results of surveys in 1898, 1921, and 1959

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2295
The American Magazine (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
542

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for The American Magazine.
published in · 
The American Magazine
date · 
January 1891
title · 
London Music Halls
by · 
P. Anstey
citation · 
volume 82 • issue 488 • page 198
content

No, she won’t, old Tiddly winks!” says the boy, rising suddenly from his hiding – place. “In less than ten minutes you will be a corpse!”

notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2297
published in · 
The American Magazine
date · 
April 1918
title · 
The Making of George Groton – A Novel
by · 
Bruce Barton
citation · 
page 45-46
content

Page 45: “New York Wants to Talk to You” You ought to have seen us the other night, squatting on a million-dollar rug in his house, with ten thousand dollars’ worth of electric lights shining on us and fifty thousand dollars’ worth of servants peeking around the corner—down on the floor playing tiddledy-winks. Cross my heart. And it would have made you cry to see how the old guy enjoyed it.

Page 46:

2/3rd-page illustration of two well-dressed men kneeling on the floor, playing tiddlywinks.

You ought to have seen us the other night, squatting on a million-dollar rug in his house, with ten thousand dollars’ worth of electric lights shining on us and fifty thousand dollars’ worth of servants peeking around the corner—down on the floor playing tiddledy-winks.

collection · 
digitized copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2298
published in · 
The American Magazine
date · 
1938
citation · 
volume 125 • page 166
content

tiddlywinks game that you play until it’s time to go to work. And that’s just what it is to me! I don’t want to be a singer. I want to be a woman! If I’m a man, you made me one. Oh, yes, that’s the worst of it. It’s mostly tiddlywinks, but its’s partly building yourself up to the level of that […]

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2299
American Photography (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
543

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for American Photography.
published in · 
American Photography
date · 
December 1917
citation · 
volume 11 • issue 12 • page 685
content
Page 684 (heading): Editorial Our Competitions Page 685: Commendation: […]”Tiddledy Winks”, Chas. D. Meservey
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2300
The American Spectator (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
544

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The American Spectator.
published in · 
The American Spectator
date · 
October 1993
title · 
Northern Exposure
citation · 
volume 26 • issue 10 • page 43 (6)
summary

Canadian post-Mulroney politics and the rise of Kim Campbell, the first woman Prime Minister

tw-ref-ID · 
2301
American Stationer (journal)
location · 
USA
Notes

Available at the Library of Congress

tw-pub-ID · 
545

Toggle showing 42 tiddlywinks references for American Stationer.
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
18 September 1890
column title · 
Trade Novelties
title · 
A New Game
citation · 
volume 27 • page 691 • column full width
summary

re E. I. Horsman’s “Tiddledy Wink Tennis”. Illustrated

content

In “Tiddledy WInk Tennis” E. I. Horsman, 80 William street, has brought out a very pretty and lively parlor game, which will furnish sport for tennis players during the season when they are debarred from exercising their skill in the open air. "Tiddledy Winks," as originaly brought out, is full of amusement, but the new game is infinitely more engaging, and, besides, it offers a considerable field for the display of nice calculation and skill.

>The accompanying illustrationg, which is taken from the box cover, will give the reader a very good idea of how the game looks when laid out for playing. The court is a parallelogram of thick green felt, marked off with white lines in exact imitation of a regular tennis court. Each player is provided with a large bone counter termed a “racket.” A number of small bone disks represent tennis balls. Special rules are provided which differ little from regular tennis, and singles and doubles, as well as three handed games, may be played.

Persons who are unfamiliar with lawn tennis may become conversant with the rules by playing “Tiddled Wink Tennis,” and thus be able to master the game much more readily. The game is learned in a litle while, and will be found one of the most lively and amusing of the many offered for parlor sport. A cup and the full number of counteres for the regular game of “Tiddledy Winks” is provided with the new game. Dealers should send for descriptive circular at once.

Illustration of the box cover.
Tiddledy Wink Tennis.
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2302
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
9 October 1890
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 27 • page 850 • column 1, 2
summary

Interview with E. I. Horsman

content

E. I. Horsman, 80 William street, is wearing a 7x9 smile these days, notwithstanding he has set the whole world by the ears with his “Tiddledy Winks” tennis and dealers are fairly tumbling over each other in their haste to get orders in early. Mr. Horsman thinks that the “Tiddledy Winks” games have made the best hit of any he has ever brought out. At any rate, he has had to roll up his sleeves and help get out order. He cannot manufacture the games fast enough, however, to keep up, and has adopted the plan of sending a dozen to dealers who order a gross, and one single game to him who orders a dozen, and filling the hiatus with liberal promises. He is increasing his facilities for manufacutring, and hopes soon to be able to fill all order promptly.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2303
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
30 October 1890
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 27 • page 1017 • column 1
summary

Interview with E. I. Horsman

content

E. I. Horsman, 80 William street, has been caught in a whirlwind of orders for his two favorite games, “Tiddledy Winks Tennis” and “Halma.” He has had to provide a separate book in which to index orders, so that they may be found in the order books without loss of time, a plan he has never before been compelled to adopt. One apartment of his establishment is given up to printed matter for gratuitous distribution concerning these two games. Games are in high favor with the trade this fall.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2304
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
20 November 1890
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 27 • page 1185 • column 2
summary

Interview with E. I. Horsman

content

Acting on the hint thrown out in The Stationer of October 30, E. I. Horsman, 80 William street, is now engaged in preparing a progressive game of “Tiddledy Winks Tennis.” It promises to be novel and amusing, and it is soon to be ready for the trade. Look out for it!

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2306
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
4 December 1890
column title · 
Chat by the way
citation · 
volume 27 • page 1307 • column 1
summary

Interview with E. I. Horsman

content

“See that bundle of letters?” said E. I. Horsman, the great “Tiddledy Winks Tennis” promoter, 80 William street. “Well, there are sixty-five of them, every one orders for my favorite game, and they have got to be answered before I go to my dinner, because the writers must have their orders filled before CHristmas, so they say, and we are so behind that I must personally beg them to excercise a little patience in the matter. ‘Tiddledy Winks Tennis’ is a great thing, I tell you, but I cannot stop to explain why just now. Come again—after the holidays, when the rush is over—and we will confer together on the subject.”

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2305
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
18 December 1890
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 27 • page 1412 • column 2
summary

Interview with E. I. Horsman

content

The dealers are still worrying the life out of E. I. Horsman, 80 William street, about “Tiddledy Winks Tennis,” although it must be said he preserves a wonderfully comfortable appearance and smiling countenance for a man who thinks of “Tiddledy Winks” all day and dreams about it all night. He declares, however, that he believes people will go right on buying the game regardless of the close of the holiday season, and he thinks there will be no rest for him until every man, woman and child in the United States has one, and he is afraid that by that time Europe will have heard of it, and he will have fresh troubles trying to understand what they want. However, he does not look as though he would mind a babel of tongues very much if “Tiddledy Winks” was involve.d

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2307
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
1 January 1891
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 1 • whole 810 • page 21 • column 1
summary

Interview with E. I. Horsman

content

E. I. Horsman, importer, manufacturer and dealer in toys and games, 80 William street, is preparing to do a big business this year in lawn tennis, and expects to put on the market the finest line ever brought out in this country. To this end he has enlarged his factory, doubled its capacity and substituted a 100 horse power engine for the 50 horse power hitherto used. Altogether he is getting ready to repeat his “Tiddledy Winks Tennis” triumphs, and the lawns and parks will bloom with pretty maids and gallant lads all singing the praises of Horsman’s tennis outfits, undoubtedly.

collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2308
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
8 January 1891
column title · 
Correspondence
title · 
Denver
subtitle · 
[From our regular correspondent]
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 1 • whole 810 • page 56 • column 3
content

Denver, Col., January 1, 1891.

A visit to the stores of various kinds even at the present time reveals a plentiful supply of goods left over and anniversaries can be cared for while the new goods are being made. The only article entirely sold out was the great and only game of the season, “Tiddledy WInks.” Not even a “wink” could be had on Christmas Eve, and clerks would merely shake their heads at the inquiry, having “just sold the last one” for several hours. Now, the quest is what sells a game like that—the price or the craze?

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2309
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
22 January 1891
column title · 
Correspondence
title · 
Kansas City
subtitle · 
[From our regular correspondent]
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 4 • whole 813 • page 156 • column 1
content

Kansas City, Mo., January 17, 1891

Of all the new games called for during the season “Tiddledy Winks” took the lead, and what was the worst feature nobody could supply the demand.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2310
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
22 January 1891
column title · 
Answers to Correspondence
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 4 • whole 813 • page 179 • column 2
content

H., Williamsport, Pa. wants to know where he can get, in quantities, the bone chips used in the game of “Tiddledy Winks”

Ans. We understand that they are imported. E. I. Horsman, 80 WIlliam street, New York, may be able to supply you. The Strobel & Wilken Company and Hinrichs & Co. import them. American manufacturers of bone goods, like C. J. Bates, Chester, Conn., or the Rogers & Hubbard Company, Middletown, Conn., may possibly meet your demand.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2311
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
29 January 1891
column title · 
Correspondence
title · 
Pittsburgh
subtitle · 
[From our regular correspondent]
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 5 • whole 814 • page 208 • column 3
content

Pittsburg, January 24, 1891.

The game of Tiddledy Winks has had a great run here and in some circles appeared as a formidable rival of euchre, and great numbers were sold during the holidays.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2312
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
29 January 1891
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 5 • whole 814 • page 224 • column 2
summary

Interview with E. I. Horsman

content

E.I. Horsman, the toy man, 80 William street, says that “Tiddledy WInks Tennis” is still in such demand that he can hardly get time to attend to the business of bringing out the superb line of lawn tennis goods which he has promised the public it should have next summer. For a simple game “Tiddledy Winks Tennis” has had a remarkable run, and strange to say, the more the public have of it the better they like it.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2313
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
5 February 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 6 • whole 815 • page 282 • column full width
summary

Includes illustration of a black pot kettle at left with ring handle, marked “TRADE MARK”, and hand with shooter on wink at right.

content

Tiddledy Winks.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER,

41 John Street, New York.
The illustration at left shows a black urn pot with three legs and a curved handle. The illustration at right shows a hand holding a squidger on a wink on a tablecloth.

Offer a new line of this popular game of their own make as follows:

No. 1, 10 cents retail, wood box with neat label, wood pot painted, with bale and feet (see cut), four large counters, twenty-four small of wood, nicely colored. The best 10 cent make on the market. Price, $9.00 per gross.

No. 2, 25 cents retail, large wood box with lithographed label, box partitioned for the different counter, handsome pot, painted and varnished, with bale and feet (see cut). The best 25 cent edition offered. Price, $24.00 per gross.

No. 3, 50 cents retail, ready February 10, elegant polished wood box, size 4½ x 9, with gilt label on cover, elegant gilt pot, box partitioned for different counters, counters of bone, six of large, thirty-six of small, good colors. Price, $48.00 per gross. The finest 50 cent style made. Samples mailed, post paid, on receipt of 10 cents for No. 1, 20 cents for No. 2, 40 cents for No. 3.

SPECIAL PRICES TO JOBBING TRADE

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2314
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
12 February 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 7 • whole 816 • page 320 • column full width
summary

Includes illustration of a black pot kettle at left with ring handle, marked “TRADE MARK”, and hand with shooter on wink at right.

content

Tiddledy Winks.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER,

41 John Street, New York.
The illustration at left shows a black urn pot with three legs and a curved handle. The illustration at right shows a hand holding a squidger on a wink on a tablecloth.

Offer a new line of this popular game of their own make as follows:

No. 1, 10 cents retail, wood box with neat label, wood pot painted, with bale and feet (see cut), four large counters, twenty-four small of wood, nicely colored. The best 10 cent make on the market. Price, $9.00 per gross.

No. 2, 25 cents retail, large wood box with lithographed label, box partitioned for the different counter, handsome pot, painted and varnished, with bale and feet (see cut). The best 25 cent edition offered. Price, $24.00 per gross.

No. 3, 50 cents retail, ready February 10, elegant polished wood box, size 4½ x 9, with gilt label on cover, elegant gilt pot, box partitioned for different counters, counters of bone, six of large, thirty-six of small, good colors. Price, $48.00 per gross. The finest 50 cent style made. Samples mailed, post paid, on receipt of 10 cents for No. 1, 20 cents for No. 2, 40 cents for No. 3.

SPECIAL PRICES TO JOBBING TRADE

notes · 
Same advertisement as in American Stationer, 5 February 1891, page 282.
collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2315
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
12 February 1891
title · 
Tiddledy Winks.
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 7 • whole 816 • page 334 • column 2
content

The evidently fascinating game of “Tiddledy Winks” is again on its travels, this time under the aegis of Selchow & Righter, 41 John street, who are putting two styles on the market, which for convenience and finish equal, if they do not excel, those offered by any other house. The larger box is square, neatly put together, and has a sliding cover which is illuminated with a

Illustration of a dark pot with legs and a ringed handle
Wink Pot
bright and handsome design. The box inside is divided into compartments intended to contain the game in an orderly and convenient manner, the “winks,” which are in four colors, having a compartment for each color, while in the centre is a round well into which the “wink pot” fits snugly, with the “tiddledies” stacked within it. The “tiddledies” and “winks” are made of polished bone, nicely colored blue, red, yellow and green, six “winks” to each color, and one “tiddledy” matching each set. The “wink pot” is a very clever imitation of a kitchen pot for cooking purposes.The second style is smaller, put up in an oblong box divided into compartments, and

Illustration of a hand holding a shooter against a wink.
Position in Playing “Tiddledy Winks.”

Accompanying this article are illustrations of the “wink” pot and the maner of playing. The pot being set in the middle of the table, the player places his “winks” before him in a row, then laying the “tiddledy” upon the centre of the “wink,” as shown in the cut, draws it backward with a firm pressure; as it slips from the wink, the disk will jump up and forward, the distance being regulated by the pressure. The object is, of course, to jump all the “winks” into the pot, the one who does this first winning the game.This little amusement is the very climax of simplicity, yet it seems to have hit popular favor and is enjoying a run which has hardly been duplicated in the world of games. The uncommonly nice form in which it is offered by Selchow & Righter will give it a new accession of popularity throughout the country without doubt.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2316
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
19 February 1891
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 8 • whole 817 • page 391 • column 1
content

The New York News Company is having a very brisk call for what is known as “The Children's Delight.” It is a package of assorted gold, silver, glazed and enameled papers, which are used by the little folks for a great variet of purposes. The packages are neatly put up and have made a veritable hit. This house has also a miniature windmill which is known as the “Signal Service Weather Vane and Windmill.” It has also a full supply of “Tiddledy Winks” and can fill all orders promptly.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2317
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
19 February 1891
title · 
PROGRESSIVE TIDDLEDY WINKS.
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 8 • whole 817 • page 400 • column full width
content

We have just completed a new and very elegant set for playing at this popular amusement progressively. The set contains full directions, lithographed score cards, invitation cards, a signal bell, and finest quality bone chips sufficient for sixteen players.

The whole forms one of the handsomest and most complete packages we have offered.

Retail Price, $3.00, subject to the usual Discount.

We have also a full line of 25 cent, 50 cent, and $1.00 TIDDLEDY WINKS, in all of which we use only BONE CHIPS.

McLOUGHLIN BROS.,

No. 623 Broadway, New York.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2318
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
19 February 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 8 • whole 817 • page 411 • column 1, 2, 3
content

Tiddledy Winks.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER,

41 John Street, New York.
The illustration at left shows a black urn pot with three legs and a curved handle. The illustration at right shows a hand holding a squidger on a wink on a tablecloth.

Offer a new line of this popular game of their own make as follows:

No. 1, 10 cents retail, wood box with neat label, wood pot painted, with bale and feet (see cut), four large counters, twenty-four small of wood, nicely colored. The best 10 cent make on the market. Price, $9.00 per gross.

No. 2, 25 cents retail, large wood box with lithographed label, box partitioned for the different counter, handsome pot, painted and varnished, with bale and feet (see cut). The best 25 cent edition offered. Price, $24.00 per gross.

No. 3, 50 cents retail, ready February 10, elegant polished wood box, size 4½ x 9, with gilt label on cover, elegant gilt pot, box partitioned for different counters, counters of bone, six of large, thirty-six of small, good colors. Price, $48.00 per gross. The finest 50 cent style made. Samples mailed, post paid, on receipt of 10 cents for No. 1, 20 cents for No. 2, 40 cents for No. 3.

SPECIAL PRICES TO JOBBING TRADE

notes · 
Same advertisement as in American Stationer, 5 February 1891, page 282.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2319
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
19 February 1891
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 8 • whole 817 • page 389 • column 2
content

McLoughlin Brothers, 623 Broadway, have recently put on the market an elegant layout for a progressive game of “Tiddledy Winks.” The set is contained in a handsome box strongly made and covered with wine colored moire paper stamped with gold, and comprises uncommonly beautiful score cards, steel plate invitation cards, a pretty nickel signal bell, bone chips of the finest quality sufficient for sixteen players, and four “wink pots” of polished box wood. This is one of the handsomest and most complete games ever brought out by this house, which is noted for the originality and finish of its goods. The firm also carries a full line of regular “Tiddledy Winks” of different grades, but all with real bone chips. In connection with the above it may be said that this house has practically completed its lines of new books, blocks and games, and from the samples shown to a representative of The Stationer it is safe to say that McLoughlin Brothers have surpassed themselves in all of the features for which their goods are famous.

collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2323
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
26 February 1891
column title · 
Correspondence
subtitle · 
Duluth, Minn., February 19, 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 9 • whole 818 • page 462 • column 1
content

Albertston & Chamberlain occupy a prominent locality upon the main street, the front of their building presenting a very attractive appearance, having one very large plate glass show window. The sign above blew down, some ten days ago, breaking through the glass, which break is at present covered by a sheet, with this very appropriate and interesting notice: “The sign did not break the glass, but the extraordinary low prices inside on Tiddledy Winks and other goods were the cause,” and no doubt it was so.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2320
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
26 February 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 9 • whole 818 • page 469 • column full width
content

Tiddledy Winks.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER,

41 John Street, New York.
The illustration at left shows a black urn pot with three legs and a curved handle. The illustration at right shows a hand holding a squidger on a wink on a tablecloth.

Offer a new line of this popular game of their own make as follows:

No. 1, 10 cents retail, wood box with neat label, wood pot painted, with bale and feet (see cut), four large counters, twenty-four small of wood, nicely colored. The best 10 cent make on the market. Price, $9.00 per gross.

No. 2, 25 cents retail, large wood box with lithographed label, box partitioned for the different counter, handsome pot, painted and varnished, with bale and feet (see cut). The best 25 cent edition offered. Price, $24.00 per gross.

No. 3, 50 cents retail, ready February 10, elegant polished wood box, size 4½ x 9, with gilt label on cover, elegant gilt pot, box partitioned for different counters, counters of bone, six of large, thirty-six of small, good colors. Price, $48.00 per gross. The finest 50 cent style made. Samples mailed, post paid, on receipt of 10 cents for No. 1, 20 cents for No. 2, 40 cents for No. 3.

SPECIAL PRICES TO JOBBING TRADE

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2321
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
26 February 1891
column title · 
Trade Novelties
title · 
RING-A-PEG.
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 9 • whole 818 • page 473 • column 2, 3
summary

“Ring-A-Peg”, invented by John J. B. Trainer, manufactured by Geo. B. Leiter & Co. (and also by E. I. Horsman).

content

This is the name of a new game which is about to be placed upon the market. In point of interest and general attractiveness it promises to outrival the famous “Tiddledy Winks.” It combines instruction with amusement, as will be seen by the following description and manner of player: A circular board containing a number of upright pegs is placed on a cloth in the centre of the table. The game may be played by two, three or four persons, each player being provided with five rings made of bone brightly colored and a square piece of the same material called the “ringer,” the latter being used to snap the rings upon the upright pegs.

The centre of king peg is higher than the rest and being the more difficult to ring counts the player relatively more than the pegs on the circles, the numbers of which will be designated in the direction. “Ring-a-Peg” can be played in several different ways, which will prove a decided advantage over games of a similar character.

The inventor of the game is John H. B. Trainer, a young man who has been connected with the book, stationery, and fancy goods trade ever since he was a small boy.

The manufacturers are Geo. B. Leiter & Co., Williamsport, Pa.

Illustration of the Ring-A-Peg game target.
RING-A-PEG.
collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2322
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
26 February 1891
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 9 • whole 818 • page 476 • column 3
content
Selchow & Righter, 41 John street, report good business with their “Tiddledy Winks” games.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2324
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
26 February 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 9 • whole 818 • page 499 • column full width
content

We have just completed a new and very elegant set for playing at this popular amusement progressively. The set contains full directions, lithographed score cards, invitation cards, a signal bell, and finest quality bone chips sufficient for sixteen players.

The whole forms one of the handsomest and most complete packages we have offered.

Retail Price, $3.00, subject to the usual Discount.

We have also a full line of 25 cent, 50 cent, and $1.00 TIDDLEDY WINKS, in all of which we use only BONE CHIPS.

McLOUGHLIN BROS.,

No. 623 Broadway, New York.

notes · 
Same McLoughlin Bros. advertisement as in the 19 February 1891 American Stationer.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2325
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
5 March 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 10 • whole 819 • page 549 • column left half
content

TIDDLEDY WINKS

Illustration of a black pot kettle at left with a ring handle, marked “TRADE MARK”, and a hand with a squidger on a wink at right

SELCHOW & RIGHTER

OFFER THE BEST LINE OF THIS POPULAR GAME MADE IN THREE STYLES, TO RETAIL AT

10 cts., 25 ct. and 50 cts. per Set.

Send for Descriptive List with Wholesale Prices.

“PARCHEESI” and a Parcheesi board are illustrated on the right half of the page.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER, Publishers, 41 John St., New York

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2326
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
12 March 1891
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 11 • whole 820 • page 563 • column left half
content

TIDDLEDY WINKS

Illustration of a black pot kettle at left with a ring handle, marked “TRADE MARK”, and a hand with a squidger on a wink at right

SELCHOW & RIGHTER

OFFER THE BEST LINE OF THIS POPULAR GAME MADE IN THREE STYLES, TO RETAIL AT

10 cts., 25 ct. and 50 cts. per Set.

Send for Descriptive List with Wholesale Prices.

“PARCHEESI” and a Parcheesi board are illustrated on the right half of the page.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER, Publishers, 41 John St., New York

notes · 
Same Selchow & Righter advertisement as in the 5 March 1891 issue of American Stationer.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2327
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
19 March 1891
citation · 
page 638 • column left half
content

TIDDLEDY WINKS

Illustration of a black pot kettle at left with a ring handle, marked “TRADE MARK”, and a hand with a squidger on a wink at right

SELCHOW & RIGHTER

OFFER THE BEST LINE OF THIS POPULAR GAME MADE IN THREE STYLES, TO RETAIL AT

10 cts., 25 ct. and 50 cts. per Set.

Send for Descriptive List with Wholesale Prices.

“PARCHEESI” and a Parcheesi board are illustrated on the right half of the page.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER, Publishers, 41 John St., New York

notes · 
Same Selchow & Righter advertisement as in the 5 March 1891 issue of American Stationer.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2328
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
2 April 1891
title · 
“Crickets on the Hearth.”
citation · 
page 730, 731 • column 3 (page 730), 1 (page 731)
content

Selchow & Righter are in the field with a new game. It is illustrated on this page and is known as “Crickets on the

Illustration of wooden game board with a vertical hearth apparatus.
"CRICKETS ON THE HEARTH."

The game is somewhat similar to “Tiddledy Winks.” The board on which the game is played consists of a floor divided into spaces and a fireplace with mantel and a hole in the wall over the mantel. In playing a small chip, called a “cricket,” is placed on a felt disk located in the square farthest from the fireplace and is then snapped with a large chip. If the cricket goes through the hole it counts the player 100, if it remains on the mantel it counts seventy-five, while if it lands in the squares directly in front of the fireplace it scores ten or twenty points according as it is the left or right hand square. The implements of the game are the shelf, by which name the board is known, ten crickets and one large chip for snapping. The game is very interesting and possesses capabilities which will no doubt be freely developed by the children of this country. The shelf folds up, inclosing within it the “crickets” and the large chip. The firm will be pleased to give the rade all information which may be desired in regard to this new and attractive game.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2329
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
9 April 1891
title · 
CRICKET ON THE HEARTH
citation · 
page 781 • column 2, 3
content

JUST READY

An Improvement on the Popular Game of Tiddledy Winks.

Snap the Counters same as Tiddledy Winks; if they go through the opening the count is 100; on the shelf, 75; in the space below, 10, 20 or nothing, as may be.

ATTRACTIVE. GOOD. CHEAP.

Retail at 10c. Price, $9.00 per Gross.

Samples mailed, postpaid, on receipt of 10 cents.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER,
MAKERS,
41 JOHN STREET, NEW YORK.

Illustration at right of the wooden game board and vertical hearth target.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2330
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
16 April 1891
citation · 
page 845 • column 2, 3
content

JUST READY

An Improvement on the Popular Game of Tiddledy Winks.

Snap the Counters same as Tiddledy Winks; if they go through the opening the count is 100; on the shelf, 75; in the space below, 10, 20 or nothing, as may be.

ATTRACTIVE. GOOD. CHEAP.

Retail at 10c. Price, $9.00 per Gross.

Samples mailed, postpaid, on receipt of 10 cents.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER,
MAKERS,
41 JOHN STREET, NEW YORK.

Illustration at right of the wooden game board and vertical hearth target.
notes · 
Same Selchow & Righter advertisement as in the 9 April 1891 issue of American Stationer.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2331
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
7 May 1891
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
page 970, 971 • column 3 (page 970), 1 (page 971)
content

Selchow & Righter are now in their new quarters at 390 Broadway, where they will be glad to see all their friends in the trade.

The new store is very deep, is nicely arranged and presents an air of prosperity and activity which is very pleasing. Then there is a cellar and sub-cellar, both of which are crowded with toys, games, &c. This firm has just issued its spring catalogue, which contains eighty pages devoted to descriptions and illustrations of equipments for croquet, lawn tennis, baseball, football and in fact all indoor and outdoor sports; hammocks, fishing outfits, air guns, fire cracker cannon, small steam engines, tiddledy winks, parcheesi, planchette and a thousand and one other games. The catalogue will be sent to anyone who is sufficiently interested to make a request for it.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2333
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
23 May 1891
column title · 
Trade Items
citation · 
page 857 • column 2, 3
content

JUST READY

An Improvement on the Popular Game of Tiddledy Winks.

Snap the Counters same as Tiddledy Winks; if they go through the opening the count is 100; on the shelf, 75; in the space below, 10, 20 or nothing, as may be.

ATTRACTIVE. GOOD. CHEAP.

Retail at 10c. Price, $9.00 per Gross.

Samples mailed, postpaid, on receipt of 10 cents.

SELCHOW & RIGHTER,
MAKERS,
41 JOHN STREET, NEW YORK.

Illustration at right of the wooden game board and vertical hearth target.
notes · 
Same Selchow & Righter advertisement as in the 9 April 1891 issue of American Stationer.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2332
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
13 August 1891
column title · 
Communications
title · 
Travelers' Expense Accounts.
subtitle · 
Dayton, Ohio, August 5, 1891.
citation · 
volume 30 • page 324 • column 2
content

As “P.D.Q.” says, houses should not send men out whom they cannot trust to use moderation in all things except getting business. I attended the convention of the U. C. T. held in this place recently, and on the last page of the banquet menu were the toasts, followed by what was supposed to be a list of the average traveler's expenses. It was as follows:

  • Hotel… $5.00
  • Seeing frield… 2.50
  • Railroad ticket… 1.00
  • Bus… 6.00
  • Hair cut… .15
  • Gave a blind man… 4.00
  • Porter… 25c.
  • More porter… 3.75
  • On account of a weak hand… 8.00
  • Prescription… Quinine… .20
  • Whiskey… 3.00
  • Tiddledy Winks&hellips; 7.00
  • Stamps… 2.75

Now, the average firm might in justice kick on the item, “weak hand;” but the “prescription” and “tiddledy winks” ought to “go.” The “bus” item, too, is quite reasonable, especially if it were incurred in Pittsburg.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2335
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
27 August 1891
citation · 
volume 30 • page 417 • column full width
summary

Selchow & Righter advertisement for “Snap Dragon”, “Pedro”, “Juno”, and two varieties of “Cricket on the Hearth”. Illustrated.

content
Illustration of the horizontal base and vertical targets of the Snap Dragon game.
SNAP DRAGON.
Illustration of the horizontal base and vertical targets of the Pedro game.
PEDRO.
Illustration of the horizontal base and vertical targets of the Juno game.
JUNO.
Illustration of the horizontal base and vertical targets of the Cricket on the Hearth game.
CRICKET ON THE HEARTH.
Five Editions.
Four of the latest and best Home Games on the market. Each in polished box, which closes up when not in use. Each game is an improved Tiddledy Winks, the principle of playing being similar. Bo better 25c. games can be offered. Just ready. Each, price, $2.00 per dozen. Samples of either mailed post paid, on receipt of 25c.

CRICKET ON . .
. . THE HEARTH

AN IMPROVEMENT ON THE POPULAR GAME OF TIDDLEDY WINKS.

Snap the counters same as Tiddledy WInks; if they go through the opening the count is 100; on the shelf, 75; in the space below, 10, 20, or nothing, as may be.

GOOD. CHEAP. ATTRACTIVE.

Retail at 10c. Price, $9.00 per Gross.

Samples mailed, post paid, on receipt of 10c.

Illustration of the horizontal base and vertical targets of this game.

ALL OF THESE GAMES ARE MANUFACTURED BY

SELCHOW & RIGHTER.

390 BROADWAY, Formerly at 41 John St., NEW YORK

PUBLISHERS OF AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN

Games and Home Amusements.

THE FINEST VARIETY TO BE FOUND ANYWHERE.

collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2334
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
27 August 1891
title · 
New Toys and Games.
citation · 
volume 30 • page 503 • column full width
summary

Article describing Selchow & Righter’s “Pedro”, “Juno”, “Snap Dragon”, and “Cricket on the Hearth”. Illustrated.

content

Selchow & Righter are in the field with a host of new goods for fall trade, all of which are on exhibition at their salesrooms, 290 Broadway, and some of which are illustrated in this number of The Stationer. In the way of games there are four which are variations of the “Cricket on the Hearth” which was brought out some time ago by this house. In “Pedro” there is a clown’s face with wide open mouth into which one snaps small brass rings. On the clown's nose and cheeks there are hooks, and rings which are caught thereon count the player a certain number of points. Then there is “Cricket,” wherein a very good representation of a fireplace is arranged, with swinging pot, mantel and an upper mantel holding two pots. Brass rings are used and snapped, as are the chips in “Cricket on the Hearth,” and the score is increased as the rings drop into the pots or rest on the shelves.

In “Juno” there is a small spring board by which the rings are thrown and the field on which they land has cups and pins of varying value. The fourth game, which is not illustrated here, is known as “Snap Dragon,” and is played with rings which are thrown at hooks which have various values.

Illustrations of three games, from left to right: Pedro, Juno, and Cricket, with corresponding captions.
collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2336
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
22 October 1891
column title · 
Trade Novelties
title · 
"LO LO."
citation · 
volume 30 • page 871 • column 1
summary

“Lo Lo The New Parlor Croquet Game”, by L. E. Lawrence, introduced by E. I. Horsman. Illustrated.

content

A new parlour croquet game, known as “Lo Lo,” is being introduced by E. I. Horsman, New York. This is the latest and is believed to be the best thing in the way of a “Tiddledy Winks” game yet brought out.

Illustration of the "Lo Lo" game cover.
“LO LO,” OR NEW PARLOR CROQUET

The cut illustrates the cover of the box containing the game and shows the method of playing.

The implements of the game consist of a piece of green felt, 11 by 23 inches, with a border stamped in black. On this felt there is a regular croquet lay out of wire arches and stakes. Six colored bone disks and six "mallet disks" complete the outfit. The colored disks represent the balls and the "mallet disks" are used to snap them into positions or through the arches.

collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2337
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
22 October 1891
title · 
Parker's Games
citation · 
volume 30 • page 898 • column 1, 3
content

The Salem game publishers are said to make the largest line of “Tiddledy WInks” issued, not only from wood, bone and composition, but also from genuine celluloid and vegetable ivory.

“Hop Scotch Tiddledy WInks,” one of the most popular elaborations of that game, is an article of especially large sale.

Illustration of the cover of “HOP SCOTCH (TRADE MARK) Tiddledy Winks”
“HOP SCOTCH TIDDLEDY WINKS.”
collection · 
photocopy, digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2338
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
19 November 1891
column title · 
Trade Novelties
title · 
NEW PATENTS.
citation · 
volume 30 • page 1063 • column 3
summary

Patent listing of George Scott’s US patent

content

No. 432,170. Game.—George Scott, Birkenhead, County of Chester, England.

A game apparatus comprising a course having an elastic surface and provided at intervals with obstacles, such as counters and springers.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2339
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
9 November 1893
title · 
Games and Toys.
citation · 
volume 34 • page 963 • column 1
summary

"Sweet Wedding Bells", introduced by Selchow & Righter, jobbers.

content

This is the time of the year when the trade all over the country are interested in toys and games, and when stocks of these goods are laid in for the holidays. Selchow & Righter devote all of their energies to catering to this class of trade and this year they present an unusually fine line for consideration. […]

Illustration of the box cover of “SWEET WEDDING BELLS”.
“SWEET WEDDING BELLS”.

“Sweet Wedding Bells” is an entirely new game, introducing in its use the always popular feature of shooting small ivory or bone counters, used in the well-known game of “tiddledy winks.” The implements used in playing the game are in the first place necessary to build up a tower or church front, representing an old ivy cut of a church. This tower is put together in a very easy and simple manner, which is a feature of the game. Suspended in the tower is a brightly polished bell, which hangs directly in the centre of the tower, between the four windows. The counters are to be snapped through these windows of the tower, striking the bell and ringing it. Every time the bell is rung the fortunate player scores one point. It is put up in a large box, attractive in appearance, and must prove to be a very popular toy. The box is 7½ inches square and 1¼ inches deep.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2340
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
23 August 1902
title · 
Selchow & Righter
subtitle · 
Some of the New Goods That This Firm Is Showing—All Meeting with Approval
citation · 
volume 52 • issue 8 • page 4 • column 2, 3
summary

Descriptions of "Table Golf" (with illustration), "Tiddledy Winks Pool" (with illustration) and Tiddledy Winks Ring Game"

content

Table Golf is another new game offered to the trade by the same house [transcriber note: Selchow & Righter]

TIDDLEDY WINKS POOL.

that has caught the popular fancy owing to the prevalence of the golf craze. "To try it is to buy it" tells the story in regard to this thoroughly up-to-date game of golf that can be played on the parlor table. Links provided with bunkers, water hazard, tee and the regulation nine holes. All the elements of the regular outdoor golf Links are laid out on a felt 22x15 inches to which are fastened nine wooden cups (holes) while three places are marked thereon for the bunkers, and a pond of water is outlines. The implements consist of four bone chips (balls) and a piece of wood called the "Baffy." The game is played as "Tiddledy Winks," using the "Baffy" to propel the chips (balls) as per rules on cover of the box. All packed in neat box, 18½x10 inches, with attractive label on cover.

"Tiddledy Winks Pool" is a very attractive game of "Tiddledy Winks," being sold by Selchow & Righther. It consists of a box with handsome lithograph on cover, on the bottom of which is lithographed at>/p>
TIDDLEDY WINKS RING GAME.

one end a pool pyramid with depressions numbered from 1 to 15, and at the other end is a felt disk from which the shooting is done. The implements are two Tiddledys and six Winks, and the object of the game is to make the highest score shooting from the spot (felt). Full instructions with each game.

Another attractive game of "Tiddledy Winks," known as "Tiddledy Winks Ring Game," is similar to above except that at one end of the bottom of the box is a circle in which are set fourteen pins, each inside a smaller circle and numbered from 1 to 14. The felt disk is the same. The implements are two Tiddledys and four

TABLE GOLF.

Ring WInks. The game is played on the order of quoits, the object being to ring the pins counting the highest numbers.

tw-ref-ID · 
3788
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
17 August 1907
title · 
PARKER BROTHERS
citation · 
volume 62 • page 57 • column full width
content

PARKER BROTHERS

(INCORPORATED)

NEW Offices
12th Floor, Flatiron Building
New York

Branch
London, England

Factory
Salem, Massachusetts

NEW GAMES & BRIDGE GOODS

Illustration of 5 adults around a table, playting the game POP-IN-TAW

POP-IN-TAW

GREAT NEW NOVELTY FOR THIS WINTER

A Fun Making Game for Any Number and All Ages

Pop-in-Taw is a rollicking game of the class which only makes its appearance at intervals of a few years. It is a “society[”] game in the same general class as Pillow Dex, Tiddledy Winks and Ping-Pong.

[…]

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2342
published in · 
American Stationer
date · 
31 August 1907
title · 
Parker Games
citation · 
volume 62 • page 28 • column 1
content

“Pop-in-Taw” is the very latest Parker game. It is a rollicking game of the class which only makes its appearance at intervals of a few years. It is a society game in the same general class as “Pillow Dex,” “Tiddledy Winks” and “Ping-Pong.”

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2341
The Annual American Catalogue (catalog)
publisher · 
Office of the Publishers' Weekly (R. R. Bowker)
location · 
New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
546

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Annual American Catalogue.
published in · 
The Annual American Catalogue
date · 
1892
title · 
Index to Books of 1891
subtitle · 
By Author, Title and Subject
citation · 
page 6 • column 1
content

Tiddledywink tales. (Ds) D. $1.25.
De Witt Pub. Ho

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2343
published in · 
The Annual American Catalogue
date · 
1892
title · 
1891
subtitle · 
Of Books recorded January 1 to December 31, 1891, will full titles and descrip[tive] notes, arranged alphabetically by Authors.
citation · 
page 13 • column 2
content

Bangs, J: Kendrick. Tiddledywink tales by C: Howard Johnson. N. Y. [De Witt Publishing House,] 1891. c. 5-236 p. il. D. cl., $1.25.

Jimmieboy was a little lad of four years, who had just been presented with a set of Tiddledy winks. After playing with his gift all day, Jimmieboy went to bed and was immediately transported to the realm of the Tiddledywinks. The strange and amusing sights that the young hero saw did not prevent a constant interchange of thought between himself and the small pieces of celluloid that comprise the game.

tw-ref-ID · 
2344
Annual Catalogue (catalog)
publisher · 
McLoughlin Brothers
location · 
New York, New York, USA
Notes

Title may vary.

tw-pub-ID · 
796

Toggle showing 13 tiddlywinks references for Annual Catalogue.
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1895 (unmarked)
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 70
content

No. 490.—KING'S QUOITS

Illustration of game box cover. The cover shows four royal persons at an angle in each corner.

Size, 15 x 17 inches

This game is a parlour quoit game played with light brass rings and a target-board filled with pegs for catching them.

There is also a tiddledy-winks game to be played upon the same target-board with perforated bone discs instead of chips, which is of merit equal to the regular quoits.

The game is very bright and attractive, as well as very simple to play. It is adapted to the use of children or young people.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2901
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1895 (unmarked)
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 110
content

No. 850. TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 0, 25 Cents.

No illustration

Duranoid Winks.
Box 3 x 4½ inches.

This game is similar to No. 1 wood pot, except that it has "Winks" and "Tiddledies" of duranoid instead of bone. This is neatly put up and a good Tiddledy Winks game, but is not quite so pleasant to play as a set with the bone winks.

No. 851. — TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 1, 30 Cents.

No illustration

Size, 3 x 4½ inches, wood pots.
" 4½x 4½ " glass pots.

The game is played the same as that described under Tiddledy Winks, No. 2, above. These sets have not mats, but are intended to be used on a soft table cover. One to four may play.

We regard the wood pot as preferable to the glass for children, as it is much safer. The glass pot gives an attractive resonant sound as the chips fall into it, which induces some to prefer it.

No. 852.—TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 2.
50 Cents.

Illustration of game with woman's hand at right shooting winks off soft pad towards pot at left. Game is marked "PATENT NOV. 18, 1890"

4½ x 8 inches.

The game of Tiddledy Winks is played with six round bone chips, or "Winks," ⅝ of an inch in diameter, one large chip, 1⅛ inches in diameter, a soft mat or table cover for each player, and a cup or "pot" for common use.

To play, a small chip is put on the mat; the large chip, grasped between the forefinger and thumb, is pressed upon its centre and drawn steadily away from the "pot." When the edge of the small chip, or Wink, is reached, it flies forward and upward toward the pot. The game is to put the Winks in the "pot" in this manner, as in the picture above. No. 2 has six sets of men, three mats, one for each pair of partners, and a wooden cup, or Wink pot.

The label is printed in colors.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2902
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1897 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 89
content

No. 490.—KING'S QUOITS

Illustration of game box cover. The cover shows four royal persons at an angle in each corner.

Size, 15 x 17 inches

This game is a parlour quoit game played with light brass rings and a target-board filled with pegs for catching them.

There is also a tiddledy-winks game to be played upon the same target-board with perforated bone discs instead of chips, which is of merit equal to the regular quoits.

The game is very bright and attractive, as well as very simple to play. It is adapted to the use of children or young people.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2903
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1897 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 123
content

No. 850. TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 0, 25 Cents.

No illustration

Duranoid Winks.
Box 3 x 4½ inches.

This game is similar to No. 1 wood pot, except that it has "Winks" and "Tiddledies" of duranoid instead of bone. This is neatly put up and a good Tiddledy Winks game, but is not quite so pleasant to play as a set with the bone winks.

No. 851. — TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 1, 30 Cents.

No illustration

Size, 3 x 4½ inches, wood pots.
" 4½x 4½ " glass pots.

The game is played the same as that described under Tiddledy Winks, No. 2, above. These sets have not mats, but are intended to be used on a soft table cover. One to four may play.

We regard the wood pot as preferable to the glass for children, as it is much safer. The glass pot gives an attractive resonant sound as the chips fall into it, which induces some to prefer it.

No. 852.—TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 2.
50 Cents.

Illustration of game with woman's hand at right shooting winks off soft pad towards pot at left. Game is marked "PATENT NOV. 18, 1890"

4½ x 8 inches.

The game of Tiddledy Winks is played with six round bone chips, or "Winks," ⅝ of an inch in diameter, one large chip, 1⅛ inches in diameter, a soft mat or table cover for each player, and a cup or "pot" for common use.

To play, a small chip is put on the mat; the large chip, grasped between the forefinger and thumb, is pressed upon its centre and drawn steadily away from the "pot." When the edge of the small chip, or Wink, is reached, it flies forward and upward toward the pot. The game is to put the Winks in the "pot" in this manner, as in the picture above. No. 2 has six sets of men, three mats, one for each pair of partners, and a wooden cup, or Wink pot.

The label is printed in colors.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2904
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1898 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 98
content

No. 490.—KING'S QUOITS

Illustration of game box cover. The cover shows four royal persons at an angle in each corner.

Size, 15 x 17 inches

This game is a parlour quoit game played with light brass rings and a target-board filled with pegs for catching them.

There is also a tiddledy-winks game to be played upon the same target-board with perforated bone discs instead of chips, which is of merit equal to the regular quoits.

The game is very bright and attractive, as well as very simple to play. It is adapted to the use of children or young people.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2905
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1898 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 135
content

No. 850. TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 0, 25 Cents.

No illustration

Duranoid Winks.
Box 3 x 4½ inches.

This game is similar to No. 1 wood pot, except that it has "Winks" and "Tiddledies" of duranoid instead of bone. This is neatly put up and a good Tiddledy Winks game, but is not quite so pleasant to play as a set with the bone winks.

No. 851. — TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 1, 30 Cents.

No illustration

Size, 3 x 4½ inches, wood pots.
" 4½x 4½ " glass pots.

The game is played the same as that described under Tiddledy Winks, No. 2, above. These sets have not mats, but are intended to be used on a soft table cover. One to four may play.

We regard the wood pot as preferable to the glass for children, as it is much safer. The glass pot gives an attractive resonant sound as the chips fall into it, which induces some to prefer it.

No. 852.—TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 2.
50 Cents.

Illustration of game with woman's hand at right shooting winks off soft pad towards pot at left. Game is marked "PATENT NOV. 18, 1890"

4½ x 8 inches.

The game of Tiddledy Winks is played with six round bone chips, or "Winks," ⅝ of an inch in diameter, one large chip, 1⅛ inches in diameter, a soft mat or table cover for each player, and a cup or "pot" for common use.

To play, a small chip is put on the mat; the large chip, grasped between the forefinger and thumb, is pressed upon its centre and drawn steadily away from the "pot." When the edge of the small chip, or Wink, is reached, it flies forward and upward toward the pot. The game is to put the Winks in the "pot" in this manner, as in the picture above. No. 2 has six sets of men, three mats, one for each pair of partners, and a wooden cup, or Wink pot.

The label is printed in colors.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2906
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1899 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 99
content

No. 490.—KING'S QUOITS

Illustration of game box cover. Cover has "KING'S" at upper right and "QUOITS" at lower left, with royal scenes in other quadrants of cover.

Size, 15 x 17 inches

This game is a parlour quoit game played with light brass rings and a target-board filled with pegs for catching them.

There is also a tiddledy-winks game to be played upon the same target-board with perforated bone discs instead of chips, which is of merit equal to the regular quoits.

The game is very bright and attractive, as well as very simple to play. It is adapted to the use of children or young people.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2907
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1899 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 137
content

No. 850. TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 0, 25 Cents.

No illustration

Duranoid Winks.
Box 3 x 4½ inches.

This game is similar to No. 1 wood pot, except that it has "Winks" and "Tiddledies" of duranoid instead of bone. This is neatly put up and a good Tiddledy Winks game, but is not quite so pleasant to play as a set with the bone winks.

No. 851. — TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 1, 30 Cents.

No illustration

Size, 3 x 4½ inches, wood pots.
" 4½x 4½ " glass pots.

The game is played the same as that described under Tiddledy Winks, No. 2, above. These sets have not mats, but are intended to be used on a soft table cover. One to four may play.

We regard the wood pot as preferable to the glass for children, as it is much safer. The glass pot gives an attractive resonant sound as the chips fall into it, which induces some to prefer it.

No. 852.—TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 2.
50 Cents.

Illustration of game with woman's hand at right shooting winks off soft pad towards pot at left. Game is marked "PATENT NOV. 18, 1890"

4½ x 8 inches.

The game of Tiddledy Winks is played with six round bone chips, or "Winks," ⅝ of an inch in diameter, one large chip, 1⅛ inches in diameter, a soft mat or table cover for each player, and a cup or "pot" for common use.

To play, a small chip is put on the mat; the large chip, grasped between the forefinger and thumb, is pressed upon its centre and drawn steadily away from the "pot." When the edge of the small chip, or Wink, is reached, it flies forward and upward toward the pot. The game is to put the Winks in the "pot" in this manner, as in the picture above. No. 2 has six sets of men, three mats, one for each pair of partners, and a wooden cup, or Wink pot.

The label is printed in colors.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2908
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1900 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 101
content

No. 490.—KING'S QUOITS

Illustration of game box cover. Cover has "KING'S" at upper right and "QUOITS" at lower left, with royal scenes in other quadrants of cover.

Size, 15 x 17 inches

This game is a parlour quoit game played with light brass rings and a target-board filled with pegs for catching them.

There is also a tiddledy-winks game to be played upon the same target-board with perforated bone discs instead of chips, which is of merit equal to the regular quoits.

The game is very bright and attractive, as well as very simple to play. It is adapted to the use of children or young people.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2909
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1900 Season
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 139
content

No. 850. TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 0, 25 Cents.

No illustration

Duranoid Winks.
Box 3 x 4½ inches.

This game is similar to No. 1 wood pot, except that it has "Winks" and "Tiddledies" of duranoid instead of bone. This is neatly put up and a good Tiddledy Winks game, but is not quite so pleasant to play as a set with the bone winks.

No. 851. — TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 1, 30 Cents.

No illustration

Size, 3 x 4½ inches, wood pots.
" 4½x 4½ " glass pots.

The game is played the same as that described under Tiddledy Winks, No. 2, above. These sets have not mats, but are intended to be used on a soft table cover. One to four may play.

We regard the wood pot as preferable to the glass for children, as it is much safer. The glass pot gives an attractive resonant sound as the chips fall into it, which induces some to prefer it.

No. 852.—TIDDLEDY WINKS — No. 2.
50 Cents.

Illustration of game with woman's hand at right shooting winks off soft pad towards pot at left. Game is marked "PATENT NOV. 18, 1890"

4½ x 8 inches.

The game of Tiddledy Winks is played with six round bone chips, or "Winks," ⅝ of an inch in diameter, one large chip, 1⅛ inches in diameter, a soft mat or table cover for each player, and a cup or "pot" for common use.

To play, a small chip is put on the mat; the large chip, grasped between the forefinger and thumb, is pressed upon its centre and drawn steadily away from the "pot." When the edge of the small chip, or Wink, is reached, it flies forward and upward toward the pot. The game is to put the Winks in the "pot" in this manner, as in the picture above. No. 2 has six sets of men, three mats, one for each pair of partners, and a wooden cup, or Wink pot.

The label is printed in colors.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2910
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1914
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 29
content

No. 5555.--KING'S QUOITS
Retail $1.10, Express extra
This is a "parlor quoits" game, played by snapping brass rings on to a target board. A tiddledy-wink game may also be played with the men.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2911
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1914
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 62
content

No. 850A. — TIDDLEDY WINKS No. 00

Illustration of game box cover. Shows title text, "THE GAME OF TIDDLEDY WINKS" in an ornate font on a banner angling toward upper right.

Size, 5½ x 4½ inches

This box contains a full set of bone "winks" etc. and a cup. The label is in full colors and varnished.

Put up in dozens.

No. 7728 — TIDDLEDY WINKS, No. 0

Illustration of game box cover. Cover shows cat in hat and dress skipping rope. Title: "TIDDLEDY WINKS A Round Game"

Size, 4½ x 7 inches

This box contains a full set of bone chips for 4 players and a wooden cup.

The label is lithographed in full colors and varnished.

Put up in dozens

No. 7738. — TIDDLEDY WINKS, No. 1

Illustration of game box cover. Cover is triptych with winks flying in left and right sections, and in center section, a hand from upper left is shooting winks at a glass cup with rays of light streaking from it.

Size, 8½ x 5½ inches

This box contains a full set of bone chips for 6 players, and a glass cup.

The label is in full lithographic colors and varnished.

Put up in dozens.

No. 7748.—TIDDLEDY WINKS, No. 2, COMBINATION

Illustration of game box cover. Cover shows two cats sitting behind a cauldron-shaped pot.

Size, 9 x 12½ inches

This box contains a full and handsome equipment for six players. In addition, there is a device with which two interesting target games can be played. The label is in full colors and varnished.

Put up in ½ dozens

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2912
published in · 
Annual Catalogue
date · 
1914
title · 
Annual Catalogue
by · 
McLoughlin Bros.
citation · 
page 63
content

No. 7735.—DUTCH WINKS

Illustration of game box cover. Cover shows boy and girl in Dutch-style clothing, facing right.

Size, 5½ x 5½ inches

The equipment in this set consists of sufficient bone chips for 4 players, and a glass cup. The box label is brightly lithographed in full colors.

Put up in dozens.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2913
Annual Report of the State Board of Education and of the Commissioner of Education of New Jersey (annual report)
With Accompanying Documents
publisher · 
The Unionist-Gazette Association, State Printers
location · 
Somerville, New Jersey, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
657

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Annual Report of the State Board of Education and of the Commissioner of Education of New Jersey.
published in · 
Annual Report of the State Board of Education and of the Commissioner of Education of New Jersey
date · 
year ending 30 June 1919 published 1920
title · 
Commissioner of Education
subtitle · 
School Report
citation · 
page 70
content

The two rooms have movable seats. In one room we had a “Solomon Grundy” party for those who did not dance. I wish I could have had a movie of those people playing ” tiddledy-winks,” “straws,” etc.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2536
Antique Toy World (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
547

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Antique Toy World.
published in · 
Antique Toy World
date · 
September 1987
citation · 
volume 17 • issue 9 • page cover • column full
summary

Photo of The Big Game Hunter (Bruce Whitehill) with games, including Lo Lo by E.I. Horsman and Crickets on the Grass

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2345
The Antique Trader Guide to Antique Prices (catalog)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
548

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Antique Trader Guide to Antique Prices.
published in · 
The Antique Trader Guide to Antique Prices
date · 
Fall 1982
citation · 
page 37
summary

Price listing

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2346
published in · 
The Antique Trader Guide to Antique Prices
date · 
October 1982
citation · 
page 54
summary

Price listing

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2347
Antiques and Collectibles (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
549

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Antiques and Collectibles.
published in · 
Antiques and Collectibles
date · 
June 1979
citation · 
page 17
summary

Ad by Fred Shapiro (same text as in Hobbies magazine).

tw-ref-ID · 
2348
The Antiques Journal (magazine)
publication ID · 
ISSN 0003-5963
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
550

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Antiques Journal.
published in · 
The Antiques Journal
date · 
December 1974
title · 
The games people played
by · 
Andrea Lovejoy
citation · 
page 22
summary

Rehash of Parker Brothers' 90 Years of Fun book.

content

Collectors who themselves played a game called “Tiddledy Winks” will want to search for Parker’s first edition of this stil popular recreational item. Born as a board game in the late 1890s the “Tiddledy Winks” success inspired variations such as “Tiddledy Winks Hopscotch” and “Tiddledy WInks Tennis”.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2349
published in · 
The Antiques Journal
date · 
May 1979
title · 
Ask Us
citation · 
volume 34 • issue 5 • page 48 • column 2
summary

Query by Rick Tucker and Fred Shapiro.

collection · 
original (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2350
Journal of Applied Statistics (journal)
tw-pub-ID · 
551

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Journal of Applied Statistics.
published in · 
Journal of Applied Statistics
date · 
May 2003
title · 
A new sports ratings system: The tiddlywinks world ratings
by · 
Patrick Barrie
citation · 
volume 30 • issue 4 • page 361 to 372
content

A system for calculating relative playing strengths of tiddlywinks players is described. The method can also be used for other sports. It is specifically designed to handle cases where the number of games played in a season varies greatly between players, and thus the confidence that one can have in an assigned rating also varies greatly between players. In addition, the method is designed to handle situations in which some games in the tournament are played as individuals (“singles’), while others are played with a partner (“pairs’).

tw-ref-ID · 
2351
Proceedings of the Aristoleian Society (journal)
publisher · 
Oxford Univesity Press
associated with · 
The Aristoleian Society
tw-pub-ID · 
575

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Proceedings of the Aristoleian Society.
published in · 
Proceedings of the Aristoleian Society
date · 
2006
title · 
Games and the Good
by · 
Thomas Hurka and John Tasioulas
citation · 
volume 80 • page 239 • column 1
content source · 
www.jstor.org/stable/4107044
content

Sports are activities the successful pursuit of which characteristically invited the display of some kind of physical prowess; indeed, having the opportunity to display such prowess is part of the point of engaging in sporting activities. This is why many jib at awarding unathletic indoor games such as tiddlywinks, darts or billiards the honorific description ‘sport’.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2393
ARTnews (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
552

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for ARTnews.
published in · 
ARTnews
date · 
January 1980
title · 
Unexpected Treasures of England’s Stately Homes
subtitle · 
Donatello tiddlywinks and Ming in the lavatory
citation · 
page 85
content
Photograph of the round bronze bowl by Donatello.
A 15th-century Donatello bronze, The Madonna and Child, served the Fitzwilliam family as a tiddlywinks bowl until the Victoria and Albert Museum recognized its importance.
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2352
Association Boys (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
553

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Association Boys.
published in · 
Association Boys
date · 
July 1903
title · 
Boys as Savages
by · 
Edgar M. Robinson
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 4 • page 139
content

We can but mention the influence of the games and athletics of camp. Though they may vary with the locality, one thing seems to characterize them everywhere. They demand strength, and fleetness, and agility. None of the “tiddledy winks” kind of expertness counts for much. Group games as a rule predominate, and in the subordination of self to the team, as others have shown, lay the foundation for self-sacrifice and other

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2353
Association Monthly (magazine)
Official organ of the Young Women's Christian Associations of the United States of America
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
554

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Association Monthly.
published in · 
Association Monthly
date · 
May 1920
title · 
The Test of Going Home
by · 
Mabel Ward Fraser
citation · 
volume 14 • issue 5 • page 229 • column 1
content

At first thought such serious planning seems to eliminate the fun with which we habitually associate vacation days, but not to her who tries it. Her body and spirit need play as they need sunlight and fresh air. So do her friends and neighbors. For every college girl who is finer and stronger for having learned to play there are numberless girls and boys and grown-ups who do not know how. One’s very play time, then, whether it be given to tennis or tiddledy winks, may become a service of dignity and worth.

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2354
The Atlantic Monthly (magazine)
alternate name · 
The Atlantic
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
555

Toggle showing 6 tiddlywinks references for The Atlantic Monthly.
published in · 
The Atlantic Monthly
date · 
1 April 1891
column title · 
Comment on New Books
citation · 
volume 67 • whole 402 • page 565 • column 1
content

The Young Folks’ Cyclopædia of Games and Sports, by John D. Champlin, Jr., and Arthur E. Bostwick. (Holt.) Eight hundred double-columned pages, full of descriptive illustrations, and so brought to date that the noble game of Tiddledy Winks has more than a column. We object seriously to one of the rules: “A player may not intentionally cover any of his opponent’s counters.” Why, the snap is taken out of the game when one can cover accidentally only.

collection · 
digitized image PDF (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2355
published in · 
The Atlantic Monthly
date · 
September 1902
title · 
On the Off-Shore Lights
by · 
Louise Lyndon Sibley
citation · 
volume 90 • whole 539 • page 383 • column 1
content

” [...] ’T is long ter set. I wisht I could feel ter play tiddledy-winks,” she said wistfully.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2356
published in · 
The Atlantic Monthly
date · 
November 1917
title · 
The Contributor’s Club
subtitle · 
The Floor
citation · 
volume 120 • page 715 • column 2
content

The only parallel that I can think of is the way in which, during very early childhood, we sometimes played tiddledywinks. When the man-made rules of that staid sport became too wearing for our advanced intellects, we used to get to snapping all at once, promiscuously. Everybody snapped everybody else’s wink, at the bull’s-eye or the eye of his neighbor, regardless. This indiscriminating sort of think lends a lawless charm most bracing to tiddledywinks, but it cancels conversation.

collection · 
digitized image PDF (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2357
published in · 
The Atlantic Monthly
date · 
May 1956
title · 
What shall we do with the dullards
by · 
Caspar D. Green
citation · 
page 74
content

There is no doubt that algebra, geography, English composition, civics, history, and literature are fun. But they are not fun like dancing, basetball, tiddlywinks, or tag; they are fun like algebra, geography, English composition, civics, history, and literature.

collection · 
excerpt (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2358
published in · 
The Atlantic Monthly
date · 
April 1990
title · 
Hollywood: The Ad
by · 
Mark Crispin Miller
citation · 
page 41 or later
tw-ref-ID · 
2359
published in · 
The Atlantic Monthly
date · 
June 1994
title · 
Busy, busy, busy
by · 
Cullen Murphy
citation · 
volume 273 • issue 6 • page 24 • column 3
content

Larry Kahn, of the North American Tiddlywinks Association, in Silver Spring, Maryland, explains that most of the 100 dues-paying “winkers” in his group are men, and that most have a background in mathematics or computers. In the United States major tiddlywinks tournaments are held four or five times a year. NATwA has a sister organization, known as ETwA, in England; of English winkers Kahn observes, “They’re even nerdier than we are.” Like participants in many other sports and games, winkers have developed a distinctive jargon. They may say, for instance, “I can’t pot my nurdled wink, so I’ll piddle you free and you can boondock a red.” Tiddlywinks apparently enjoyed something of an efflorescence in the United States in the late 1960s and the 1970s, after which it entered a period of mild decline. Kahn blames this on the nation’s having experienced a time of cynical economic opportunism and creeping spiritual discontent, which together eroded the bedrock of silliness upon which the edifice of tiddlywinks is erected. Or so I inferred. Actually, what he said when asked about the cause of the decline was simply, “Reagan.”

collection · 
digitized copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2360
Australian Law Times (journal)
location · 
Australia
tw-pub-ID · 
229

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Australian Law Times.
published in · 
Australian Law Times
date · 
1890
summary

A report on whether the term "tiddledy winks" is libelous.

notes · 
Cited in an article in the Cincinnati Enquirer, 13 December 1890, page 234, column 6.
tw-ref-ID · 
814
Baseball Weekly (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
556

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Baseball Weekly.
published in · 
Baseball Weekly
date · 
18 May 1994
title · 
Waxing nostalgic for weathered leather we once wore
by · 
Lisa Winston
citation · 
page 34
content

The last one picked for every team from softball to tiddlywinks.

collection · 
digitized copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2361
The Billboard (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
557

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Billboard.
published in · 
The Billboard
date · 
18 August 1951
column title · 
Television-Radio
title · 
The Rayburn and Finch Show
citation · 
page 9 • column 1
content

In spite of these negative factors, the boys work very well together and deliver a solid number of yocks. Their scene from Shakespeare, the play-by-play of the tiddly-winks championship from the Harvard field house, the Hollywood number interlaced with a satire on movie columnists, were all on the strong side.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2362
The Black Cat (magazine)
A Monthly Magazine of Original Short Stories
location · 
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
558

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Black Cat.
published in · 
The Black Cat
date · 
July 1903
title · 
An Arctic Scoop
by · 
Walter Tallmade Arndt; Philip Loring Allen
citation · 
volume 8 • issue 10 • page 16
content

As the papers never published any telegraph news their duties were not onerous and they spent most of their time playing tiddledywinks and tit-tat-too at the Red Walrus.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2363
The Book World (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
560

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Book World.
published in · 
The Book World
date · 
March 1901
column title · 
SPORTS
title · 
The Joys of Sport
by · 
W. Y. Stevenson
citation · 
volume 6 • issue 3 • page 270 • column 1
content

Mr. Stevenson is what is called an all-around sportsman. He has tried them all. Take golf, for example. “Gawf,” he says, “is a great game, but shiver me niblicks if I think it comes up to tiddledy-winks.” It is played “with a couple of farms, a river or so, two or three sand hills, a number of implements resembling dentists’ tools, a strange language, much like Hindoostani, any old clothes and a large assortment of oaths.”

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2365
Bookman (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
559

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Bookman.
published in · 
Bookman
date · 
September 1926
citation · 
page 90
summary

Quick book review of Sinclair Lewis’ book, Mantrap.

content

MANTRAP—Sinclair Lewis—Harcourt, Brace. The great realist plays an amusing game of tiddlywinks in the north woods.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2364
Boys’ Life (magazine)
associated with · 
Boy Scouts of America
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
561

Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for Boys’ Life.
published in · 
Boys’ Life
date · 
July 1916
title · 
BOYS PLAY “GRASSHOPPER TENNIS”
citation · 
volume 6 • issue 4 • page 35 • column 2
content

BOYS PLAY “GRASSHOPPER TENNIS”

in Camp or on Vacation, day or night, rain or shine

Most interesting, exciting, and snappy; the game sensation of 1916.

A combination of Lawn Tennis and Tiddledy-Winks. Two, three or four can play.

It’s just the thing for those rainy days or dull nights.

Comrades club together and send $1 for a barrel of fun.

Send for a booklet how to run a Championship Tennis Tournament.

Agents wanted

C. H. Belknap, 46 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, N.Y.

collection · 
digitized image (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2366
published in · 
Boys’ Life
date · 
September 1928
title · 
Words Across the Net
by · 
Harold M. Sherman
citation · 
volume 18 • issue 9 • page 12 • column 2
content

The big match of the day is to be a clash between Little Bill Johnston and Big Bill Tilden and Sandy keeps telling us to wait for this, that “we ain’t seen nothing yet.” But we think we’re seeing plenty. We’ve seen enough already to let us know we haven’t even been playing tiddledy-winks.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2367
published in · 
Boys’ Life
date · 
October 1930
title · 
On the Last Down
by · 
Harold M. Sherman
citation · 
volume 20 • issue 10 • page 5 • column 3
content

No coach cared to jeopardize youths who were not physically fitted to look out for themselves on the bruising gridiron. Football was no game of tiddledy-winks. You had to be strong enough and tough enough to survive on the bottom of jamming, twisting heap of elbows, fists, knees, feet and heavy bodies—with your face pushed into the dirt and your legs and arms in anything but a comfortable position!

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2368
published in · 
Boys’ Life
date · 
October 1931
title · 
Radio Control
by · 
Henry B. Comstock
citation · 
volume 21 • issue 10 • page 18
content

“What tha blankety-blank-blank did you think you was doing? Having a game of tiddly-winks, or three deep, or slap the baby, or what?”

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2369
published in · 
Boys’ Life
date · 
July 1975
title · 
Wink Tennis
by · 
Bob Loeffelbein and John Taylor
citation · 
page 52 to 53 • column 2 (page 52); 1 (page 53)
summary

Constructing a custom “Wink Tennis” table game. With photograph of two boys playing and an illustration of the tennis court.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2370
The Bridgemen's Magazine (magazine)
associated with · 
International Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers
location · 
American Central Life Building, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
563

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Bridgemen's Magazine.
published in · 
The Bridgemen's Magazine
date · 
April 1918
title · 
(no title)
by · 
J. Stitt Wilson
citation · 
volume 18 • issue 4 • page 195 • column 2
content

There is only one crime in human history, and we are seeking it now. That crime is the assumption by any kind of a specimen of a human being that dares to possess the earth or rule and deny the humblest human being the highest opportunity of a son of God on earth. There is no other crime; the rest are the tiddledy-winks acts of our human failure. That is the only crime, and correspondingly the supremest virtue in the world, the supremest significance of being a human being, is to stand up for the rights of man, to stand up for all men, and if need be to die for man against that crime of the ages.—J. Stitt Wilson.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2372
Bucks County Life (magazine)
location · 
Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
565

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Bucks County Life.
published in · 
Bucks County Life
date · 
October 1962
summary

Coverage of Oxford match against Bucks County Playhouse actors.

notability rating · 
potentially interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2374
Buddy Book Treasures (magazine)
publisher · 
The Children's House
location · 
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
564

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Buddy Book Treasures.
published in · 
Buddy Book Treasures
date · 
November 1928
summary

Catalog-like entry for tiddley winks

tw-ref-ID · 
2373
Business Week (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
183

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Business Week.
published in · 
Business Week
date · 
4 December 1971
title · 
TEXAS TIDDLYWINKS
by · 
Bill Mauldin (editorial cartoonist for the Chicago Sun-Times)
citation · 
page 26 • column 2
summary

Bill Mauldin cartoon of John Connally playing “Texas Tiddlywinks” with dollar and yen.

collection · 
original (Drix/NATwA); digital copy (NATwA); photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2375
published in · 
Business Week
date · 
2 October 1978
title · 
Where nuclear plants get grins—not growls
citation · 
edition Industrial Edition • page 22C
tw-ref-ID · 
2376
published in · 
Business Week
date · 
2 April 1984
title · 
High-Tech Exports: Sparks are About to Fly
citation · 
page 30
tw-ref-ID · 
2377
The Business World (magazine)
publisher · 
Business World Company
location · 
Tribune Building, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
567

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Business World.
published in · 
The Business World
date · 
15 October 1906
column title · 
Business Articles in the Magazines
title · 
Fortunes in Games
citation · 
volume 26 • issue 10 • page 828 • column 2
content

“Tiddledy-winks,” a game in which flipping small counters into a cup plays the chief part, has proved a gold mine in its way. This game was first played by some members of a club who were waiting for a card table. One of them started to try to flip a poker chip into his glass with a coin, and, as he failed, a friend thought he could do better. This led to bets being made, and in the end nearly all the members who were present in the club had gathered round the table and were breathless with excitement over this new game. Eventually it was decided to patent the game, and since then the public have paid something like two hundred throusand dollars to the retailers of “tiddledy-winks”

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2378
The Camera (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
568

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Camera.
published in · 
The Camera
date · 
August 1932
by · 
Bruce Metcalfe (photographer)
citation · 
volume 45 • issue 2 • page 107
summary

“TIDDLYWINKS” photograph from the Fourth Chicago International Photographic Salon.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2379
Canadian Magazine (magazine)
location · 
Canada
Notes

Sunday newspaper magazine insert?

tw-pub-ID · 
177

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Canadian Magazine.
published in · 
Canadian Magazine
date · 
February 1971
title · 
He Squidges! He Pots!… Canada Has A Great Chance In The North American Tiddlywinks Championships
summary

Includes photograph(s)

tw-ref-ID · 
542
published in · 
Canadian Magazine
date · 
1 May 1971
title · 
Canada's great tiddlywinks hope: they would up third
citation · 
page 24 to 25
summary

Includes photograph(s)

content

Perhaps, on balance, our forecasts have been pretty accurate. With the notable exception, that is, of tiddlywinks.

Black and white photograph of seven winkers looking at the camera.

[...]

collection · 
photocopy (Drix/NATwA); digital of photocopy copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
541
Catalog of Copyright Entries (official records)
publisher · 
Library of Congress
location · 
Washington, District of Columbia, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
569

Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for Catalog of Copyright Entries.
published in · 
Catalog of Copyright Entries
date · 
1928
citation · 
volume 25 • section Part 1 New Series • page 201 • column 1
content

Alderman, Fairchild co.*, Rochester, N. Y. 6519-6526

Blinky blinx- tiddledy winks. Directions for playing the game. no. 411. Sheet. © Feb. 4, 1928; 2 c.and aff. Feb. 20 ; A 1066418.

tw-ref-ID · 
2380
published in · 
Catalog of Copyright Entries
date · 
1928
citation · 
volume 25 • section Part 1 New Series • page 834 • column 1
content

Parker bros., inc.*, Salem, Mass.

Directions for playing. 1928. Each. sheet. 26047-26059 [...]

Pyramid tiddledy winks. © May 8; 2 c. and aff. May 11; A 1076759.

tw-ref-ID · 
2381
published in · 
Catalog of Copyright Entries
date · 
1928
citation · 
volume 25 • section Part 1 New Series • page 1004 • column 1
content

Parker bros., inc.*, Salem, Mass. 31017-31024
Directions for playing. 1928.

Games of base ball: Steeple chase [!] Hop in the Tub: Tiddledy winks. © May 18; 2 c. and aff. June 4; A 1079805.

tw-ref-ID · 
2382
published in · 
Catalog of Copyright Entries
date · 
1936
citation · 
volume 30 • section Part 4: Works of Art, Etc. New Series • page 24 • column 1
content

Einson-Freeman co., inc. 1282-1311

[Box design]: Baseball tiddledy winks, 1603, Basket-ball tiddledy winks, 1600. […] © Mar. 7, 1935; K 25331-2533[2] [...].

[Game design]: Baseball tiddledy winks, 1603, Basket-ball tiddledy winks, 1600. […] © Mar. 7, 1935; K 25336, 25340 [...].

tw-ref-ID · 
2383
published in · 
Catalog of Copyright Entries
date · 
1936
citation · 
volume 30 • section Part 4: Works of Art, Etc. New Series • page 42 • column 2
content

Gabriel (Saml) sons & co. [...] 2998

Tiddledy winks, T 220. © Mar. 1, 1934; K [...] 22499

tw-ref-ID · 
2384
published in · 
Catalog of Copyright Entries
date · 
January 1949 to June 1949
citation · 
volume 23 • section 3rd Series Volume 3 Part 1B • issue 1 • page 45 • column 1
content

Bradley (Milton) Company ©

Tiddledy winks tennis; a game for 2, 3 or 4 players. Instructions. 4808. Springfield, Mass., © 9Mar48. AA103131.

tw-ref-ID · 
2385
published in · 
Catalog of Copyright Entries
date · 
July 1969 to December 1969
citation · 
volume 23 • section 3rd Series Part 1 Section 1 • issue 2 • page 2671 • column 1
content

WARNER U.S.A.

Fill the ark; a Bible tiddlywinks game. Appl. author: Warner Press,Inc. © Warner U.S.A. a.a.d.o.W arner Press, Inc.; 15Jan69; A79259.

tw-ref-ID · 
2386
Century (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
570

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Century.
published in · 
Century
date · 
May 1919
title · 
The Archer
by · 
Richard Matthews Hallet
citation · 
page 585
content

In the case in question they spun away from the strongbacks like tiddledewinks.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2387
Century Advertising Supplement (to Century Magazine) (magazine)
location · 
USA
Notes

Available at the Library of Congress.

tw-pub-ID · 
571

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Century Advertising Supplement (to Century Magazine).
published in · 
Century Advertising Supplement (to Century Magazine)
date · 
December 1890
by · 
E. I. Horsman
tw-ref-ID · 
2388
Changing Times (magazine)
The Kiplinger Magazine
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
572

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Changing Times.
published in · 
Changing Times
date · 
October 1949
title · 
So You Want to Invent a Game
citation · 
page 29
content

With a few exceptions, Parker Brothers own almost all the well-known proprietary games. Many old games, such as chess, checkers, Chinese checker and tiddlywinks, are open games, not owned by anyone. They are in the public domain.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2389
Chatterbox (magazine)
publisher · 
The Page Company
location · 
53 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Notes

John Erskine Clarke, M.A. (founder)

tw-pub-ID · 
573

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Chatterbox.
published in · 
Chatterbox
date · 
1919
title · 
The Home Toy-Shop
subtitle · 
I. Games for a Rainy Day
citation · 
page 28 to 29 • column 1 (page 28); 1 (page 29)
content

You mark out a square on a piece of stout cardboard severn inches by seven inches, and rule it into forty-nine equal squares of one inch. On twenty-five separate one-inch squares of card put the numbers one to twenty-five, and set these on the board in any way, the positions being changed after each game. In the illustration (fig. 1), the twenty-five numbered pieces form a compact square in the twenty-five inner compartments.

Illustration of a 7 by 7 array of square cells, with most but not all of them marked with a number from 1 to 25 and also C, A, and B.
Fig. 1 .—A Walling-off Game.

The same board can be used as a scoring-board f[or the] well-known game of “Tiddley-Winks,” the nu[mbered] squares being distributed in any uneven way.

Illustration of a stack of 4 bound books at left and the same at right, with a wire spanning across them. A human figure is balanced on the wire above the table surface.
Fig. 2.—A Tiddleywinks Target.

A target can be set up as shown in fig. 2, for ‘Tiddley-Wink’ players to shoot at. Cut out some comical cardboard figure, about two inches long, and across the chest glue a strip of match-wood. A few books with a lenght of thread twisted tightly round the topmost make a suitable tight-rope on which the figure can be balanced by means of the short piece of match-wood. When [...] the small counters should be placed on a double [...] cloth, and then chipped by the edge of a larger [counter.]

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2390
Child Development (journal)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
574

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Child Development.
published in · 
Child Development
date · 
March 1963
title · 
Development of sex differences in play choices during preadolescence
by · 
Brian Sutton-Smith, B. G. Rosenberg, and E. F. Morgan Jr.
citation · 
page 121
tw-ref-ID · 
2391
published in · 
Child Development
date · 
1964
title · 
Measuring Masculinity and Femininity by Children’s game choices
by · 
Richard N. Walker
citation · 
page 965
tw-ref-ID · 
2392
Children's Work for Children (magazine)
publisher · 
Women’s Foreign Missionary Organizations
associated with · 
Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church
tw-pub-ID · 
578

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Children's Work for Children.
published in · 
Children's Work for Children
date · 
April 1892
title · 
Geographical Tiddledywinks
citation · 
volume 17 • issue 4 • page 69
content

A half-dozen, little full-blooded Indian girls, were in my room a few evenings since, playing Tiddledywinks, a game sent us from the east.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2396
Christianity Today (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
579

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Christianity Today.
published in · 
Christianity Today
date · 
12 September 1994
title · 
Blinded by the ‘lite:’ dying modernity is “into” spirituality
citation · 
volume 38 • issue 10 • page 14 • column 2
tw-ref-ID · 
2397
Collier's (magazine)
The National Weekly
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
580

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Collier's.
published in · 
Collier's
date · 
8 February 1919
title · 
Signor Pug
by · 
Mildred Cram
citation · 
page 7 • column 3
content

There’s trouble down there, and I’ve been playing tiddledy-winks on Broadway!

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2398
The Colorado Magazine (magazine)
location · 
Colorado, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
581

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Colorado Magazine.
published in · 
The Colorado Magazine
date · 
April 1893
title · 
Mrs. Gaskell's Tiddledy-Winks
by · 
Carol Foster
citation · 
volume 1 • page 267 to 270
content
Cartoon depicting a man sitting in a chair at left, with his hands on a table playing tiddlywinks. A woman appears at right, standing in front of a chair. Another man is observing at rear left.
Mrs. Gaskell's Little Game.

MRS. GASKELL determined to give a party. Not a crush with trains, and décolleté, and all that the resources of the village quite precluded anything of the kind—but just a “small and early,” which should embrace only the best families. And it should be something out of the ordinary run of tea and gossip—she was resolved upon that—but what? It was a very proper community, and cards and dancing were not to be thought of, and quiltings and apple-bees were voted old-fashioned—still there must be something by which sociability could be galvanized intolife and she did not despair. Her horizon was a little broader than that of her neighbors, for she had a city sister to whom she was indebted for many a suggestion and to her she carried the present perplexity. Letters of advice and counsel flew back and forth and at length, one day. everybody that was anybody in Clinton received a card like the following:

Mrs. Gaskell
will be pleased to see
you on Tuesday, March 31st,
from 2 till 5 o’clock.

Tiddledy-Winks.

It was a bomb shell! Everyone felt flattered to be invited to Mrs. Gaskell’s, as she was popularly supposed to know what was what, but that mystic word in the left hand corner was a puzzler. It might be an old story in other localities but rustic Clinton had never seen nor heard it. And then only ladies were invited, which, in itself was an innovation—what were we coming to anyhow?

Grand-father Jones put on his best glasses, sighted the card at arm’s length and then peered at it near by, turned it wrong side up. and up side down but could make nothing of it. Grand-daughter Nelli peeped over his shoulder, and said, maybe Mrs. Gaskell forgot to cross the first letter and it was an “F” instead of a “T” and ” Winks” was his last name.

Mrs. Bird thought it must mean that you should bring your babies, and when they were “Tiddled” awhile, they could be laid away for the traditional forty winks while their mothers enjoyed themselves, and she “must say it was very thoughtful in Mary Ann Gaskell, who had no children of her own.”

Mr. Larkin, who was the village politician “‘lowed it was a kind o’ female suffrage meetin’ and for his part he hadn’t much opinion o’ hen parties, no how.”

Some thought it might be a joke, others a surprise, and one or two ventured to ask Mrs. Gaskell herself about it, but she only smiled mysteriously and bade them come and see.

As might be expected, on the appointed day every guest was present, and on tiptoe with curiosity. When they found the pleasant parlors filled with tables, and each flanked by four chairs, some of the older ladies put on their severest looks, as though scenting wickedness in the air, but Mrs. Gaskell was deaf and blind to every such symptom, and, producing six neat little boxes, proceeded to explain the beauties and intricacies of “Progressive Tiddledy-Winks.” Such a chattering as there was! “How do you do it?” “I never saw the game before in my life.” “Who plays first?” “When do you begin?” and kindred questions were heard in all directions. A less efficient hostess would have been distracted. But partners were at length chosen, and the game settled down after the well-known rules of progressive euchre only here they were not well-known, and it took some time to learn that the winners at lower tables always progressed towards the top, and that the winners at the top remained there so long as they continued winners. It was a lively scene, and when a half-dozen games had been played, nobody wanted to stop, even though a lovely supper stood ready for them.

After supper, a new surprise awaited the guests. Mrs. Gaskell announced that she had provided a little souvenir of the occasion for the lady who had won most games, and also one for her who had least. What a counting up of scores there was. and when one prize was awarded to Mrs.Davies, and the other to Miss Hart, everyone declared that they would have worked twice as hard if they had known there was anything half so lovely among the possibilities. And so the party broke up, all declaring this was a red-letter day in Clinton society.

But this was not the end. The complacency with which Mrs. Gaskell had regarded the success of her party, was turned to gall and wormwood, when, on the next Sabbath, Parson Brown preached a sermon on the iniquity of gambling. As it was a sin entirely unknown in the village, the discourse seemed as innocent as one against the drama, for instance, in the wilds of Africa, and it took Mrs. Gaskell a good while to realize that her weil-meant attempt at entertainment was being used to “point a moral and adorn a tale.” The reverend speaker spoke of the wiles of theDevil, of the wicked amusements of the city being transplanted into our peaceful community, of the unholy passions that were aroused thereby, and especially the depths of depravity that followed the sin of covetousness. and as the full force of it all grew upon her, Mrs. Gaskell went home full of wrath and indignation. A night’s rest did much to calm her feelings, and as she reflected that the parson probably knew as little of any gambling game as he evidently did of Tiddledy-Winks, a smile played about her mouth, and she determined to give another entertainment, but this time for “gentlemen only.” Shortly after dinner she sent out three dainty little notes, one to Rev. Zephaniah Brown, and one each to the two elders of his church,Messrs. Davies and Burt. Each asked the person addessed to call on her that evening, and were all exactly alike, save that the Parson was asked to come at seven, Elder Davies at half-past seven, and Elder Burt at eight. As the time was so short, she thought it unlikely they would have an opportunity to compare notes, but in any event she must take her chance of that.

At seven o’clock Mr. Brown rang the bell, and was shown into the pleasant parlor, where Mrs. Gaskell received him in her most bewitching manner. But the Reverend gentleman was ready for Delilah and wore his most forbidding frown—he made nodoubt that his sermon had struck home and was prepared to do his duty in admonishing a repentant sinner or calling down the terrors of the law on a stiff-necked and rebellious one. Mrs. Gaskell read him like an open book, and after a few general remarks led the conversation to the subject in hand.”

Mr. Brown,” she said, ” I took the liberty of intruding on your valuable time to ask you who it is that has been introducing gambling into this quiet nook? You know my husband is a Justice of the Peace, and I want to urge him to get out a warrant and stop such wickedness.”

The minister looked a little nonplussed, but bringing the tips of the fingers of both hands together, said solemnly, “He that regardeth iniquity in his heart is no less wicked than he that committeth the overt act.”

Mrs. Gaskell dropped her anxious look and settling back into her chair with a sigh of relief, said, “Oh, that is it! Of course it is very wicked, but I cannot help being glad that no one has really done it yet, because you know some one else might have seen it and been led astray. But,” sheadded, looking up into his face with the confidingness of a child “do you think it would do to arrest them for thinking about gambling?”

Mr. Brown had an uncomfortable feeling of being quizzed, and said severely, ” Madam, I am sorry to say that it is by you our young people are being led astray.”

”I!” was the exclamation, in great surprise;” I beseech you tell me how that can be?”

”Yes, Madam, you, with your unholy games.”

”Is it possible.” was the reply, “that by all these dreadful things you mean my poor little Tiddledy-Winks party?”

”I know nothing of the names by which the Devil chooses to deceive even the very elect at times, but from what I have heard, I believe this to be one of those sinful games that lead to all manner of iniquity.”

It was hard for Mrs. Gaskell to look becomingly penitent and serious, but she said, “Surely Mr. Brown, you have never seen the game,” and before the gentleman could remonstrate she had pulled from behind a screen a little table tightly covered with felt, with a box of Tiddledy-Winks in the center. Talking as fast as she could to prevent interruption, she went on: “Of course I will never play again if you really disapprove it, and I am very sorry I should have been the means of introducing it to others, but really it does not seem quite fair that you should altogether condemn us without seeing what the game is. Just look at that simple little box—you will see that it is a game in which there can be no money, no stake of any kind—just these little bits of ivory and that tiny giass. We place the glass in the middle, so—and divide up these little ‘winks’ (isn’t it a funny name?), putting six on each side the table like that; then suppose I was the first player, I would take this largest bit of ivory and try to flip a small one into the glass. There, you see I got that one in, and that gives me another trial—there, that one missed—you see it is quite a silly game, but some persons are more successful in playing than others.”

The Parson listened in spite of himself and as he watched the slim little fingers toying with the bits of ivory, he thought he could put them in oftener in spite of his larger hands. Mrs. Gaskell went on explaining, he got interested without intending it. and did not realize that they were really playing a game till the door opened noiselessly, and Elder Davies was shown into the room. The Parson looked very much confused, but Mrs. Gaskell never changed her position, only offered her hand cordially and said, “I am so glad you have come Mr. Davies; I was showing Mr. Brown how much he was mistaken about my poor Tiddledy -Winks; now I can show you at the same time. Pray take a seat there between us. Place those six little green buttons in front of you and with the larger one in your hand, you will soon see what an innocent amusement it is.”

”Thank you.” said Mr. Davies, who was delighted to find himself in such good company; “my wife has told me a great deal about the delightful time she had at your party, and it is contrary to all discipline, you know, for the Elder’s wife to know more than the Elder!”

And thus it happened that for half an hour Mrs. Gaskell had a very lively three-handed game in her parlor, which was only interrupted by the entrance of Elder Burt. To say that all three gentlemen were astonished is to put it very mildly, and the hostess was the only one thoroughly at ease. With the sweetest smile, she shook hands with the new guest, and. making room for him beside herself, said:

”You are just in time Mr. Burt. Someone has been maligning my little game and I was showing our good friends here what a harmless thing it is. I could not be happy a moment if the leading gentlemen of the community disapproved it,” and she bowed comprehensively, “but really I think when you know what it is you will all agree with me that it is better than talking about one’s neighbors as we are so apt to do when we have nothing special to occupy us. Mr. Davies, will you please pass me those small white men that Mr. Burt may see for himself how it is?”

At last Mrs. Gaskell felt herself a success. In spite of prejudice and the pride of consistency, she was playing a four-handed game in her own parlor with the minister and both his elders. The time flew on fairy wings for these staid gentlemen, all unused as they were to any form of amuse-ment and when at length the door opened again, and a trim little maid entered with cups of strong aromatic coffee, such as elderly men love, together with some dainty cakes, all were surprised and just a little ashamed to find that it was late. Mrs. Gaskell bowed them sweetly from the door, and she always said her only regret was that her husband was from home and did not witness her victory.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2399
Computer Weekly (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
582

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Computer Weekly.
published in · 
Computer Weekly
date · 
late 1979 ?
notes · 
Mentioned in Winking World 34, page 6.
tw-ref-ID · 
2400
Confidential Price List and Telegraph Code (catalog)
publisher · 
McLoughlin Brothers
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
795

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Confidential Price List and Telegraph Code.
published in · 
Confidential Price List and Telegraph Code
date · 
1894 to 1895
title · 
Kings Quoits
by · 
McLoughlin Brothers
citation · 
page 18 • column 1
content

Code: SPIRAL
Nos.: 490
King's Quoits
Price Per Gross: 72 00

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2899
published in · 
Confidential Price List and Telegraph Code
date · 
1894 to 1895
by · 
McLoughlin Brothers
citation · 
page 25 • column 1
content

Code: Pansy
Nos.: 850
Tiddledy Winks No. 0, [crossed out: Duranoid] Bone [written in] Chips
Price per Gross: $12.00

Code: Parade
Nos. 851
Tiddledy Winks No. 1, Bone Chips ...
Price per Gross: $18.00

Code: Parcel
Nos. 852
Tiddledy Winks No. 2, Bone Chips ...
Price per Gross: $36.00

Code: Parish
Nos. 853
Tiddledy Winks No. 3, Bone Chips ...
Price per Gross: $72.00

Code: Padlock
Nos. 854
Game of Hurdles ...
Price per Gross: $36.00 not determined to be tiddlywinks

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
type · 
catalog
tw-ref-ID · 
2900
The Contemporary Review (magazine)
publisher · 
Isbister and Company Limited
location · 
15 and 16 Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
584

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Contemporary Review.
published in · 
The Contemporary Review
date · 
August 1894
title · 
The Home or the Barrack for the Children of the State
by · 
Henrietta O. Barrett
citation · 
volume 66 • page 246 • column 1
content

Recreation rooms were provided for both boys and girls, and the long winter evenings were anything but dreary, for when school was done and work over the children gathered in the brilliantly lit, hot-pipe-heated rooms and played draughts, bagatelle, lotto, or tiddly-winks.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2403
The Cosmopolitan (magazine)
publisher · 
The Cosmopolitan Press
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
585

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for The Cosmopolitan.
published in · 
The Cosmopolitan
date · 
July 1895
title · 
The Maltese Cat
by · 
Rudyard Kipling
citation · 
volume 19 • issue 3 • page 308 • column 2
content

“Who said anything about biting? I’m not playing tiddlywinks. I’m playing the game.”

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2404
published in · 
The Cosmopolitan
date · 
October 1895
title · 
The Parker Games
subtitle · 
They are Played in a Million Homes
citation · 
volume 19 • issue 6 • page unnumbered, 6 pages after 704
content

Our illustrated catalogue describing “Innocence Abroad,” “Chivalry,” “Penny Post,” “Kringle,” “Tiddledy Winks,” and 100 other games, on receipt of 2c. stamp.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2405
published in · 
The Cosmopolitan
date · 
~ April 1976
title language · 
English
citation · 
page 38 to 39
summary

"Tiddly-Winks™" bra and lingerie from The WARNACO Group

collection · 
original (Rick Tucker collection)
notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
3802
Current Opinion (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
586

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Current Opinion.
published in · 
Current Opinion
date · 
September 1891
column title · 
Current Literature
title · 
Brief and Critical Comment
citation · 
volume 8 • issue 1 • page 159 to 160
content

Mrs. Amelia E. Barr, writing in The North American Review, takes this view of the matter: “The true writer gives his whole intellect and his whole time to his work, and he is satisfied to do so. He has no time and no interest to spare for tiddledy-winks and donkey parties, nor even for progressive euchre. […]”

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2406
published in · 
Current Opinion
date · 
July 1924
title · 
The Golden Honeymoon
by · 
Ring Lardner
citation · 
page 57
tw-ref-ID · 
2407
Delta Upsilon
associated with · 
Delta Upsilon
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
335

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Delta Upsilon.
published in · 
Delta Upsilon
date · 
16 September 1907
title · 
Looking Backward
subtitle · 
"Before-the-Charter" Reminiscences
by · 
William Hardy Alexander
citation · 
volume 25 • issue 4 • page 333
summary

Reprinted from "News of our Chapter" of the Toronto Chapter.

content

Well, this quartette of worthies was thusly gathered one autumn evening on Breadline—Lord ! Breadalbane—Street: enter to them the present writer, a sophomore, who, having accepted the invitation of the "frat." a day or so previously, mainly because he didn't know how to refuse, had now come to be initiated. Don't talk to me about bum initiations ! That was the limit far and away. I came over prepared to be killed, if necessary, and all they made me do was to swear politely eternal brotherhood and all the rest of the tiddledy-winks. Was I sorry I had joined ? Let us be quite frank.

links · 
Google Books – digitized image (free) (tw-ref-link-id 2340)
tw-ref-ID · 
1428
Dimensions (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
588

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Dimensions.
published in · 
Dimensions
date · 
around Winter 1983 to 1984
summary

Listing of NATwA’s Continentals tournament

tw-ref-ID · 
2409
Disarmament Times (magazine)
associated with · 
United Nations Non-Governmental Organization Disarmament Committee
tw-pub-ID · 
589

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Disarmament Times.
published in · 
Disarmament Times
date · 
6 October 1980
title · 
Back to the drawing board on the NPT!
citation · 
page 4
summary

Figurative use of the word tiddlywinks.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2410
Discover (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
590

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Discover.
published in · 
Discover
date · 
April 1993
title · 
Loops of space
citation · 
volume 14 • issue 4 • page 60(9)
summary

(a possible theory of quantum gravity), mention.

tw-ref-ID · 
2411
The Draughts Players’ Weekly Bulletin (magazine)
publisher · 
J. A. Kear & Son
location · 
5, Beaumont Street, Stapleton Road, Bristol, Bristol, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
592

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Draughts Players’ Weekly Bulletin.
published in · 
The Draughts Players’ Weekly Bulletin
date · 
21 November 1896
column title · 
London Notes
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 3 • page 35 • column 1
content

I am the happy possessor of a monster pen’north in the “Sunlight” Yearbook.” In addition to treatises on Veal stuffing, Tiddley Winks and Double Sixes, the work contains an article on Draughts in which the gifted author is good enough to remark that the game “may call forth a fair amount of skill.”

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2413
Dun’s Business Month
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
593

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Dun’s Business Month.
published in · 
Dun’s Business Month
date · 
November 1981
title · 
Satisfying Cable’s Vast Appetite for Programming
citation · 
page 84
collection · 
excerpt (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2414
The Economist (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
594

Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for The Economist.
published in · 
The Economist
date · 
18 November 1947
title · 
End of Act Two
citation · 
page 626 • column 1
content

The storm was long predicted; Ministers have had the most ample warning; yet when its first icy gust blew in the windows of the Cabinet room last February, it found Ministers playing tiddleywinks.

These are hard words. But politics is the art of the possible and he who would condemn a group of politicians for their misuse of power must first convince himself that a more effective grouping was possible.

notes · 
Fred Shapiro indicates that this usage "alerted lexicographers to figurative usage” of the word, tiddlywinks.
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2415
published in · 
The Economist
date · 
27 December 1980
title · 
Marching Past Georgia
citation · 
page 13
collection · 
excerpt (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2416
published in · 
The Economist
date · 
10 December 1988
title · 
By the squidging of their thumbs….
citation · 
whole 7580 • page 45 • column 2
summary

Preventing multiple voting in Ghana.

content

Ghana's local elections on December 6th involved a lot of ink. Voters queued outside polling stations in village post offices and schools to have their hands marked with indelible violet crosses that would betray them if they tried to vote again. They then had to squidge their thumbs into dark blue pads and press them on the ballot papers.

notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2417
published in · 
The Economist
date · 
4 March 1989
title · 
A gap in the learning market
subtitle · 
Britain’s only private university has lessons for its state-financed competitors
citation · 
volume 310 • whole 7592 • page 57 • column 2
summary

About the University of Buckingham

content

Earnest study. With such a concentrated study programme, there is little time for partying, student politics, or tiddlywinks societies.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2418
published in · 
The Economist
date · 
27 February 1993
title · 
The royal game
by · 
David Manasian
citation · 
volume 326 • whole 7800 • page 96
summary

Concerning the game of court tennis

content

Do not, however, assume a contest on a physical par with tiddlywinks: real tennis (meaning “royal”, rather than “genuine”, and also known as court tennis) is the finest racquet sport of all.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2419
Journal of Educational Sociology (journal)
associated with · 
American Sociological Association
tw-pub-ID · 
595

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Journal of Educational Sociology.
published in · 
Journal of Educational Sociology
date · 
October 1933
title · 
A Discussion of Criteria or Standards of Educational Value with Special Reference to Woodworking
by · 
Fred Strickler
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 2 • page 121
content source · 
www.jstor.org/stable/2961684
content

When I begin to think of boys and girls I begin to think of their eager pursuit of some activity because of its special appeal and their special interest in doing some particular phase of it. They must choose, they must identify themselves with the activity whole-heartedly or they would better be playing “tiddledy-winks” or thinking about nothing in particular.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2420
Journal of English and Germanic Philology (journal)
publisher · 
University of Illinois Press
tw-pub-ID · 
577

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Journal of English and Germanic Philology.
published in · 
Journal of English and Germanic Philology
date · 
October 1953
title · 
Elements of Criticial Theory by Wayne Shumaker
by · 
W. K. Wimsatt, Jr.
citation · 
volume 52 • issue 4 • page 587 • column 1
content source · 
www.jstor.org/stable/27713615
content

do not believe Mr. Shumaker has written his book with the conscious aim of destroying literary criticism. But it would be difficult to conceive a way better calculated to reduce criticism to one of the most conspicuously futile forms of tiddlywinks in the range of civilized activities.

Yale University

W. K. Wimsatt, Jr.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2395
The English Illustrated Magazine (magazine)
publisher · 
The Central Publishing Company
location · 
358, Strand, W. C., London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
596

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The English Illustrated Magazine.
published in · 
The English Illustrated Magazine
date · 
May 1908
title · 
A Scientific Game
by · 
Agnes Hood
citation · 
volume 39 • whole 62 • page 155
content

The lady speaks: “Oh, yes, I’m devoted to whist; I know you men think we poor women can’t play a bit, but really you’re quite wrong. I’ve been told I play a very pretty game. It is so nice and intellectual, isn’t it? It makes one think. No, I don’t care for most games, they are such waster of time, don’t you think so? A friend of mine spends hours, positively hours, over Tiddleywinks. I often say to her, my dear Mary, how can you? I call it really wicked to waste one’s time so.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2421
The English Journal (journal)
tw-pub-ID · 
597

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The English Journal.
published in · 
The English Journal
date · 
March 1919
title · 
Protecting the Theme-Reader
by · 
Homer A. Watt
citation · 
volume 8 • issue 3 • page 170 • column 1
content

The principal charge against Freshman English is that it is uninspiring. It does not engage the teacher’s mind sufficiently nor pay back in intellectual stimulation the efforts expended upon it. To descend from several years of graduate study of the best literature in the world to extensive and intensive reading of what the Atlantic Clubber calls the worst literature in the world is like a descent from chess to tiddledywinks.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2422
Entertainment Weekly (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
598

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Entertainment Weekly.
published in · 
Entertainment Weekly
date · 
16 June 1995
title · 
Head Over Heels
citation · 
issue 279 • page 58(2)
summary

Mention in sound recording reviews

tw-ref-ID · 
2423
Esquire (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
599

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Esquire.
published in · 
Esquire
date · 
September 1949
title · 
Love and Tiddlywinks
by · 
Martin Gardner
citation · 
volume 31 • issue 3 • whole 190 • page 76 to 77
content

So the first word I called out was ‘Tiddlywinks.’

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2424
published in · 
Esquire
date · 
February 1984
column title · 
American Beat
title · 
For Members Only
by · 
Bob Greene
citation · 
page 12
summary

Includes a section about Larry Kahn

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2425
published in · 
Esquire
date · 
29 January 2007
column title · 
The Screen
title · 
And the Leni Riefenstahl ward for Rabid Nationalism Goes to…
by · 
Tom Carson
citation · 
edition online
content

Spielberg turns him back into Sergeant York, and his feats make the real one’s look like tiddlywinks.

tw-ref-ID · 
2426
Ethnology (journal)
tw-pub-ID · 
600

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Ethnology.
published in · 
Ethnology
date · 
April 1962
title · 
Child training and game involvement
by · 
J. M. Roberts & Brian Sutton-Smith
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 2 • page 177 • column 1
content

TABLE 7

Number of Games Differentiating Between the Sexes at p = .05 or Better

Game Classes—Pure Physical Skill

Nonsignificant—Quoits (1)

Favoring Girls— Hopscotch, Jump Rope, Jacks, Tiddleywinks (4)

Favoring Boys—Bowling, Horseshoes, Racing, Tug of War, Darts, Shuffleboard, Bows & Arrows, Throwing Snowballs, Shooting (9)

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2427
Everybody's (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
601

Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for Everybody's.
published in · 
Everybody's
date · 
April 1906
title · 
The Gathering of the Churches
subtitle · 
Graft in the Wage System
by · 
Eugene Wood
citation · 
volume 14 • issue 4 • page 466 • column 1
content

“Open and honorable competition!” What do our “moral teachers” think the scuffle for a living is? A game of tiddledywinks?

notes · 
Publication name is: Everybody's Magazine.
tw-ref-ID · 
2428
published in · 
Everybody's
date · 
March 1912
title · 
Otherwhere
by · 
Leon Rutledge Whipple
citation · 
volume 26 • issue 3 • page 527 • column 2
content

The lambs bounced away on springs, “baa-baa-ing” plaintively. [...]

“They hop like tiddledywinks on green felt,” she called to John, laughing against the fence.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2429
published in · 
Everybody's
date · 
3 May 1958
title · 
Well and True Tiddled
by · 
Russell Gordon
citation · 
page 14 to 15
notes · 
Includes an illustration.
collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2430
published in · 
Everybody's
date · 
17 May 1958
by · 
Peter Downes
summary

Tiddlywinks query by Peter Downes

notes · 
Mentioned in an edition of Winking World.
tw-ref-ID · 
2431
Fab (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
602

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Fab.
published in · 
Fab
date · 
1965
summary

Mention in an article about musician Spencer Davis.

content

Graduate in German, Spencer Davis, likes best to sleep and eat—but not both at once. As a group, the Spencer Davis mob are keen tiddlywinkers and carry their sets around with them. Drummer Pete York, 6 ft. 3 in. tall, is known as Tiddler and is great with the winks. They seem to have started quite a trend and got the Manfreds and Animals interested too. So if you see the boys hopping around on the floor, don't disturb them. A match point might be at stake.

notes · 
Mentioned in Winking World 8, page 16.
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2432
Fabrics Fancy Goods and Notions
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
603

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Fabrics Fancy Goods and Notions.
published in · 
Fabrics Fancy Goods and Notions
date · 
October 1905
title · 
Dolls and Toys
citation · 
volume 39 • issue 10 • page 32 • column 2
content

The Tiddledy Winks Ring game is another attractive game of Tiddledy Winks. At one end of the bottom of the box there is a circle in which are set fourteen pins, each one inside a smaller circle and numbered from one to fourteen. The implements consist of two Tiddledys and four Ring Winks, which are snapped from a felt disc. The game is played very much on the order of quoits, the object being to ring the pins counting the highest numbers, and it requires considerable skill to do this. The game sells for $2.00 a dozen, and each one is supplied with full instructions as to how it is played.

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2433
Famous Jersey Cattle (magazine)
Serial Historical Magazine
tw-pub-ID · 
604

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Famous Jersey Cattle.
published in · 
Famous Jersey Cattle
date · 
November 1922
title · 
Tiddledywink’s Majesty King 181784, AJCC
by · 
Cedar Run Farm (Phoenixville, Pennsylvania)
citation · 
volume 1 • section Advertising section • issue 1 • page 14 and others • column 1
content

We placed Tiddledywink's Majesty King in service with the conviction that through his use “Cedar Run” would to a degree step ino the shoes of White Horse Farmes, now being dispersed after thirteen years’ intelligent and effective breeding by its late owner.

notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2434
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
643

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction.
published in · 
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction
date · 
August 1955
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2521
Focus (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
605

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Focus.
published in · 
Focus
date · 
August? 1999
content

NASA should hire tiddlywink players to be astronauts

tw-ref-ID · 
2435
Forbes (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
606

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Forbes.
published in · 
Forbes
date · 
10 December 2007
title · 
You Don't Know Tiddly
by · 
Dick Teresi
citation · 
section Forbes Life section
content

In the bare-knuckle world of competitive tiddlywinks, squops, gromps and Bristols are all fair play.

When Dave Lockwood sidled up to the pad to face Larry “King” Kahn in the penultimate round of the championship series, the tension in the room was so palpable one could cut it with a dull squidger–not that anyone in this crowd, which included four former world champions, would be in possession of a dull squidger.

Lockwood, trailing Kahn in the overall competition by three points and needing a decisive win to pull ahead, launched an all-out attack. We’re not talking about a nancy-boy, Indianapolis Colts, Peyton Manning attack, but rather a 1985 Chicago Bears attack, both safeties and every linebacker on a blitz, to hell with the consequences.

It started to work, too. Lockwood commandeered a huge pile of winks, but then Kahn, a former world champion, executed a masterly Bristol, and the 2007 North American Singles Tiddlywinks title was his. It is here that the responsible journalist should explain what a Bristol is, but let us put such technicalities aside for the moment in favor of a revelation:

Tiddlywinks is a sport, or so the winkers, playing here at the local high school in Ithaca, New York, kept telling me. It requires the foresight and strategy of chess, but, as one must shoot the winks to the desired location, the game takes a good bit of physical prowess as well. Former world champion Severin Drix called tiddlywinks a cross between chess and pool, an ideal mix of skill, strategy and luck. I would add “obsession.”

Created in 1888 by an English pub owner to amuse his patrons between brawls, tiddlywinks was a simple game in which a player pressed one disk, a squidger, down on the edge of another to force it to fly through the air and into a cup, a move called “potting.” For decades it remained a pastime primarily for children.

The game was transformed in 1955 at Cambridge University, where students instituted a set of rules more prolix than the Salt II accord. Tiddlywinks now takes place on a six-foot-long table covered with a mat, these days made of orthopedic foam, which provides lift and predictability when squidging a wink.

Tiddlywinks is normally a pairs game, with four colors of winks: blue, green, red and yellow. Each player gets six winks of the same color: four small winks of 16-millimeter diameter and two larger 22mm winks. Blue and red are partners, as are green and yellow (in singles, players take two colors). Play proceeds alphabetically (blue, green, red, yellow), with each player starting at a corner of the table. A small pot, 38mm high, with a 48mm opening at the top, sits in the center.

Scoring is what primarily separates the adult game from the child’s version. A player earns three points for each wink he has shot into the pot and one point for each wink that remains uncovered by an opponent’s wink. This means that tiddlywinks is mainly a defensive game.

At the Ithaca tournament, I tried my hand at potting. I barely missed my first attempt, then potted six straight winks from various distances and angles. I thought, aha, I finally have found my sport. That would be true if we were playing the old pub brand of tiddly. But in the Cambridge- improved version, potting isn’t everything. In fact, I witnessed many matches in which nary a wink ended up in the pot. As in golf, you pot for show, and “squop” for dough. If only there were some dough.

Covering, or squopping, your opponent’s wink, which takes it out of play, turns out generally to be a better strategy than going for the pot. The odds favor the player who controls the field of winks and plays for a low score over he who guns for three-pointers. Players vie to control ever-growing piles of winks by landing one of their colors on top. A single wink can theoretically squop any number of winks. Picture here not a neat stack, like a column of poker chips, but a “shingled” pile, a cascade of winks, each covering the one beneath like a fanned-out deck of cards.

At the national championships, I watched Ferd “the Bull” Wulkan take on Joe Sarnelle in an early round. Severin Drix served as my game-day commentator. Drix, a high school math teacher, and Wulkan, a labor organizer, both attended the Bronx High School of Science, graduating in 1964.

Drix explained that there are two American capitals of winking: Ithaca and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Wulkan went on to MIT, where he helped spark the Cambridge effort, while Drix attended Cornell and spearheaded the Ithaca winking machine. Since 1965, the bulk of American winkers have come from Cornell, MIT and Harvard.

Alas the game has never moved into the mainstream, as Drix was reminded a few years ago when he attempted to cross the Canadian border. Border guards asked what business Drix and his party had in Toronto. Drix replied, “We’re going to a tiddlywinks tournament.” The guards tore their cars apart.

Drix provided analysis as Wulkan and Sarnelle went at it. Early on Wulkan “nurdled” a wink. A nurdle is a wink that lands too close to the pot so it can’t be potted on a subsequent shot. It is an embarrassing but not fatal error. The game moved swiftly under a 20-minute clock, the players spending fewer than 30 seconds on each move. Wulkan took control quickly, squopping Sarnelle’s winks. At one point, one of Wulkan’s piles was threatened, so he executed a “gromp.” That is, he was able to squidge the entire pile so it moved to a more advantageous position en masse. Soon, Wulkan was taking three turns to Sarnelle’s one. When one player squops all his opponent’s winks of one color, the opponent cannot move those winks and loses that color’s turn. Start losing this kind of defensive battle, and you are trapped in an inexorable downward spiral. Offense cannot save you. The denouement came when Sarnelle potted one of his few un-squopped winks from a prodigious distance. It traced a long, lovely parabola in the air and clinked beautifully in the center of the pot. I thought, “Wow, three points.”

Drix said, “That’s Joe’s way of resigning.” What winks were not squopped were virtually unusable. His situation was “constipated,” in the parlance. Sarnelle had given up with a dramatic potting gesture. Wulkan won 6-1 under a scoring system that converts total points to “ordinals” in the color scheme and well, let’s just say that the crowd went wild.

Most of the matches I watched during the tournament were defensive struggles like this one, games that came down to squops, gromps and Bristols. Other maneuvers included the feeb, piddle, boondock, kumquat, megacrud, xylophone and the lunch. About which, the less known the better.

The big talk at the tournament, however, was about the impending “squidger shortage.” Winkers carry little tins full of different squidgers just as golfers carry a bag of clubs. Drix showed me his. He uses at least six, all within the allowable size of 1 to 2 inches in diameter: a medium-size potting squidger, a very thick one for long distance, a grainy disk for more friction, a large squidger that allows him to squidge more than one wink at a time, a special squopping squidger and a thin squidger for getting into dense piles. Drix said there is not much financial impetus driving manufacturers to devote a factory or two to squidger fabrication given that there are approximately 70 major-league winkers in North America. Many winkers make their own squidgers using a drill press or sometimes reshaping a poker chip on a lathe.

But, to paraphrase Lance Armstrong, it’s not about the squidger. I keep thinking about Larry Kahn’s Bristol against Dave Lockwood in the pivotal match. Let’s allow Lockwood to explain: “A Bristol, named for its invention at the University of Bristol in the UK, is a subset of gromps, which moves a pile of winks together to try to capture additional enemy winks. The two-wink Bristol shot in my game with Larry came after he blew up a pile, a few preliminary squops occurred, and then I squopped onto a pile with several of my winks. This is the one shot I regret, because I didn’t take the pile sufficiently far from Larry’s single squop. He was able to Bristol over and squop my wink. This pile eventually swallowed most of my winks, and what was a close game after the blowup turned into a solid win for Larry.”

The important thing is, nobody got hurt.

notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2436
Fortune (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
website · 
tw-pub-ID · 
213

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Fortune.
published in · 
Fortune
date · 
22 October 1990
title · 
Do You Push Your People Too Hand?
by · 
Thomas A. Stewart
citation · 
edition online • volume 122 • issue 10 121(3)
content

Striking machinists drove Eastern Air Lines into bankruptcy when asked to tighten their belts once too often. Many workers simply burn out. (To avoid this, British Airways puts most employees through group training programs, which can include such surprising team-building activities as tiddlywinks, jigsaw puzzles, and Lego-building.)

collection · 
digital text (NATwA)
links · 
Fortune magazine – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 354)
tw-ref-ID · 
707
published in · 
Fortune
date · 
22 November 1993
title · 
Smart Marketing: The best ways to reach your buyers
subtitle · 
(The Tough New Customer)
by · 
Patricia Sellers
citation · 
volume 128 • issue 13 14(4)
content

With consumers choosing whether they will watch your ad, marketers will look beyond TV in search of captive audiences. Hence the growing popularity of sponsoring live events. No one watching the game can shut out your name if it's plastered on banners around a football stadium, racetrack, or even the Twinville Tiddlywinks Tourney.

notes · 
Autumn-Winter edition.
links · 
Fortune magazine – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 356)
tw-ref-ID · 
708
published in · 
Fortune
date · 
2 July 2015
title · 
Venture capitalist Reid Hoffman talks unicorns, valuations, and bitcoin
by · 
Leena Rao
citation · 
edition online
content

Q: Is the scale that Silicon Valley has achieved, with the massive amount of companies being built, good for the ecosystem overall?

Hoffman: Unequivocally yes. It’s not to say that there isn’t a bunch of noise, like an app launching for counting Tiddlywinks or something.

tw-ref-ID · 
709
Game Researchers' Notes (journal)
associated with · 
American Game Collectors Association
publication ID · 
ISSN 1050-6608
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
608

Toggle showing 20 tiddlywinks references for Game Researchers' Notes.
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
October 1966
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
whole 24 • page front cover
summary

Illustration from Charles Zimmerling's tiddlywinks game patent.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2455
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
October 1966
title · 
Tiddlywinks: The Classic Victorian Pastime: On Target for the 21st Century
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
whole 24 • page 5552 to 5561
summary

Includes 6 photographs of antique sets.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2456
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
October 1966
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
whole 24 • page back cover
summary

Illustration of E. I. Horsman’s “Ring-A-Peg” tiddlywinks game

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2457
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
June 1988
title · 
Archives Information Listing
citation · 
whole 3 • page 5032 • column all
content

Type – Company – Game – Date – Contributor

Instr – E. I. Horsman – Tiddledy Winks – ca. 1890 – Lee & Rally Dennis

Instr – E. I. Horsman – Tiddledy Wink Tennis – 1890 – Lee & Rally Dennis

also Tidly Winks The New Round Game

Instr – McLoughlin Bros – Tiddledy Winks – 1890 – Lee & Rally Dennis

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2438
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
June 1988
title · 
Archives Information Listing
citation · 
whole 3 • page 5034 • column all
content

Type – Company – Game – Date – Contributor

Instr — ? – Tiddledy Winks — ? – John Overall

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2439
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
June 1988
citation · 
whole 3 • page 5042 • column all
summary

Reprint of ad for Horsman’s Tiddledywink Tennis

content

Tiddledy Winks Tennis © 1890 by E. I. Horsman; From the collection of Lee & Rally Dennis

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2440
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
December 1989
column title · 
Games Wanted
citation · 
whole 6 • page 5103 • column 1
content

Chuck Hoey is looking for early Lawn Tennis (pre-1900) & all racket games. In particular Geo. S. Parker […] Tiddledy Winks Tennis […], E. I. Horsman […] Tiddledy Winks Tennis

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2441
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
December 1989
column title · 
Game Catalog Responses
citation · 
whole 6 • page 5104 • column 1
content

All Fair, Inc. – 1928 Blinky Blinx (#411)

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2442
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
August 1992
title · 
Robinson Crusoe’s Farmyard and The Wide, Wide World; How a Card Game led to the publication of a Victorian Best-seller
citation · 
whole 12 • page 7
content

It was a far better game than “Tiddle-de-Winks’”.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2443
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
August 1992
citation · 
whole 12 • page 17
summary

“Four Moons Tiddledy Winks” listed for Selchow & Righter for 1865 (sic; year around 30 years too early)

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2444
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
June 1993
title · 
Jaymar is Game for 70th Anniversary
by · 
Bruce Whitehill
citation · 
whole 14 • page 5321
content

Donald Duck’s Tiddley Winx

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2445
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
June 1993
citation · 
whole 14 • page 5323
content

Chuch Hoey is looking for […] M.B.’s Tiddeldy Wink Tennis” (sic)

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2446
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
June 1994
title · 
The Leo Hart Company and Playtime House: Rochester Printer and Puzzle Maker
by · 
Anne D. Williams
citation · 
whole 17 • page 5374, 5377 • column 2 (page 5374); all (page 5377)
content

As of January 1, 1945, the Hart Company adopted the name of Playtime House for a subsidiary specializing in puzzles, games, activity sets (paper dolls, sewing cards, stencils, etc.), and cloth books for infants. Most of the games were old standbys like bingo, lotto, anagrams, tiddly winks, checkers, Chinese checkers, Old Maid, and Pin the Tail on the Donkey.

These are some of the Playtime House products that are being featured by the leading retailers of America. [...]

GAMES [...]

Tiddly Winks

This 1946 advertisement shows the Playtime House logo.
collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2447
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
February 1995
title · 
Comics and Cartoons Board Games
by · 
Alex G. Malloy
citation · 
whole 19 • page 5421
content

Disney did well getting their games into the marketplace. In the 1930s Whitman produced various Disney games including […] Disney Tiddley Winks

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2448
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
June 1995
column title · 
News
title · 
AGCA Mid-West Regional Meeting
citation · 
whole 20 • page 5467
content

a display of early games from the Midland County Historical Society, which included […] Tiddly Wink games;

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2449
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
February 1996
title · 
The Lilly Library Archives
by · 
Jim van Fleet
citation · 
whole 22 • page 5505
summary

Mentions the antique set “Over the Garden Wall” by E. I. Horsman, in the Lilly Library collection

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2450
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
February 1996
title · 
The Lilly Library Archives
by · 
Jim van Fleet
citation · 
whole 22 • page 5506
summary

2 black & white photos of “Over the Garden Wall”

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2451
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
February 1996
title · 
Keeping in Touch
by · 
Robert Finn
citation · 
whole 22 • page 5513
summary

Refers to Rick Tucker’s tiddlywinks web site on the Internet

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2452
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
February 1996
citation · 
whole 22 • page 5516
summary

Black & white reproduction of Rick Tucker’s tiddlywinks home page on the Internet

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2453
published in · 
Game Researchers' Notes
date · 
February 1996
title · 
An Important Antique Toy & Game Auction
citation · 
whole 22 • page 5522
summary

Cites McLoughlin Bros.’ “Combination Tiddley (sic) Winks”

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2454
Game Times (newsletter)
associated with · 
American Game Collectors Association
publication ID · 
ISSN 1050-6594
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
609

Toggle showing 13 tiddlywinks references for Game Times.
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
April 1966
title · 
Subject: RE: Monopoly on the cereal box……
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
volume 12 • issue 1 • whole 29 • page 630
summary

Includes Rick Tucker's email excerpt re Trix cereal tiddlywinks

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2470
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
Spring 1985
title · 
Games People Played—and Still Do!
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 1 • whole 1 • page 5
content

Many more games from the late 1800s and early 1900s are still with us. TIDDLY WINKS, also spelled TIDDLEDY, can be found before the turn of the century with instructions as to how to “tiddle the wink”, the tiddle being the larger disk which was snapped against the wink, or smaller disk.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2458
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
Spring 1985
title · 
Game Trivia
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 1 • whole 1 • page 5
content

1. What does it mean to “tiddle your wink”?

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2459
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
Spring 1985
title · 
Common Games
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 1 • whole 1 • page 11
content

Generic Games […] TIDDLEDY WINKS

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2460
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
Late Summer 1985
title · 
Game Tally
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 2 • whole 2 • page 12
content

Chaffee & Selchow […] TIDDLEDY WINKS

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2461
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
Summer 1987
column title · 
Featured Company
title · 
Transogram
citation · 
volume 3 • issue 2 • whole 7 • page 105
content

The 1930s also saw Transogram expand into the area of games. From the 1935 BIG BUSINESS to the 1938 GAME OF INDIA and TIDDLEDY WINKS, the company started featuring more colorful graphics and more interactive games.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2462
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
August 1992
title · 
Fish... to Games... to Gardening
by · 
Anne Williams
citation · 
volume 8 • issue 2 • whole 18 • page 377
summary

Refers to the North American Tiddlywinks Association

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2463
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
April 1994
title · 
Tiddleywinks: Plain & Exotic
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
volume 10 • issue 1 • whole 23 • page 504
collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2464
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
August 1994
title · 
All-Fair Games, Cards, and Puzzles
by · 
Anne D. Williams
citation · 
volume 10 • issue 2 • whole 24 • page 517
summary

Refers to tiddlywinks in Fairchild’s 1958 catalog

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2465
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
August 1994
title · 
All-Fair Games, Cards, and Puzzles
by · 
Anne D. Williams
citation · 
volume 10 • issue 2 • whole 24 • page 519
summary

Reproduction of Alderman-Fairchild’s ad in Playthings
(1928) with Blinky Blinx Tiddledy Winks

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2466
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
December 1995
title · 
Subject: Aftermath
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
volume 11 • issue 3 • whole 28 • page 602
summary

Rick Tucker’s email re Bloomington convention. of the American Game Collectors Association

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2467
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
December 1995
citation · 
volume 11 • issue 3 • whole 28 • page 607 and 608
summary

Photographs of Rick Tucker “as a tiddlywink” at the Bloomington convention

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2468
published in · 
Game Times
date · 
December 1995
title · 
Online
citation · 
volume 11 • issue 3 • whole 28 • page 613
summary

Refers to Rick Tucker's tiddlywinks web page.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2469
Games (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
610

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Games.
published in · 
Games
date · 
February 1992
title · 
The Game and Puzzle Events Calendar
citation · 
page 54
summary

Tiddlywinks listing

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2471
Games and Puzzles (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
611

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Games and Puzzles.
published in · 
Games and Puzzles
date · 
November 1973
title · 
Tiddlywinks
by · 
Alan Dean
citation · 
whole 19 • page 7
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2472
published in · 
Games and Puzzles
date · 
May 1974
title · 
Tiddly-winks (American style)
by · 
Philip M. Cohen
citation · 
whole 24 • page 22
summary

This is an early version of Philip M. Cohen's article on tiddlywinks terminology that later appeared in the journal, Verbatim.

tw-ref-ID · 
2473
Journal of Genetic Psychology
tw-pub-ID · 
613

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Journal of Genetic Psychology.
published in · 
Journal of Genetic Psychology
date · 
May 1960
title · 
A revised conception of masculine-feminine differences in play activities
by · 
B. G. Rosenberg & Brian Sutton-Smith
citation · 
volume 96 • page 168
content

Tiddle di winks

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2476
Golf Illustrated (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
614

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Golf Illustrated.
published in · 
Golf Illustrated
date · 
11 May 1900
column title · 
On the Ladies’ Links
title · 
A New Golf Game
citation · 
volume 4 • issue 48 • page 129 • column 2
content

“Golf Links” is the title of a new parlour game invented by Major Barter. Without being so ambitious and complicated as some of the variations on Golf which we have seen, it appears to be full of interest and to resemble the game closely enough to justify its title. The board, which is of a handy size for a morning room table, represents a short course, and in the centre is placed a circular box divided into compartments of different values. From the green felt-covered corners of the board the players flick their counters into the box on the “tiddly wink” principle. A small leaden sphere, flattened at the bottom, represents the actual ball and is placed in the position on the board which the number scored by the player entitles it to. The course abounds in hazards which entail the regular golfing penalties. “Golf Links” should provide a fund of amusement for winter evenings and wet days. It can be obtained at the Army and Navy Stores for 3s. 9d.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2477
Golfers Magazine (magazine)
location · 
US
tw-pub-ID · 
615

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Golfers Magazine.
published in · 
Golfers Magazine
date · 
January 1922
citation · 
page 40
content

You Can Do Everything You Do on a Regular Golf Course with Holland’s Indoor Golf Game

The Most Fascinating Indoor Game Invented in Years

You “hook em,” “slice em,” “dub em” but practice will make you a perfect player.[…]

Illustration of the golf game board>

collection · 
digitized copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2478
GQ (magazine)
alternate name · 
Gentlemen's Quarterly
location · 
US
tw-pub-ID · 
616

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for GQ.
published in · 
GQ
date · 
December 1992
title · 
Tom Cruise From the Neck Up
citation · 
page 186 • column 2
collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2479
Harper's Bazar (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
618

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Harper's Bazar.
published in · 
Harper's Bazar
date · 
March 1910
column title · 
New Games
citation · 
page 196 • column 4
content

There is a new tiddledy-winks game, with spring-boards from which to snap the chips and numbered openings.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2483
Harper's New Monthly Magazine (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
617

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Harper's New Monthly Magazine.
published in · 
Harper's New Monthly Magazine
date · 
January 1891
column title · 
London Music Halls
by · 
F. Anstey
citation · 
volume 82 • whole 498 • page 198 • column 1
content

No, she won’t, old Tiddlywinks!’ says the boy, rising suddenly from his hiding-place

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2480
published in · 
Harper's New Monthly Magazine
date · 
December 1891
column title · 
Literary Notes
citation · 
volume 84 • whole 499 • page 3 • column 2
content

He had not been fed on caramels, he had never been taught to drum on the piano in country hotels, and he had never played Tiddledy Winks.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2481
published in · 
Harper's New Monthly Magazine
date · 
January 1893
title · 
The Old Way to Dixie
by · 
Julian Ralph
citation · 
volume 86 • whole 512 • page 170 • column 2
content

There was a desk and a student-lamp in the great cabin, and, alas for the unities! on the desk lay a pad of telegraph blanks—“the mark of the beast.” But they evidently were only a bit of accidental drift from wide-awake St. Louis, and not intended for the passengers, because the clerk came out of his office, swept them into a drawer, and invited me to join him in a game of tiddledywinks. He added to the calm pleasures of the game by telling of a Kentucky girl eleven feet high, who stood at one end of a very wide table and shot the disks into the cup from both sides of the table without changing her position. I judged from his remarks that she was simply a tall girl who played well at tiddledywinks.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2482
Hobbies (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
619

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Hobbies.
published in · 
Hobbies
date · 
April 1979
title · 
Tiddlywinks Games
by · 
Fred Shapiro
citation · 
page 161 • column 3
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2484
The Illustrated American (magazine)
publisher · 
The Illustrated American Publishing Co.
location · 
Bible House, New York, New York, USA
Notes

Also at 142 Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois USA

tw-pub-ID · 
620

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Illustrated American.
published in · 
The Illustrated American
date · 
23 May 1891
column title · 
Current Comment
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 66 • page 3 to 4 • column 2 (page 3), 1 (page 4)
content

DOORATCHKY.”—There is no simpler game of cards than the Russian “dooratchky,” which may be freely translated as “tiddly-winks.” It was introduced into the fashionable world of St. Petersburg by Miss Goolak Artemovskaya, whose personal charms were so great that half the young dandies in the capital were soon engaged in playing "dooratchky " at her table. As she cheated them, the government sent her to Siberia.

One of her admirers had become so passionately devoted to "dooratchky" that he followed Miss Goolak Artemov-skaya into exile at Irkutsk, where lie married her. Here they met the good Bishop Benjamin, an excellent prelate with a weakness for card-playing. They had little difficulty in teaching him " dooratchky " ; and the bishop, falling in love with the game, persuaded the government to allow the late Miss, now Mrs. Goolak Artemovskaya to open a house at Irkutsk for the playing of "dooratchky." She cheated the youth of Irkutsk as she had cheated the youth of St. Petersburg, and her husband finally abandoned her, vowing that he would never play a game of "dooratchky" again.

Then came to Irkutsk the daughter of a Moscow merchant, who bore a striking resemblance to Mrs. Goolak Artemovskaya, not only in her physical charms but also in her love for "dooratchky." Under the spell of that fascinating game she and Goolak Artemovskaya became bosom friends, and not long afterward she was found lying dead by a river-bank, and Goolak Artemovskaya disappeared with her passports. The police, however, were too quick for that disciple of "dooratchky "; they brought her back to be tried for murder at Irkutsk, and the game of "dooratchky " is under a cloud throughout the Russian dominions.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2485
published in · 
The Illustrated American
date · 
1 August 1891
column title · 
Correspondence
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 76 • page 523 • column 1
content

If you find it quite impossible to provide for dancers, try progressive games. Have as many tables as you like, and arrange a different game at every table. At one, jackstraws; at another, jack-stones; for the third, bagatelle; for the fourth, checkers; and so on till the last table, where euchre is played. Lotto parties are very nice sometimes, and for just the kind of entertainment you wish, tiddleywinks is played.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2486
The Illustrated London News & Sketch (magazine)
location · 
London, London, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
621

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Illustrated London News & Sketch.
published in · 
The Illustrated London News & Sketch
date · 
1970
citation · 
volume 257 • issue 1
content

a favorite during student rags recently became so popular that the English Tiddlywinks Association published a set of international rules.

Pundits will argue hours over two competing strategies. The “Pot-Squop” school plump for one player in a tiddley pair to pot his winks while the other delays the opposition team by “squopping” (covering) their winks with his own.

The ”Double-Squop” school prefers both players of the pair to cover their opponents’ winks before going for the pot.

tw-ref-ID · 
2487
Illustrated World (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
622

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Illustrated World.
published in · 
Illustrated World
date · 
December 1917
title · 
Toys Made from Odds and Ends
by · 
Jane Nesbitt
citation · 
volume 28 • issue 4 • page 582 and 620
content

Illustration at top of a fort with open windows, to be used as targets in the game of tiddlywinks.

An appropriate war game may be made after the fashion of “Tiddley-winks”. The front elevation of a fort is drawn in pencil on a piece of stout cardboard and colored with paints or crayons. Windows are cut out,and the whole is made to stand upright by the addition of two or three triangular supports.

Each player in turn places his small counters (generally six) anywhere in front of the fortress. He is now the attacking party, and his object is to shoot his counters through the different windows. If he succeeds in sending a counter through the window, then he “kills” a certain number of the “enemy”. The winner is the player who “kills” the greatest number in a given time. Any shot missing the fort entirely, going over, or missing at the sides, is a wasted shot, and counts one figure off the player’s score.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2488
The Independent (magazine)
publisher · 
Independent Corporation
location · 
130 Fulton Street, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
623

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Independent.
published in · 
The Independent
date · 
7 January 1904
title · 
An Excursion in Higher Criticism
by · 
Frank Crane, D.D.
citation · 
volume 56 • page 495
content

A RECENT ministerial meeting discussed the question as to the ethical bearings of the game called tiddledy-winks. Becoming interested in this matter I have been at some pains to investigate it thoroughly, and now, with considerable misgivings offer the results of my research to te public. While presenting the following views with a deep sense of humility and deeply conscious of possible errors in judgment, yet it seems to me that the eminent authorities quoted should have considerable weight.

Note, first, the nature of the issue. The question is not whether the game of tiddledy is harmful to the young, nor the game of winks, but tiddledy-winks, a compound expression, embodying two ideas in one. Each part of the given subject should therefore be separately examined, and the mutual interactive influences of each upon the other carefully gauged.

Taking up the first seed-thought, tiddledy, we may as well dismiss at once the theory (Meyer, Olshaufen Katzenellenbogen, Schnupfenannehmen) that this has any reference to one T. D. Winks, a prominent controversialist of Amsterdam in the sixteenth century. [...]

The ripest scholarship has decided that tiddledy has really a composite origin. [...]

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2489
published in · 
The Independent
date · 
20 September 1919
title · 
Pebbles
subtitle · 
Personal
citation · 
volume 99 • whole 3693 • page 379 • column 3
content

From the Personal column of the London Times:

PERSONAL:

Would like to play Tiddlywinks.—Sweetheart.

notes · 
Early use of the spelling, “tiddlywinks”.
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2490
Instructor (magazine)
publisher · 
F. A. Owen Publishing Company
tw-pub-ID · 
624

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Instructor.
published in · 
Instructor
date · 
1979
citation · 
volume 89
content

[...] David Lockwood. Flipping little disks into a cup may be acceptable for five-year-olds, but for tournament players, it’s the “squop” shotv[...]

tw-ref-ID · 
2491
The International Bookseller (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
625

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The International Bookseller.
published in · 
The International Bookseller
date · 
26 March 1892
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 1 • page 6 • column 2
content

De Witt Publishing House […]The same house has just issued a new book by John Kendrick Bangs, author of “Tiddledy-wink Tales,” which proved to be the best child’s book of the year. The new volume is called The Tiddledywink’s Poetry Book,” and is a large quarto with full-page illustrations by Charles Howard Johnson. The text is printed in a colored border, and the cover alone will recommend it to the heart of every child.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2492
published in · 
The International Bookseller
date · 
1 October 1892
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 27 • page 459 • column 1
content

The De Witt Publishing House (R. H. Russell & Son, proprieters), announce a number of most attractive juveniles [...] . “In Camp with a Tin Soldier,” by John Kendrick Bangs, is a sequel to the delightful “Tiddledywink Tales,” and recounts the further adventures of that engaging little lad, Jimmieboy; it is charmingly illustrated by E. M. Ashe, and can be had separately or in a box with “Tiddledywink Tales.” Mr. Bangs has also prepared a large picture book with humorous verses called “The Tiddledy-wink’s Poetry Book,” illustrated by Charles Howard Johnson. This book will be as popular with the children as the Brownie books were. Large quarto, with illuminated covers, 30 full-page illustrations, and colored borders to text. Bound in boards.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2493
Jouets et Jeux de France (magazine)
location · 
France
tw-pub-ID · 
627

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Jouets et Jeux de France.
published in · 
Jouets et Jeux de France
date · 
1953
title · 
Puces
citation · 
volume 3rd edition • page 304
summary

Listing of 8 French tiddlywinks manufacturers

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); original (Pascal Pontremoli)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2495
published in · 
Jouets et Jeux de France
date · 
1956
title · 
Puces
citation · 
volume 5th edition • page 266
summary

Listing of 12 French tiddlywinks manufacturers

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); original (Pascal Pontremoli)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2496
The Judge (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
629

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Judge.
published in · 
The Judge
date · 
1921
citation · 
volume 81 • page 31
content

Page 31, illustration at right: Mr. Monk—Take my advice—quit golf and stick to tiddledy-winks! Page 31 (heading): When It Took Courage to Keep StillBy Minnie Leona Upton […]

tw-ref-ID · 
2499
Journal of Jurisprudence and Scottish Law Magazine (journal)
location · 
Scotland, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
628

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Journal of Jurisprudence and Scottish Law Magazine.
published in · 
Journal of Jurisprudence and Scottish Law Magazine
date · 
November 1890
column title · 
This Month
citation · 
volume 34 • issue 407 • page 609 to 610
content

Tiddley-Winks.—There is a report of a case in the Australian Law Times which involved the question whether the word “tiddley-wink” is libellous. A Chief Justice and two puisne judges deliberated upon this delicate matter, and decided in the negative. An “expert in slang” was called as a witness at the trial, who defined “tiddley-winking” to mean “using little dodges to obtain his own ends.” The jury declined to find this libellous, and the Court refused to disturb their decision. It is clear that the “expert in slang” did not know what he was talking about. Tiddley-winks, as most people know, is a game played with counters on a table, the object being to jerk the counters into a small cup in the centre of the table. To call a man a tiddley-wink, therefore, is no more libellous than to call him a lawn-tennis racquet.

tw-ref-ID · 
2498
Kindergarten Review (magazine)
publisher · 
Milton Bradley Co.
location · 
Springfield, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
630

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Kindergarten Review.
published in · 
Kindergarten Review
date · 
April 1909
title · 
Happy Farmers
by · 
Camilla Kendall
citation · 
volume 19 • page 505 • column 1
content

Kenneth, whose father is a draughtsman and skillful with a knife, brought a most perfectly made windmill for the barnyard, and Edwin furnished a “Tiddledy Winks” cup for a watering trough.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2500
Ladies’ Home Journal (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
631

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Ladies’ Home Journal.
published in · 
Ladies’ Home Journal
date · 
June 1991
title · 
Playing Together
citation · 
page 82 and later
summary

Family recreation for the summer months.

tw-ref-ID · 
2501
League of American Wheelmen Bulletin and Good Roads (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
632

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for League of American Wheelmen Bulletin and Good Roads.
published in · 
League of American Wheelmen Bulletin and Good Roads
date · 
19 April 1895
title · 
Spokes from the Felloes
citation · 
volume 21 • issue 16 • page 30
content

The senior editor and his associate will be the guest of the Woodbridge Club on Wednesday evening of this week, and we believe that no other gentlemen will be present. The two knights of the pen are not very strong at whist, and for their special entertainment a program has been arranged, which will allow them to revel in the delights of jackstraws and tiddledywinks. We never could absorb ourselves in whist when a pretty girl was smiling at us from across the way, but tiddledy-winks is full of delightful opportunity, especially when the young lady wears an expression on her face that is most becoming.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2502
Liberty Review
A Magazine of Politics, Economics, and Sociology
location · 
17, Johnson's Court, Fleet Street, E.C., London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
634

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Liberty Review.
published in · 
Liberty Review
date · 
January 1903
column title · 
To Those Whom It May Concern
citation · 
volume 13 • issue 1 • page 22
content

SPORTSMAN.—We thank you for sending us the catalogue of Messrs. John Jaques & Son, 102, Hatton Garden, E.C., giving particulars of the latest “Parlour Games.” These prove unmistakably that the march of intellect is becoming quicker every day we live. “Wibbly-Wob”; the new varieties of “Tiddledy-Winks”; “Snick-Kick”; “Blow Football”; “Ludo”; “Pliffkins”; “Bumble-Puppy”; “Curliwigs”; “Loto”; “Flitterkins”; “Shantu”; and the rest of these pastimes which we see, are described as “intellectual and exciting,” are a complete justification of State-supported schools and free libraries. We hold that, in view of these marvellous evidences of the blessings of popular education, the citizen who curses the upward tendency of the school-rate is a disgrace to the enlightened age in which he lives. It may or may not be true that Wellington declared that the Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton: of this be assured, all future British victories will be entirely due to either “Wibbly-Wob” or “Bumble-Puppy.” We have already seen, in South Africa, what an intimate knowledge of the rules of “Ping-Pong” can do for the British Army; and the way in which General Buller crossed and recrossed the Tugela till he did not know which side he was on, or whether he was in the middle, demonstrated conclusively that “Tiddledy-Winks” is an indispensable adjunct to the study of military manœvres.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2504
published in · 
Liberty Review
date · 
April 1918
title · 
The Housewife’s Glee
by · 
Carolyn Wells
citation · 
volume 43 • page 240
content

Here are some records, old, I know

But they’ll like any song;

And these nice games must surely go —

Tiddledy-winks, ping-pong.

notes · 
Reprinted from Life magazine.
collection · 
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2505
Library Journal (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
633

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Library Journal.
published in · 
Library Journal
date · 
15 April 1978
title · 
Books or tiddlywinks?
by · 
Lillie Struble
citation · 
volume 103 • issue 8 • page 790 • column 3
content

Wouldn't librarians do better to be excellent librarians instead of running kindergartens, craft shops, and clubhouses? What has happened to the traditional concept of the librarian as a lover of books able to guide people to the recorded wisdom of the past? Have we sold our precious heritage in exchange for frivolity and a game of tiddlywinks?

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2503
Life
location · 
19 West 31st Street, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
635

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Life.
published in · 
Life
date · 
1 October 1896
title · 
At Tiddly-winks-by-the-Sea
citation · 
volume 28 • whole 718 • page 245 • column 1
content

THE season at Tiddly-Winks had not been over-successful. The genial proprietor of Tiddly-Winks Inn had enforced the regulation against Hebrews strenuously, but the Christian element had not responded as he had expected. As a result he had intimated to his clerks, towards the end of the summer, that if any of the chosen people who looked profitable appeared, they should not be scrutinized too closely.

Mr. Dreistein, who is well-known in the cloak line, happened down the coast, and hearing of the quarantine at Tiddly-Winks was seized with the characteristic longing of his race to evade it. Greatly to his suprise he was not informed after he had registered that the house was full. For a day or two he strutted the piazzas, in his full panoply of diamonds and gold-rimmed pince-nez. But his proud secret burned within him. Finally he sat down at the end of the piazza, in a vacant chair, next a dwarfed and hump-backed gentleman who was looking at the sea-scape. Dreistein ventured a remark about the weather which received a courteous reply. Finally, Dreistein, bursting with pride, went further.

"My tear sir," he said, "can you keep a segret?"

"I fancy so," replied the deformed man.

"Veil, I must tell you a good choke. You know der rule in this hotel about Hebrews?''

"Yes."

"Veil, I vas a Jew myselluf." And a broad smile of conscious cleverness inundated Dreistein's curved beak and other features.

"Can you keep a secret ?" asked the other.

"Zertainly," replied Dreistein, "I can keep anything that comes my way."

"Well, said his new acquaintance, "don't you tell a soul on earth, but I'm a hump-back."

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2506
published in · 
Life
date · 
29 November 1917
title · 
The Housewife’s Glee
by · 
Carolyn Wells
citation · 
whole 1831 • page 863
content

A BOON the soldiers are to me.

With joy to them I send

Old magazines and books, you see,

And papers without end.

This “Care of Children ” I can spare,

And just as well as not

They can have that old Bible there—

That fine-print polyglot.

Then here is “Hints for Losing Weight”;

And now—just let me see—

Yes, I’ll send ” Bridge Rules Up-to-date “;

The date is ’93.

Oh, here’s a row of funny books.

Well, I won’t touch that shelf;

They’re full of stories, by their looks,

I’d like to read myself.

Here are some records, old, I know,

But they’ll like any song;

And these nice games must surely go—

Tiddledy-winks, ping-pong.

These playing-cards will make them glad!

They’re sticky, I’m afraid—

But in our club we’ve always had

Caramels while we played.

There! I’ve worked hard those boys to please.

You see, I hate to knit,

And so I send such things as these.

And feel I’ve done my bit!

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2507
Life (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
211

Toggle showing 11 tiddlywinks references for Life.
published in · 
Life
date · 
5 December 1938
by · 
O. Schoenhut, Inc. (2001 E. Hagert Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
citation · 
volume 5 • issue 23 • page 88 • column 3
content

TIDDLE TENNIS

Table tennis with tiddly winks, 50c

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
667
published in · 
Life
date · 
9 December 1940
title · 
Christmas Toys
subtitle · 
They Give Great Fun to Old and Young
citation · 
volume 9 • issue 24 • page 97 • column 3
content

But [F. A. O.] Schwarz still has a steady, satisfying demand for standbys like fluffy dolls, tiddlywink sets, express wagons.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
675
published in · 
Life
date · 
27 December 1948
column title · 
Letters to the Editors
by · 
Mal Higgins (Cottage Grove, Oregon)
citation · 
volume 25 • issue 26 • page 2 • column 3
content

Sirs:

I admire your marvelous courage in doing "The Chicago Rackets" but aren't you risking a kick in the teeth or a slug in the belly?

You spoiled a beautfiful illusion with this writer by digging up the ghosts of Capone. I thought they had all turned to tiddlywinks.

But as long as they have evidently tucked away their heaters, are making their graft payments happily and are keeping Chicagoans and suburbanites biologically, economically and psychologically merry, why not let sleeping dogs keep their bones buried?

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
668
published in · 
Life
date · 
3 July 1950
title · 
What Will the Sergeant Think?
citation · 
volume 29 • issue 1 • page 24 • column 3
content

Fortunately none of the people in these pictures happened to die, but only because there was Someone watching over them who did not give one tiddlywink what anybody thought.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
674
published in · 
Life
date · 
28 April 1952
title · 
Eisenhower of Abiliene
citation · 
volume 32 • issue 17 • page 117 • column 2
summary

About Dwight D. Eisenhower

content

At one time he threatened to get interested in life and won his "A" by being the most promising back in Eastern football—but the Tufts game broke his knee and the promise. Now Ike must content himself with tea, tiddledywinks and talk, at all of which he excels.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
669
published in · 
Life
date · 
unconfirmed 22 August 1960
summary

Ad or reference to a Harvard University tiddleywinks competition (unconfirmed)

tw-ref-ID · 
670
published in · 
Life
date · 
14 December 1962
title · 
In a tense game of tiddlywinks, Harvard is heartened by an odd Ivy cheer…
subtitle · 
…Hold that Squop!
citation · 
volume 53 • issue 24 • page 121 to 122 • column all
summary

Coverage of match between Harvard's Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (GUTS) and Brown University on 17 November 1962 at Phillips Brooks House in Harvard Yard, Cambridge, Massachusetts

content
Black and white photograph of four male winkers leaning over a table with a cup and winks on the mat.
Black and white photograph of six female cheerleaders with pom-poms cheering on the winkers below.

The touch that won a tiddle title

In the gathering gloom of a New England Saturday, the score lay deadlocked, 9 to 9. An underdog Brown team had held its own against the favored Harvards. The Crimson spectators stood silent, sensing an upset. Then a crucial Harvard play clicked. Harvard's defensive specialist tiddled a deft squop. Another Harvard scored on a long, soaring squidge. "Hold that squop," cheered the spectators. Wink snapped after wink, and now the Crimson onslaught could not be denied. Squopping and squidging with nimble-fingered accuracy, Harvard went on to win, 40 to 16, and left the table to the triumphal bleats of its band.

It was the climactic game of a tense athletic rivalry. So heartened was Harvard by its hands-down victory that it went on to beat its arch-rival Yale 32 to 10 the next week and emerged undefeated in national competition. The rivalry—which has occupied the earnest efforts of some 25 collegs this year and already generated a legend and language of its own—centers around an innocent parlor pastime of children turned diabolical in the hands or more-or-less grownups: tiddlywinks.

Intercollegiate tiddling infected America last fall when a team from Oxford came to the U.S. English students had been winking it up since 1955 and they felt like showing off in the colonies. The game they brought over complicated tiddlywinks' essentially simple challenge, which uses a large plastic disk to snap a smaller disk into a cup. They had grafted on to it a complexity worthy of a country which has produced such bizarre complications as cricket and English grammar. It embraced such concepts as "the squidge,", i.e., the basic winking shot, the shooting of a disk into the tiddlepot, or cup; and the "squop," a crucial defensive maneuver which immobilizes an opponent by landing your disk on top of his. The well-thumbed Oxonians defeated 25 U.S. teans in a row. Sniifed one, "The best tiddlywinks player in America appears to be only slightly better than the worst."

But Harvard was not put off by the arrogant Oxford tour. It formed its own varsity, practiced hard and scheduled not only some traditional Ivy League rivals but also Mt. Holyoke, Simmons and Wellesley. Soon the dexterous Harvards were making intercollegiate wink lore of their own. They perfected the crowd-pleasing "Carnovsky," named after Steve Carnovsky, varsity candidate who sank four table-length shots in a row during fall practice. (Weaker at short range, Carnovsky failed to make the team. Harvard was quick to put the finger on the idea of offensive and defensive specialists. It set up two-man units each with a powerful offensive squidger and a canny defensive squopper. Harvard's top scorer is John Kernochan, class of '64. His defensive partner, the Crimson Chinese bandit, it Thomas R. Houston, '64. Harvard's splendid 11 and 0 season has been encouraged by a traveling entourage of comely cheerleaders from nearby girls' colleges (previous page, bottom) whose repertoire has included such tiddilating exhortations as "Apply Game Theory!", "Use Effective Strategy! and the basic cheer, "Tiddle the Wink!"

Black and white photograph at top right of a male winker at left leaning down to shoot a wink, with many onlookers and fellow winkers behind him at to the right of the mat.
Before tense spectators at match, Stephen Goldberg (above) of Brown aims a "squidge" or "long bomb."
Black and white photograph at center right of a winker wearing glasses leaning down close to the match and holding his squidger near a large pile adjacent to the pot.
Right: Harvard Captain Parry tries delicate shot at Tiddlecup's rim.
Black and white photograph at bottom right of six Harvard winkers, each tensing one or more of their fingers for the camera.
Unvanquished in American competition, Harvard's proud varsity tiddlywinkers stand in college yard and display the deft hands and dour concentration that won them tiddle title.
collection · 
original copy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
671
published in · 
Life
date · 
11 January 1963
column title · 
Letters to the Editor
title · 
HOLD THAT SQUOP
by · 
Avrom I. Doft
citation · 
volume 54 • issue 2 • page 22 • column 3 to 4
content

Sirs:

Your article on Tiddlywinks (Dec. 14) brings back fond memories of four years ago when I was the Abbott of the Wink, the leader and founder of the Society for the Advancement of Tiddlywinks at the University of Pennsylvania (SATUP).

So your article is in error in stating that inter-collegiate tiddling first infected America last fall. SATUP was organized in 1958.

Oxford claimed the championship that year, but SATUP immediately challenged them and arrangements were made for a match to be held in the U.S. When Oxford failed to show, SATUP claimed the title.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
672
published in · 
Life
date · 
9 October 1964
column title · 
Letters to the Editor
title · 
EDITORIAL: CUP RACES
by · 
N. W. Potter (Tacoma, Washington)
citation · 
page 29 • column 3
content

Sirs:

I wholeheartedly disagree with your editorial "Good Luck to Sovereign." With that line of reasoning we should have allowed the Russian track team (men) to defeat our team in L.A. and give the Communists Southeast Asia because the Communists have been trying so hard and so long for these goals. Thank goodness our forefathers did not have this belief. As for me, I want the U.S.A. on top, be it tiddlywinks, sailing or Vietnam.

tw-ref-ID · 
677
published in · 
Life
date · 
10 October 1969
column title · 
LIFE Comment
title · 
The Game That Blooms in Calmer Times
subtitle · 
Baseball: The Other Fabulous Invalid
by · 
Wilfred Sheed
citation · 
volume 67 • issue 15 • page regional (6 pages before 25) • column 3
content

The other main problem—that there is just too much baseball every summer—is less easy to fix. [...]

As to the argument from fashion, let us hear a word from Mahatma Dal Gosht, the rage of the East. "Your modern youth has taken a definite turn toward contemplation and inner peace. The unseemly hustle of his elders is not for him, oh no, For after-yoga relaxation—tiddlywinks, perhaps, or a quiet game of Mah-Jongg. But baseball is too fast." If you struck out too often in grade school, you'll believe it.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
676
published in · 
Life
date · 
September 1988
citation · 
volume 11 • issue 11 • page 82(4)
content

Obsessed: says America's Cup sailor Dennis Cooper, 'Competition is life's blood, and I'm a vampire.'

tw-ref-ID · 
673
Light (magazine)
A Journal of Social Worcester and her neighbors
location · 
Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
636

Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for Light.
published in · 
Light
date · 
20 September 1890
citation · 
volume 2 • issue 30 • page 21 • column 3
content

Tiddledy Wink !

JUST OUT. The most enchanting and fascinating game for young or old in the market. All the rage in Boston and New York. Price, only 25c. For sale by

C. F. HANSOM & CO., 317 Main Street.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2508
published in · 
Light
date · 
27 September 1890
title · 
With Reed and Lyre and Voice
citation · 
volume 2 • issue 31 • page 12 • column 2
content

It appears that Mr. Johnson is striking out in the right direction. His dramatic singing is prov- ing satisfactory in large measure, and it is pleasant to hear that fine voice in something beside the tiddledy-winks which the Ruggles Street Quartet has to sing frequently. He sang down the orchestra, with the brass a trille headstrong, very satisfactorily.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2509
published in · 
Light
date · 
27 September 1890
citation · 
volume 2 • issue 31 • page 27 • column 2
content

Tiddledy Wink !

JUST OUT. The most enchanting and fascinating game for young or old in the market. All the rage in Boston and New York. Price, only 25c. For sale by

C. F. HANSOM & CO., 317 Main Street.

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2510
published in · 
Light
date · 
4 October 1890
citation · 
volume 2 • issue 32 • page 3 • column 1, 2
content

Society must have its favorite game each season. Last winter Worcester played whist, whist, whist, nothing but whist. Occasionally a euchre party intervened, or an evening of “progressive hearts”—though, for that matter, “progressive hearts” was probably played (without the cards) at a good many of the other parties. Poker, too, is said to be becoming quite the game in a social way. But late advices, which the newspapers are fond of talking about, seem to indicate that progressive tiddledy-wink will be one of the great games this winter, if not the leader of all. A Worcester lady who played it with the people at Bar Harbor, this summer, tells Light thatit had an immense vogue there and that it is really “great fun.” Light has not yet played tiddledy-wink, but there is a fascination about the name, and a tiddledy-wink party seems to sound just as well as a progressive whist séance. At any rate, the world must have its pastimes, and this seems to be a harmless and pleasurable one

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2511
published in · 
Light
date · 
18 October 1890
column title · 
About Folks
citation · 
volume 2 • issue 34 • page 5 • column 3
content

Worcester has a citizen named Winks. He is not a relative of Tiddledy.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2512
Linn's Stamp News (newspaper)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
637

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Linn's Stamp News.
published in · 
Linn's Stamp News
date · 
18 December 1978
title · 
Tiddlywinks Topical
by · 
Rick Tucker
citation · 
page 6
summary

Query by Rick Tucker.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2513
The Literary World (Boston) (magazine)
A Fortnightly Review of Current Literature
publisher · 
E. H. Hames & Company
location · 
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
639

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Literary World (Boston).
published in · 
The Literary World (Boston)
date · 
17 December 1892
title · 
Holiday Books
citation · 
volume 23 • issue 26 • page 480 • column 1, 2
content

L. Prang & Co. issue among their many pleasing Christmas publications […] two humourous pictures of four owls playing “Whist” and four cats engaged at “Tiddledy-Winks,” by Mrs. S. C. Winn […]

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2515
The Literary World (London) (magazine)
publisher · 
James Clarke & Co.
location · 
13 & 14 Fleet Street, E.C., London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
638

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Literary World (London).
published in · 
The Literary World (London)
date · 
13 May 1892
title · 
Nonsense and Fairy Stories
citation · 
volume 45 New Series • whole 1176 • page 457, 458
content

Tiddledywink Tales. By John Kendrick Bangs. Illustrated by Charles Howard Johnson. (Griffith, Farran, and Co. 2s. 6d.)

Although it is nonsense pure and simple, yet we venture to predict that Mr. Bangs's new book, Tiddledywink Tales, will be read and laughed over by a large number of grown-up readers, in addition to those for whom it was presumably intended. The story describes the adventures of an engaging little lad, Jimmieboy by name, in the land of the Tiddledywinks after he had been put to bed. Mr. Bangs is an American writer, which may render it necessary to explain to juvenile readers the meaning of some of the allusions made; but it is to be hoped that the book will not fall into the hands of young people with inquiring minds. Should it do so, parents will have a hard time in trying satisfactorily to explain the many absurdities in situation and dialogue. For instance, who would not rather have the following taken on trust than be compelled to explain the salient points in it to an infant terror?

The Techeelephant.

Just then there came to Jimmieboy's care the greatest din he had ever heard, and he noticed that the Red Tiddledywink looked very much frightened—in fact, he had turned pink with fear.

‘What is the matter?’ asked Jimmieboy. ‘Nuffin’s wrong I hope.’

‘No,’ returned the Red Tiddledywinks, ‘but we wamt to get out of this as quickly as we can, because the Techeelephant is coming, and if he sees me we won't get away for two hours, and then we shall be late for the Athletic Sports and the Blue Tiddledywink’s Ball.’ [...]

‘Oh, fank you,’ cried Jimmieboy, jumping down and running to the Tiddledywink’s side. ‘Tell him Blackey's Hoodoo verse,’ he whispered.

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2514
M (magazine)
The Magazine for Civilized Men
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
641

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for M.
published in · 
M
date · 
May 1989
citation · 
page cover
collection · 
original (NATwA, Dave Lockwood)
tw-ref-ID · 
2517
published in · 
M
date · 
May 1989
title · 
Civilized Fun
subtitle · 
Child's Play at Oxford
citation · 
page 4 to 6
summary

Article about the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Society, with 5 black-and-white photographs.

collection · 
original (NATwA, Dave Lockwood)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2518
Mad (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
642

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Mad.
published in · 
Mad
title · 
Tiddleywinks Finals
by · 
Severin (artist)
summary

In Wide World of Sports

tw-ref-ID · 
2520
published in · 
Mad
date · 
September 1970
title · 
Makeus Sickby M.D.
citation · 
whole 137 • page 43 to 48
tw-ref-ID · 
2519
Management Today (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
644

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Management Today.
published in · 
Management Today
date · 
January 1992
title · 
Power, Pride and Prejudice
citation · 
page 5
summary

About women in management

tw-ref-ID · 
2522
Marketing News (magazine)
location · 
Illinois, Chicago, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
10

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Marketing News.
published in · 
Marketing News
date · 
13 August 1994
title · 
Consumers go POG wild; marketers milk latest craze
by · 
Tim Triplett
citation · 
volume 28 • page 1
content

POGs? Flat marbles. Round trading cards. New Age tiddlywinks.

keywords

pogs

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
42
Maxim (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
645

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Maxim.
published in · 
Maxim
date · 
May 2000
title · 
The Best of British
citation · 
whole 62 • page 62
summary

Mention of Alan Dean’s World Singles win.

tw-ref-ID · 
2523
McClure's Magazine (magazine)
publisher · 
The McClure Publications, Inc.
location · 
New York and London, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
646

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for McClure's Magazine.
published in · 
McClure's Magazine
date · 
February 1918
title · 
Leaks and Letters
citation · 
volume 51 • issue 4 • page 46 • column 3
content

PERHAPS you will remember the time when we came very near having a smart brush with one of the big powers over a small, yet meaningful incident that occurred about a Latin American country. We took our stand on the Monroe doctrine and told the Big Power to go chase itself. Whether or not the B. P. woidd pay any attention to our warning was another matter. Things looked very tense and exciting for a while. A lot of the jingo papers began calling for support of the President, no matter whether he declared war or not, and urging him to go the limit, in the defense of our dignity. Various legations hummed with activity and our state department worked all night and every night. The navy was put in lighting order — oh. we gave every sign of pulling up our shirt sleeves and getting ready to give somebody a good licking. Cables hummed and the Cabinet met every day in long strenuous sessions. <Pour-parlers were tossed back and forth between our country and the Big Power like tiddledy winks and the war cloud got blacker and blacker and more menacing with every second.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2524
Mind and Body (journal)
A Monthly Journal Devoted to Physical Education
publisher · 
Western Photo-Engraving Company
location · 
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
647

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Mind and Body.
published in · 
Mind and Body
date · 
June 1899
title · 
The Developmental Influences of Play
by · 
James Herbert McKee, M.D.
citation · 
volume 6 • issue 64 • page 77 • column 1
content

Boys delight in the use of tools during this period and in building all sorts of things ; making little streams and dams, paddle-wheels and boats, simple machinery of all kinds. Many games are now played — “duck-on-the-rock,” “black man,” “crokinole,” “leap-frog,”—simple feats of all kinds, turning somersaults, rolling over backward, marbles, “mumble-the-peg,” “prisoner’s base,” “puss in the corner,” ” tiddledy winks,” “touch wood.”

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2525
Missions (magazine)
An International Baptist magazine
location · 
Ford Building, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
648

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Missions.
published in · 
Missions
date · 
January 1917
title · 
Wants for Some One to Fill
citation · 
volume 8 • issue 1 • page 48 • column 1
content

The following is a list of game Miss Carpenter would like very much to have for use in her clubs for boys and girls. […] Brevet, Wonder Garden, Chuck a Luck, Wonderland Zoo, Parcheesi, Puff Billiards, Wall Toss, Funny Face Game, Parlor Croquet, Halma, Ping Pong, Picture Lotto, Jack Straws, Putting Tail on Donkey, King Ring, Hopla, TIddledy Winks, Croquet

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2526
Modern Language Notes (journal)
publisher · 
Johns Hopkins University Press
tw-pub-ID · 
576

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Modern Language Notes.
published in · 
Modern Language Notes
date · 
December 1945
title · 
Anglo-French Etymologies
by · 
Leo Spitzer
citation · 
volume 60 • issue 8 • page 514 • column 1
content source · 
www.jstor.org/stable/2910470
content

In view of the French names of children's games which are derived from the pirouette tiddlywinks ‘a game in which one tries to throw small disks into a small cup’ with the medieval pilliwinks. The NED s. v. tiddlywink lists the following meanings:

[... to be retrieved]

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2394
The Monthly Magazine (magazine)
Or, British Register
publisher · 
Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper
location · 
London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
650

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Monthly Magazine.
published in · 
The Monthly Magazine
date · 
December 1840
title · 
The Knave and the Deuce
subtitle · 
A Horrible Story
by · 
Sir Ephialtes Mooncalf, Knight-Mayor
citation · 
volume 4 • issue 24 • page 571 • column 1
content

He cared not for ghosts, but he’d watched like a lynx

For the deuce when the dice he would rattle,

And then the bad spirits he’d met with, methinks,

At the low country taverns they call tiddleywinks,

Might have used him to that sort of cattle.

notability rating · 
pub
tw-ref-ID · 
2529
Mosher's Magazine (magazine)
Official organ of the Catholic Summer School and Home Study and Reading Circle
publisher · 
The Mosher Publishing Co.
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
651

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Mosher's Magazine.
published in · 
Mosher's Magazine
date · 
April 1902
column title · 
Book Reviews
citation · 
volume 20 • issue 1 • page 135 • column 1
content

From Benziger Brothers comes a goodly number of the excellent short stories for youth, which they publish in good form and, as a rule, with excellent discrimination. [...] Bunt And Bill, by Clara Mulholland, opens with an exciting account of a game at tiddledy-winks, and has a masked lady in it.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2530
MPLS-St. Paul Magazine (magazine)
location · 
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
649

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for MPLS-St. Paul Magazine.
published in · 
MPLS-St. Paul Magazine
date · 
April 1995
title · 
Fifty-two weekend getaways
citation · 
volume 23 • issue 4 • page 34(22)
summary

In the Upper Midwest region

tw-ref-ID · 
2527
published in · 
MPLS-St. Paul Magazine
date · 
August 1995
title · 
Bingo! Five rows, five columns of good clean fun
citation · 
volume 23 • issue 8 • page 52(2)
tw-ref-ID · 
2528
Proceedings, National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (journal)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
652

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Proceedings, National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
published in · 
Proceedings, National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
date · 
26 October 1999
title · 
Vocal imitation in zebra finches is inversely related to model abundance
by · 
Ofer Tchernichovski, Thierry Lints, Partha P. Mitra, and Fernando Nottebohm
citation · 
volume 96 • issue 27 • page 12901 to 12904
content

Song Tutoring Apparatus

Each bird was kept singly in a soundproof box (50 × 30 × 27 cm3) throughout the experiment. The box contained two keys, 1 inch above each of two perches. Keys were prepared from 2-g lever switches (Cherry Elect E22–85HX; Wallingford, CT). We glued a red, ½-inch round, plastic tiddlywinks piece to the end of the lever and, above this, attached a small piece of cuttlebone. By pecking either of the keys, the bird could induce song playbacks from a 11/4-inch samarium cobalt speaker (Intervox S125RL; Washington, DC) hidden inside a plastic model of an adult zebra finch male (6). Birds had free access to the keys and to the plastic male model throughout the experiment. All birds started pecking the key within 2–5 days of being placed in the training cage, at a posthatching age of 32–37 days. Key pecking persisted throughout the experiment.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2531
National Magazine (magazine)
An Illustrated American Monthly
publisher · 
“The National” Press; W. W. Potter Co.
location · 
41 West First Street, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
653

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for National Magazine.
published in · 
National Magazine
date · 
October 1902
title · 
PING PONG
subtitle · 
The Greatest of In-Door Games
by · 
Henry Essex
citation · 
volume 17 • issue 1 • page 127
content

This winter Ping-Pong will doubtless reach the greatest point of popularity that a game has ever attained.In the last twenty years there have been three great furores in games. These were Tiddledy Winks, flippant and foolish but still fascinating; Pillow Dex, the immensely popular game played with inflated Pillow Dex ballons, (which are struct to and fro across a dividing line) and Ping-Pong:—

And the greatest of these is Ping-Pong.

It is a notable and significant fact that all three of these games are games in which the element of physical skill enters. It is also a notable fact that all three of them are purely of English derivation, although the American game publishing house of Parker Brothers is responsible for the last two furores, and is the sole maker of both Ping-Pong and Pillow Dex in the United States.

Mp>Of these three game Tiddledy Winks is entirely devoid of generalship or mental skill. Pillow Dex has use for a certain degree of intelligence, while Ping-Pong, on the other hand, possesses large opportunities for ability and strategy. The English people are very fond of games in which physical skill is employed. They are, in fact, also very fond of mental board games requiring strategy, although no good strategical board game has come out from England, while the United States has produced, in recent years, the great games of skill—Go Bang, Halma and Chivalry. [...]

notability rating · 
ridicule
tw-ref-ID · 
2532
Neuropsychologia (journal)
publisher · 
Elsevier Ltd.
tw-pub-ID · 
654

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Neuropsychologia.
published in · 
Neuropsychologia
date · 
7 February 2009
title · 
Pointing to two imaginary targets at the same time: Bimanual allocentric andegocentric localization in visual form agnosic D.F
by · 
David P. Carey, H. Chris Dijkerman, A. David Milner
citation · 
volume 47 • page 1469
content

In the later experiments, we showed that requiring a sensorimotor response is not in itself sufficient to allow for near-normal localization in pointing. D.F. made aiming movements directly to coloured tokens (“tiddlywinks”) on a fixed workspace containing 3–5 elements

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2533
New England Monthly (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
655

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for New England Monthly.
published in · 
New England Monthly
date · 
October 1986
title · 
Caution: Geniuses at Work and Play
summary

About MIT; mentions tiddlywinks

notes · 
Reprinted in Reader's Digest, October 1987.
tw-ref-ID · 
2534
New Era (magazine)
The official monthly magazine for youth of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
656

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for New Era.
published in · 
New Era
date · 
March 1978
title · 
Oh, Tiddledywinks
by · 
Nancy Hinsdale Wilcox
citation · 
page 48
content

The players are in their appointed places, eyes ahead and breath held. Every muscle is tensed, every nerve ending ready for the signal that will mean the start of a long-awaited, precision competition.

“Ready?” the referee barks. The competitors nod silently. “Okay then. Ready, set … tiddledy!”

Tiddledy?

Yes, tiddledy. At the command the first contestant expertly flips a plastic disk toward a small, round container in the center of the table, having used eye, hand, and mind in the effort. Success! There is a faint plastic plop as the disk settles into the cup.

“Darn!” The opponent says to himself. “I’ll really have to squidge the wink into the tub carefully this time.”

Squidge? Wink? Tub? What is this, anyway?

This, in case you have not already guessed, is that game you probably discarded years ago with your dolls or toy trucks. If you didn’t, you better get it out of your little brother’s toy box or the attic; the tiddledywink revival is on its way.

Although there was no tiddling team in the Olympics, the game—or sport, as enthusiasts prefer to call it—has enjoyed popularity on college campuses for years. Many universities sponsor an annual tournament (probably in conjunction with their frog-jumping and frisbee-throwing contests) to pit top tiddlers against each other. In fact, one year the Harvard team hosted an international meet, only to be out-winked by the Oxford flippers 25–0. This did not inhibit them, however, and they went on to capture all of the Ivy League titles for that year.

The sport is ideal for parties, activities, and socials. Almost everyone can participate, whether it is as a competitor, scorekeeper, referee, or cheerleader (“T-I-D, D-L-E, Tiddle-that-wink!”). Rounds can move fast enough for a fairly large group to play and a tournament champion can emerge in fairly short order. However, for the more intense, six-hour winkathons have been known to occur.

Interested? It is easy to learn, and a few minutes of tiddling will probably bring it all back to you. So dig out that dilapidated box and prepare yourself to become an expert.

Perhaps the pieces have been scattered or lost over the years, so it might be a good idea to take inventory. Official rules list equipment as follows: (1) at least 15 small disks in assorted colors, 7/8 inch in diameter and 0.057 inch thick (but don’t get out the measuring tape—most assembled games are regulation size); (2) a cup, 1 1/2 inches in diameter and 1 1/2 inches high; (3) a larger disk of unspecified size; and (4) felt launching pads, usually thick and square.

Rules can be simple or complex, but the basic move is the same no matter which method you choose. The cup is always placed two feet from the launching pads, and the player presses the edge of the large disk against a smaller one, causing it to flip into the air—hopefully to land in the cup.

In tournaments there are men’s and women’s singles and doubles, and it is quite easy to mix the teams. In singles, each player flips 15 winks; in doubles, each team flips a total of 25, with at least ten apiece.

There are basically three types of scoring. The first, similar to golf, gives each player the total number of tries it takes to flip all disks into the cup. The player with the lowest score wins.

The second method is the kind you’ll most likely find explained in your childhood set. Often, a plastic mat will be included, with the cup as the bull’s-eye and concentric circles of lower scores as the wink lands farther away from the cup. In this case, each disk is flipped only once.

The second method may be combined with the third or the third may be used alone for the more experienced player. It also consists of one flip per wink and scores as follows:

10 points if it lands and stays in the cup

5 points if it lands in and then bounces outside the cup

3 points if it grazes the cup in the air

1 point if it grazes the cup on a bounce from the table.

Any of these methods can be adapted to suit your particular winkers’ wants.

Now that you know the basics, here are a few terms to help you hoodwink your opponent into thinking you are an old pro, even if you haven’t squidged a disk in years.

PLOP: another word for the landing of the wink. “That was just a lucky plop”

SHOOTER: the largest disk

SQUIDGE: another word for shooting, in which the largest tiddledy (“squidger”) sends the wink flying

TIDDLEDY: the large disk

TIDDLEPOT: the cup

TUB: another word for the cup

WINK: the smaller disks

There you have it. You are now ready to tackle the squidgers in another ward or Mutual class, or even in your own family. Organizing a competition should be easy, especially if the top tiddler receives a chocolate cake decorated with candy tiddlies. But even if you lose, what could be better than getting flipped a wink by that boy or girl you’ve had your eye on all year?

media description

Illustrated by Julie F. Young

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2535
The New Leader (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
658

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The New Leader.
published in · 
The New Leader
date · 
17 November 1986
title · 
Spain’s rocky straits
citation · 
volume 69 • page 6(3)
summary

Sovereignty issues over the Straits of Gibraltar

tw-ref-ID · 
2537
New Monthly Magazine and Humorist (magazine)
Edited by Theodore Hook, Esq.
publisher · 
Henry Colburn
location · 
13, Great Marlborough Street, London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
659

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for New Monthly Magazine and Humorist.
published in · 
New Monthly Magazine and Humorist
date · 
1837
title · 
High Connexions
by · 
A. A. G.
citation · 
volume 50 • page 399 • column 1
content

There’s Lady Flash, the Earl of Trumps,

And old Sir Abel Addle.—

Lord Tidley Winks, and Viscount Frumps,

And Lady Fiddlefaddle;—

Some others I could mention, too,

And give you their directions:

Why, bless your soul, these are but few

Of all her high connexions.

links · 
New Monthly Magazine and Humorist (tw-ref-link-id 1727)
notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2538
New Republic (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
661

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for New Republic.
published in · 
New Republic
date · 
30 April 1966
title · 
Indonesia for Indonesians
citation · 
page 11
summary

Figurative usage of tiddlywinks

content

But if the Army were careless, and Dr. Subandrio gained power again, he could make what has happened recently in Indonesia look like a game of tiddlywinks.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2539
New Scientist and Science Journal (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
459

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for New Scientist and Science Journal.
published in · 
New Scientist and Science Journal
date · 
1 April 1971
title · 
Counting Cosmic Rays
citation · 
page 36 • column 1
content

[Ian] Hepworth (whose main claim for fame is to have been tiddlywinks champion of Nottingham University), uses large sodium iodide and caesium iodide scintillation crystals to measure the rate and energy spectrum of cosmic ray stars by pulse shape discrimination.

tw-ref-ID · 
1906
New York (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
664

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for New York.
published in · 
New York
date · 
31 March 1986
title · 
Design/Game Room
by · 
Marilyn Bethany
citation · 
page 64
media description

Photographs of an antiquet iddlywinks set.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2547
New York Review of Books (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
660

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for New York Review of Books.
published in · 
New York Review of Books
date · 
25 January 1979
citation · 
page 2, 50
summary

Query by Fred Shapiro and Rick Tucker

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2565
The New Yorker (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
663

Toggle showing 17 tiddlywinks references for The New Yorker.
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
10 December 1927
citation · 
page 84 • column 3
content

* Holland's Indoor Golf Game—played with tiddledywinks on sporty nine-hole course. Really swell; $3.50.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2550
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
7 December 1929
citation · 
page 132
content

[...] like the magnetic fish pond, Tiddledy- Winks, Diabolo, etc.

tw-ref-ID · 
2548
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
8 February 1930
title · 
Court Games
subtitle · 
Tiddlywinks vs. Squash Racquets—The Pros Agree—Coaches All
citation · 
page 80 • column 2
content

A FEW weeks ago Dr. Mixsell, on behalf of the squash committee of the Princeton Club, sent out cards on which members were asked to indicate whether they favored squash tennis or squash racquets. Everything was made as easy as possible for them; the cards were stamped, addressed, and little boxes for checking were provided so that one’s preference could be indicated with a minimum of effort. As a result quite a few people voted. Once the jokers who turned in ballots for ping-pong and tiddlywinks had been weeded out, the returns indicated a large majority for quash racquets—208 to 126, to be exact.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2551
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
15 December 1934
citation · 
page 116
content

A feature is Tiddledy- Winks, in a stirring revival;

tw-ref-ID · 
2549
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
17 December 1938
citation · 
page 79 • column 1
content

The old toothpick-and-bottle trick of barroom fame pops up at Macy in an item called Pile ’Em High; this version adds the hazard of a swinging bottle that tips drunkenly just as you begin to think you are getting somewhere; twenty-three cents. At the same place: Tiddle-Tennis—like tiddlywinks except that you try to get your chips over a miniature tennis net instead of into a cup; a green felt pad is marked like a tennis court and you score as in the outdoor game; fourty-seven cents, and good…

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2552
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
3 December 1949
citation · 
page 151
content

educational toys-plain pastimes, like Tiddledy \Vinks ($1.29), and games that

tw-ref-ID · 
2558
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
1950 s
title · 
(none)
by · 
Doris Matthews
content
Cartoon illustrating 5 golf players standing with golf club bags at a driving range. At right, a man is wearing a sign placard stating “NO WAITING—TIDDLYWINKS PRACTICE RANGE”. No caption.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2557
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
13 October 1951
citation · 
page 32 • column 2
content

“Like any three-year-old, he’s temperamental,” Richens said. “He thinks he’s a pretty tough guy.” “Believe me, I am really tough,” Elektro said, seeming to perk up. “I am so tough I shave with a blowtorch and I play tiddlywinks with manhole covers.”

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2553
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
15 December 1962
column title · 
The Sporting Scene
title · 
Just a Personal Thing
citation · 
page 156 • column 3
content

plus a series of wholly unofficial matches not sponsored by the universities—two Rugby games against Amherst teams, touch games between the Harvard Krokodiloes and the Yale Whiffenpoofs, ad between the Harvard Crimson and the Yale Record (the announced score of this game, by tradition, is always 23–2 in favor of the home team), and even a Harvard-Yale “varsity” tiddlywinks game.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2554
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
21 November 1963
column title · 
The Sporting Scene
title · 
Just a Personal Thing
citation · 
page 151
content

ornamental, grape-colored stacked-tiddledywink-and-tassel trim is $249.

tw-ref-ID · 
2559
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
4 April 1964
column title · 
A Reporter at Large
title · 
Wake up and live
citation · 
page 146
summary

Figurative usage.

content

Sun Citians […] take little interest in the organized activities, describing them as ‘make-work’ or ‘tiddlywinks’

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2560
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
24 October 1964
title · 
Why advanced winkers prefer to do their tiddly-winking on a Montina Vinyl Corlon Floor
citation · 
page 249 • column all
content

As is always the case with intense and serious games of this nature, experts emerge who find ways to make the games more difficult than they already are.

Which is why advanced winkers play on a Montina Corlon floor.

Montina Corlon, through the design and cunning of its manufacturer, has an extraordinary, nubbly surface textures.

squopping of winks a matter subject to hazard and chance. Even the most perfectly balanced wink, tiddly-winked with utmost precision, case be caused to waver and falter on Montina's charmingly uneven surface.

The heat of combat is apt to render the players unaware of Montina's beauty. [...]

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2555
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
20 September 1982
citation · 
page 7
content

club and Eddie Condon’ , just a tiddledy- wink’s hop east, demarcate a

tw-ref-ID · 
2561
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
11 October 1982
title · 
Jimmy Ryan's
citation · 
page 8 • column 1
content

154 W. 54th St. (664-9700)—This club and Eddie Condon's, just a tiddlywink’s hop east, demarcate a little slice of what West 52nd Street—now labelled Swing Street for tourists but known in earlier times to the initiated as simply The Street—was like thirty, forty, and more yeats ago, when it was swing and bebop world headquarters and rows of town houses housed jazz clubs.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2556
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
7 July 1986
citation · 
page 57
content

I appeared: “Si McCarthy. Tiddledy- winks.” -MARY MCCARTHY

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2562
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
16 December 1991
citation · 
page 15
content

including the still familiar Tiddledy Winks and Pillow-Dex (Parker

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2563
published in · 
The New Yorker
date · 
7 December 1992
citation · 
page 48
content

a champ at it. Russian bank, tiddledy- winks. No wonder George runs

tw-ref-ID · 
2564
Newsweek (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
662

Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for Newsweek.
published in · 
Newsweek
date · 
23 June 1958
title · 
Britain
subtitle · 
One Was Not Prim
citation · 
page 43
summary

Mention of Oxford playing Cambridge at tiddlywinks.

content

Ancient Oxonians [...] might weep or wonder about such antics of today's Oxford students as these:

A tiddlywinks contest with Cambridge University (won 113 to 111 by the Oxford tiddlers).

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2540
published in · 
Newsweek
date · 
3 March 1969
title · 
Man inside the spacesuit
citation · 
page 57
summary

Quote from astronaut Gordon Cooper

content

"They ought to hire tiddlywinks players as astronauts," Cooper snorted.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2541
published in · 
Newsweek
date · 
10 November 1980
title · 
Grim Lessons of the Long Crisis
citation · 
page 60 • column 3
summary

Figurative usage in the context of President Jimmy Carter's Iran rescue mission.

content

Secretly, Carter was considering giving the Pentagon the green light. for a military operation. “The White House was playing tiddlywinks with the State Department”, says one Carter aide.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2542
published in · 
Newsweek
date · 
16 March 1981
title · 
The Fastest Man On the Inside Track
citation · 
page 101 • column 2
content

“I've always had this killer instinct,” he [Eamonn Coghlan] says over a giant bowl of cornflakes, “whether it was tiddlywinks or cross-country, I had to win”

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2543
published in · 
Newsweek
date · 
4 May 1981
title · 
Thurow Vs. Gilder: A Debate
citation · 
page 63 • column 3
content

To an extent, [Lester] Thurow said. [...] “This is one of those areas where George [Gilder] says you've got to have faith, but the problem with that is that we have only one economy to play tiddlywinks with.”

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2544
published in · 
Newsweek
date · 
30 October 1989
title · 
Not Just Kid Stuff Anymore
subtitle · 
Corporate sponsorship for childhood games
citation · 
page 70
summary

Mentions NATwA.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2545
published in · 
Newsweek
date · 
6 October 2003
title · 
Bar Games: Seeing Eye to Eye
by · 
Brian Braiker
citation · 
edition online
content

So bored that they took an interest in staring contests.[…] NEWSWEEK lays claim to the burgeoning tiddlywinks movement.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2546
The Nineteenth Century and After (journal)
A Monthly Review
publisher · 
Spottiswoode & Co. Ltd., Printers
location · 
New Street Square, E. C., London, London, England, UK
Notes

James Knowles (Editor)

tw-pub-ID · 
665

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Nineteenth Century and After.
published in · 
The Nineteenth Century and After
date · 
March 1906
title · 
Football and Polo in China
by · 
Herbert A. Giles
citation · 
volume 59 • whole 359 • page 509
content

In one passage we are told how the great general Ho Ch’ü-ping, when campaigning in the north, and almost destitute of provisions for his troops, ‘hollowed out a place for them to play football in,’ whatever that may mean.In the Hsi ching tsa chi we read:

The Emperor, Ch’êng Ti, B.C. 32-6, was fond of football; but his officers represented to him that it was both physically exhausting and also unsuitable to the Imperial dignity. Hist Majesty replied: We like playing; and what one chooses to do is not exhausting. An appeal was then made to the Empress, who suggested the game of tiddlywinks for the Emperor’s amusement.
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2566
North American Review (magazine)
associated with · 
University of Northern Iowa
location · 
Iowa, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
666

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for North American Review.
published in · 
North American Review
date · 
July 1891
title · 
The Relations of Literature to Society
by · 
Amelia E. Barr
citation · 
volume 153 • issue 416 • page 91
content

The true writer gives his whole intellect and his whole time to his work, and he is satisfied to do so. He has no time and no interest to spare for tiddledy-winks and donkey parties, nor even for progressive euchre.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2567
Notes and Queries (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
667

Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for Notes and Queries.
published in · 
Notes and Queries
date · 
9 December 1871
citation · 
volume 4th Series viii • page 486 • column 2
summary

Query re “kidly wink”

content

“TOM AND JERRY” (4th S. viii, 362)—Beer-shops are in Craven very commonly known as “Tom and Jerry” or “Jerry shops”. The name (not related by the proprietors) is significative of the rows and disturbances that too often occur in some of those nests of infamy called “beer-shops.” In the West of England a beer-shop is known as a “kidly wink”—a term which is a puzzler to me.

VIATOR (1)

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
pub
tw-ref-ID · 
2568
published in · 
Notes and Queries
date · 
6 January 1872
citation · 
volume 4th Series ix • page 19 • column 2
summary

Quote re “kiddle-a-wink” from Beeton’s Christmas Annual for 1863, page 39, note

content

KIDLY-WINK (4th S. viii. 486.)—This is surely the same as kiddle-a-wink—a word which advertisements and placards made sufficiently familiar to the public eye just before the appearance of Beeton's Christmas Annual for 1863. It was used as the general title of a collection of stories supposed to be told by some persons snowed up in a Cornish ale-house or kiddle-a-wink. The author of the tales, Francis Derrick, offers the following etymology:—

“In Cornwall, every ale-house licensed to sell beer only is called a kiddle-a-wink. The name is said to have arisen thus:—About thirty years ago, when I believe an Act of Parliament had just been passed establishing the new licence, some miners entered one of the first of the new-fashioned beer-houses and demanded some toddy. ‘I am not licensed to sell spirits,' answered the poor woman who kept the place, looking hard at the men ; “but I can boil the keddle (kettle) for é, and ef ye mind to wink when I pouar out tha hot waatur, maybe you'll find it’s draawed out of an uncommon good well.' The miners did as they were told, and as they stirred and drank the hot water, one of them said, “So the gran' folks up to Lunnun church-town that make tha laas cael this a beer-house, they do. Aw my dear, I should cael et a keddle-an’-wink. An ef thee stick to thic name, Un (Aunt) Tamson, thee'st do a pewer stem of trade; but ef thee kips to tha name they give et oop to Lunnun churchtown, thee waient fang (earn) much cobshans (savings) fer thee ould age. What do é say, soas (friends)? I reckon I'm right. Give me a drap more hot water out of the kiddle-a-wink, do é now, co’. (This last is a coaxing term generally added to every entreaty by the Cornish.) Thus, without the aid of parliament or of lexicon, a word was coined, that instantaneously and like a flash was conveyed throughout the county and adopted by every possessor of the new licence; and although beer-houses doubtless sell nothing but beer, they nevertheless remain kiddle-a-winks to this day.”—Beeton's Christmas Annual for 1863, p. 39, note.

St. SWITHIN

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
pub
tw-ref-ID · 
2569
published in · 
Notes and Queries
date · 
6 July 1872
citation · 
volume 4th Series x • page 5 • column 1 and 2
summary

Song about Kidley Wink from a newspaper

content

“KIDLEY WINK.”

If the enclosed copy of verses, which I have recently met with amongst some other newspaper cuttings, is of any use to you as illustrative of the derivation of the common term of “Kidley Wink,” as applied to a beer-shop, it is at your service.

THOMAS HARPER.

Mercury Office, Cheltenham.

“Ye topers of England, attend to my song,
The moral is great and the matter not long;
It concerns those new shops for the vending of drink,
Which are, by most people, called Kidley Wink.
- Derry down, down, derry down!


“Now, this Kidley Wink is the name of a man,
Who in London resides, and is fond of a can ;
He advised this new method of turning the “chink,’
And therefore each shop is called Kidley Wink.


“The law was proposed, it could not have been better,
By the worthy X-Chancellor of the X-chequer,
And he made a long speech on the blessings of drink,
But he ne'er took his can in a new Kidley Wink.


“Now the consequence is, that everywhere
Tailors, hucksters, and all take to selling of beer;
They pawn their best coats, buy a barrel of drink,
Turn landlords, and set up a Kidley Wink.


“And the cobbler his pegging-awl drops to unloose
The peg—while the tailor, forsaking his goose,
Makes a goose of his friend, robs his purse, ’till the brink
Of ruin is found in a Kidley Wink.


“Then in country or town, wherever you gaze,
Strange signs of the times stare you full in the face:
Griffins grin in your teeth—Angels tempt you to drink
All your money away in a Kidley Wink.


“The Dog, Cow, and Horse are each pictured so pat,
That beholders, quite puzzled, ask “What sign is that?’
But to some men the Devil, I verily think,
Would be pleasing if hung o'er a Kidley Wink.


“Now, 'tis plain that those men, with their malting and brewing,
Do themselves little good, while the landlord they ruin;
For the profits of sale, and the strength of the drink,
Are together dispersed in each Kidley Wink.


“Then let each man in future keep to his own trade,
And depend on’t that all things will better be made;
For ’tis vain for our huckstering landlords to think
A fortune to make in a Kidley Wink.


“But 'tis avarice makes us forget we're all brothers,
And we seek our own gains on the ruin of others;
Then, ye lovers of justice and hearty good drink,
Pray for England's deliverance from Kidley Wink.
November, 1831.”
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
pub
tw-ref-ID · 
2570
published in · 
Notes and Queries
date · 
6 April 1878
citation · 
volume 5th Series ix • page 264
summary

Slang “tiddlywink” via The Reader, 1864

content

Tiddlywink.—A “leaving” shop where money is lent on goods without a pawnbroker's licence (Northamptonshire).

from The Reader, 1864, an extinct literary journal.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
pub
tw-ref-ID · 
2571
published in · 
Notes and Queries
date · 
18 January 1890
citation · 
volume 7th Series ix • page 48 • column 2
summary

Query re “kiddlewink”; first use of “tiddledywinks” in a sentence

content

KIDDLEWINK.—Can any of your correspondents inform me what is the derivation of the word “kiddlewink,” or “tiddledy winks”? A friend tells me in the Midland Counties it denotes a house where beer is sold without a licence. Lately a game has been introduced here bearing the name of “Tiddledywinks.” M. D.

Lamaha House, Georgetown, Demerara.

[“Tidlewink, a beer-shop.—West”—Halliwell.]

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2572
published in · 
Notes and Queries
date · 
1 February 1890
citation · 
volume 7th Series ix • page 96 • column 1
summary

Reply to query

content

KIDDLEWINK (7th S. ix. 48).—The source of this application of this term to a beer-shop may be seen in ‘N. & Q.’, 4th S. ix. 19, after Beeton's Annual, 1863, p. 39, note. In vol. x. p. 5 there is a copy of verses (November, 1831) in illustration of the story:—

It concerns those new shops for the vending of drink,
Which are, by most people, called kidley wink.

Vv. 3, 4.

ED.MARSHALL.

Kiddle-a-winks were houses (chiefly, I believe, in the West Country) where smuggled spirits were sold, and where the presence of a kettle and a knowing wink from the proprietor indicated that “right Nantz” or other contraband spirits might be obtained. Some years ago one of Beeton's annuals was entitled ‘Kiddleawink; or, Nine Balls One and All.’ JAMES HOOPER.

50, Mornington Road, N.W.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
pub
tw-ref-ID · 
2573
published in · 
Notes and Queries
date · 
19 October 1946
citation · 
page 158 • column 1
summary

“Squalloping” in list of words from the book Lorna Doone

content

Squallopping. lx: 68. (Of a toad.) The context indicates “splashing about.” ‘E.D.D.’ has Scolloping, “draggling,” Herefordshire only, and Scallops, “an awkward girl,” Northern. The Suppt. has Squallop, sb., Devon, “meaning unknown,” but obviously disparaging. ‘O.E.D.’ has Squalper, obs., rare, “to agitate, disorder.” “Squalloping” looks imitative, and for many such words it is impossible to specify a normal form.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
potentially interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2574
Official Gazette (official records)
associated with · 
United States Patent and Trademark Office
location · 
Washington, District of Columbia, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
669

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Official Gazette.
published in · 
Official Gazette
date · 
15 November 1927
title · 
Alphabetical List of Registrants of Labels
citation · 
volume 364 • issue 3 • page vi • column 2
content

Zulu Toy Manufacturing Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich. Tiddledy Winks Croquet. For Tiddledy Winks Game. 33,011; Nov. 15

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2576
published in · 
Official Gazette
date · 
15 November 1927
title · 
Alphabetical List of Registrants of Labels
citation · 
volume 364 • issue 3 • page xiv
content

Tiddledy Winks Croquet. For Tiddledy Winks Game. Zulu Toy Manufacturing Company. 33,011; Nov 15

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2577
published in · 
Official Gazette
date · 
15 November 1927
title · 
Labels Registered
citation · 
volume 364 • issue 3 • page 567
content

Registered November 15, 1927. […]

33,011.—Title: Tiddledy Winks Croquet. For Tiddledy Winks Game. Zulu Toy Manufacturing Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich. Published February 1, 1927.

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2578
L' Officiel des Jeux et Jouets (magazine)
name in English · 
The Official Games and Toys
location · 
France
tw-pub-ID · 
670

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for L' Officiel des Jeux et Jouets.
published in · 
L' Officiel des Jeux et Jouets
date · 
13 April 1950
title · 
Opinion Sovietique sur les Jouets 1950
title in English · 
Soviet Opinion on Toys 1950
citation · 
issue 13 • page 24
content

«L’inventeur, estime la Pravda, n’a pas encore mis au point un jeu de puces capables de communiquer le choléra. Mais cela viendra.»

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); original (Pascal Pontremoli)
notability rating · 
potentially interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2579
Ohio State Law Journal (journal)
location · 
Ohio, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
668

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Ohio State Law Journal.
published in · 
Ohio State Law Journal
date · 
1992
title · 
Exculpatory Agreements for Volunteers in Youth Activities—The Alternative to “Nerf” Tiddlywinks
by · 
Joseph H. King, Jr.
citation · 
volume 53 • issue 3 • page 683
content

"Nerf®" tiddlywinks2 will become the guiding paradigm.

2 The metaphor of the "neriP" tiddlywinks comes from one of my former students, Patricia F.

Nicely.
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2575
Oklahoma Toastmaster (magazine)
location · 
Oklahoma, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
240

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Oklahoma Toastmaster.
published in · 
Oklahoma Toastmaster
date · 
April-May 1972
citation · 
page 4
tw-ref-ID · 
852
Oregon Voter (magazine)
Weekly Magazine of Citizenship
publisher · 
C. C. Chapman (editor)
location · 
Worcester Building, Portland, Oregon, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
671

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Oregon Voter.
published in · 
Oregon Voter
date · 
30 March 1918
title · 
Can You Beat It?
citation · 
volume 12 • issue 13 • page 401 • column 2
content

For a gold brick game that makes J. Rufus Wallingford look like a tiddledy chip the Non-Partisan League is entitled to all the medals.

At $100 per farmer it has cashed in more than $1,000,000 for the privilege of buying at stores promised to be established at farming centers.

Of this $1,000,000, nearly $700,000 is authorized to be used for spreading the league propaganda—a gigantic slush fund.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2580
The Ornithologist and Oölogist (journal)
publisher · 
Frank Blank Webster Company
location · 
Hyde Park, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
672

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Ornithologist and Oölogist.
published in · 
The Ornithologist and Oölogist
date · 
February 1891
column title · 
Brief Notes
citation · 
volume 16 • issue 2 • page 29
content

The inside coterie of the A. O. U. just now seem to be engaged in a game of Tiddledy-winks, seeing who can jump the most names in the new list.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2581
Our Paper (magazine)
publisher · 
Massachusetts Reformatory
location · 
Concord Junction, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
117

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Our Paper.
published in · 
Our Paper
date · 
20 May 1911
title · 
What Would You Do
by · 
Elliot Flower
citation · 
volume 27 • issue 20 • page 230 • column 1
content

Sam Tanson was the first called, and Sam was an indictment in himself. The shade over one eye and the absence of two front teeth would have convinced the skeptical that he had not been playing tiddledywinks.

tw-ref-ID · 
382
The Outlook (magazine)
publisher · 
The Outlook Company
location · 
381 Fourth Avenue, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
673

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Outlook.
published in · 
The Outlook
date · 
9 January 1918
column title · 
By the Way
citation · 
volume 118 • issue 5 • page 195 • column 1
content

Why not let the children start with bridge and chess, and gradually work them up to the point where they can appreciate lotto, halma, and tiddledywinks?

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2582
Patents for Inventions (official records)
Abridgments of Specifications
publisher · 
Darling & Son, Ltd., 1-3, Great St. Thomas Apostle, London, E.C.
location · 
Patent Office, 25, Southampton Buildings, Chancery Lane, W.C., London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
674

Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for Patents for Inventions.
published in · 
Patents for Inventions
date · 
1894
title · 
Abridgment Class Advertising and Display
citation · 
volume 1893-1896 Classes 1-5 • page 40 • column 1
content

6943. Kershaw, W., and Brierley, J. B. April 7.Drawings to Specification.

Advertising.—Advertisements may be placed on the boards or boxes used for educational parlour games, played somewhat after the manner of tiddledy winks.

notes · 
The print volume addresses 1893 to 1896 in Classes 1 to 5. Printed in 1899. The item identified is in 1894.
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2583
published in · 
Patents for Inventions
date · 
1894
title · 
Abridgment Class Toys, Games,and Exercises
citation · 
volume 1893-1896 Classes 130-134 • page 97 • column 1
content

6943. Kershaw, W., and Brierley, J. B. April 7.

Illustration of a circular target with three concentric circles, having one open area in the innermost circle, 10 in the middle circle, and 16 in the outer circle. Three "h" markings appear in the figure. At right, a squidger is on a wink, along with a depiction of a dotted rotating path of the wink heading toward the round target.
FIG. 6
Illustration of a square item with shadows.
FIG. 6a
Illustration of a connectivity diagram between round objects, with two "e" markings on it.
FIG. 3.

Games played with balls or counters.—Relates to educational parlour games somewhat of the nature of tiddledy winks. In the example shown, a circular box h is divided into a number of compartments, having letters placed in the bottom thereof, into which counters or discs are projected by pressing on their edges, so as to spell out any desired word. Or the missile may be a ball, and be projected from a spring thrower, or from a trap e, by hitting the free end either with a striker so as to send the ball directly into the compartments, or with a small racquet so as to send the ball upwards and afterwards, while it is in the air, strike the ball with the racquet so as to drive it into one of the compartments. Numbered, instead of lettered, compartments may be employed; or, if desired, words may be employed whereby a verse of poetry or a sentence may be formed. Advertisements may be placed on the boards or boxes employed.

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2584
published in · 
Patents for Inventions
date · 
1894
title · 
Abridgment Class Toys, Games,and Exercises
citation · 
volume 1893-1896 Classes 130-134 • page 128 • column 1 and 2
content

18,061 Ditchburn, W. Sept. 22.

Illustration of a human head device facing left with various letter indications on it.
FIG. 3

Games played with counters and the like.—Relates to a game resembling tiddledy winks, in which counters, coins, and the like are projected or thrown by players into the open mouth of amechanical head, which is either stationary or revolves, while the mouth may remain open or bealternately opened and closed. An oblong box carries a block F through which passes freely a spindle E, squared at the portion E1. The lower end carries a pulley C driven by a band C1 connected to another pulley on a shaft operated by a crank handle. The spindle E rests upon a stepped support H, while a second spindle G rests upon another stepped support H1. The supports are connected together, and can be shifted in position horizontally by a button u2. The head G is provided with a block R to which is fixed a plate N having a square opening in which the top of the squared portion E1 can enter. The lower jaw is pivoted so as to open and close, a roller being connected therewith. Above the block F is placed a crown cam wheel K having a pin T. The spindle E is also provided with a cam driver M. In the position shown, that is with both spindles E and G resting upon the lower step of the supports H, H1, the head rests upon the collar P, the pin T is out of engagement with the spindle G, the roller engages with the teeth of the crown wheel K, the squared portion E1 of the spindle E is out of engagement with the plate N, and the crank of the driver M engages with the teeth of the wheel K, the result being that the head remains stationary, while the wheel K rotates, causing the jaws to open and close by means of the roller riding up and down the teeth of the crown wheel. On sliding the plates H, H1 inwards slightly, the spindle E will be first raised. This will result in the top thereof engaging with the plate N, whereby the head will rotate along with the spindle, and the cam wheel rotating with the roller, the jaws will remain open. On further sliding the plates inwards, the spindle G will also be raised, so as to engage with the tooth T and prevent the wheel K from rotating, the resujt being that the roller will ride up and down the teeth thereof, and the jaws open and close in addition to the head turning round.

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2585
published in · 
Patents for Inventions
date · 
1894
title · 
Appendix.
subtitle · 
A.D. 1894.
citation · 
volume 1893-1896 Class 146 • page 170 • column 1 and 2
content

6943. Kershaw, W., andBrierley, J. B. April 7.

Illustration of a circular target with three concentric circles, having one open area in the innermost circle, 10 in the middle circle, and 16 in the outer circle. Three "h" markings appear in the figure. At right, a squidger is on a wink, along with a depiction of a dotted rotating path of the wink heading toward the round target.
FIG. 6
Illustration of a square item with shadows.
FIG. 6a
Illustration of a connectivity diagram between round objects, with two "e" markings on it.
FIG. 3.

Reading, teaching.—Relates to educational parlour games somewhat of the nature of tiddledy winks. In the example shown, a circular box h is divided into a number of compartments, having letters placed in the bottom thereof, into which counters or discs are projected by pressing on their edges, so as to spell out any desired word. Or the missile may be a ball, and be projected from a spring thrower, or from a trap e, by hitting the free end either with a striker so as to send the ball directly into the compartments, or with a small racquet so as to send the ball upwards and afterwards, while it is in the air, strike the ball with the racquet so as to drive it into one of the compartments. Numbered, instead of lettered, compartments may be employed; or, if desired, words may be employed whereby a verse of poetry or a sentence may be formed. Advertisements may be placed on the boards or boxes employed.

notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2586
PC Week (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
675

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for PC Week.
published in · 
PC Week
date · 
4 November 1986
title · 
Letters
title in English · 
Don't Toy With me
citation · 
page 61
collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2587
The Pedagogical Seminary (journal)
alternate name · 
Journal of Genetic Psychology (successor)
publisher · 
Louis N. Wilson (publisher), Press of Oliver B. Wood
location · 
Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Notes

Edited by G. Stanley Hall

tw-pub-ID · 
676

Toggle showing 8 tiddlywinks references for The Pedagogical Seminary.
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
October 1894
title · 
Education by Plays and Games
by · 
G. E. Johnson
citation · 
volume 3 • page 113
summary

Listing.

content

412 Tiddledy Winks, 1 m.b., e. ms. h.a.

  • 412: number in alphabetical list
  • 1: citation of the book by Champlin & Bostwick, Young folks' cyclopædia, 1890
  • m.b., e. ms. h.a.: fair value for mind, body, eye, muscular sense, hand and arm.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2588
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
July 1897
title · 
A Study in Moral Education
by · 
J. R. Street
citation · 
volume 5 • issue 1 • page 23 and 24
content

The following list shows the games played by the girls: Hide and seek 56. Croquet 43. Tag 41. […] Hop-scotch, tiddledy winks 5.

In regard to the moral import of games, the following classification shows the way they are viewed by the boys and girls: […] Perserverance. Pigs-in-clover 9.Parchesi 9. Tennis 9. […] Tiddledy winks 2. […] Honesty. Croquet 19. Hide and seek. 18. Cards 12. […] tiddledy winks, innocence abroad, go bang (1 each).

tw-ref-ID · 
2589
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
September 1899
title · 
Amusements of Worcester School Children
by · 
T. R. Croswell
citation · 
volume 6 • page 321 • column 1
summary

Listing in favorites of boys ("B") and girls ("G") from a survey made in Fall 1896

content

3. Contests with Objects.

Ball B 679-241, G 409-67; Marbles B 608-115, G 130-21; Football B 455-151, G I; Jackstones B 28-2, G 341-63; Hockey, Shinney, Polo B 313, G 8; Top B 176-28, G 11; Hop Scotch B 16, G 154-21; Croquet B 62-3, G 148-52; Hoop B 71-3, G 1 10-14; Stilts B 70-7, G 12; Bean Bag B 4, G 72-7; Pick Kuife B 57-4, G 3; Tenpins B 53-10, G 6; Tennis B 51-10, G 31-10; Tip Cat B 33-1, G 10-2; Tiddledy Winks B 22-6, G 31-3; Pillow Dex B 16-2, G 21-4; Horse Shoes, Quoits B 19-2, G 1; Fish Pond B 12-1, G 15; Pool, Billiards, B 13-2, G 2; Jackstraws B 4, G 11; Golf B 4-1, G 1; Cricket B 4, G 1; Battledore B 1, G 3; Bagatelle B 2,G 3; Parlor Ring Toss B 1, G 1

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2590
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
September 1899
title · 
Amusements of Worcester School Children
by · 
T. R. Croswell
citation · 
volume 6 • page 355 • column 1
summary

Quotations from boys ("B") and girls ("G") from a survey made in Fall 1896

content

“Such toys as checkers, dominoes and tiddledewinks, I like these toys because one can sit down and have some fun, but still be resting.” G. 13.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2591
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
December 1900
title · 
A Study in the Play Life of Some South Carolina Children
by · 
Zach McGhee
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 4 • page 463 • column 1
content

Group of Plays in which Rivalry plays the most Important Part, the Object of the Game being to “Beat” an Opponent.

One Hole Cat, Golf, Walking to Jerusalem, Shinney, Marbles, Picking Eggs, Pretty Maids' Country, Authors, Dominoes, Up Jinks, Lotto, Football, Croquet, Battle, Knucks, Hull Gull, Jack in the Bush, Crokinole, Tennis, Open Gates as High as the Sky, Base, Parchesi, Charades, Cards, Ten Pins, Bean Bags, Stealing Chips, Wrestling, Jack Straws, Baseball, Snap, Foot and a Half, Simon Says Wig Wag, Pig in the Parlor, Jack Stones, Hop Scotch, Checkers, Bull Pen, Clumps, Parlor Croquet, Philopcena, Roly Poly, Dumb Scrambo, Geography, Pillow Dex, Basket Ball, Green, Five Hundred, Tit Tat Taw, Mumble Peg, Backgammon, Chess, Tiddledy Winks.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2592
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
December 1900
title · 
A Study in the Play Life of Some South Carolina Children
by · 
Zach McGhee
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 4 • page 465 • column 1
summary

Listing of boys and girls choosing tiddledy winks in survey from Fall 1896

content

Tiddledy Winks, BOYS. 79 GIRLS. 120

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2593
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
December 1900
title · 
A Study in the Play Life of Some South Carolina Children
by · 
Zach McGhee
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 4 • page 473 • column 1
summary

Definition of the game of Tiddledy Winks

content

Tiddledy Winks. Shooting small disks into a cup by pressing quickly on the edge of the disks with another disk. Chief elements: Unusual Activity, Dexterity, Rivalry.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2594
published in · 
The Pedagogical Seminary
date · 
December 1909
title · 
The Influence of Kindergarten Methods on the Socialization of the School
by · 
Colin A. Scott
citation · 
volume 16 • issue 4 • page 550-552 • column 1
content

Condemn us in this room this morning to play tiddledywinks, and it might appeal to some who would shine, but others would certainly be out of it. We would be in a need of a method to make it interesting, but it could never be a completely or a truly social method, since our wills would not be engaged upon the object. What we would have to do would be either to pretend that tiddledywinks was something else—such as religion, philosophy, or education, or to play the game so as to join in, to be agreeeable, or because it would be a trial in overcoming which our virtue would be trained. But in these cases, we would not really be playing tiddledywinks at all. We would be distinctly conscious of an object beyond, which would be the real source or purpose of our action. We might be flirting. We might be showing off our rings. We might be joking or telling stories. Tiddledywinks would form a good automatic basis for these more genuine occupations. Here as you see the subject or object that we began with turns out to be no object at all, but is much more like a method of attaining other objects, while the method or way we do the thing is really the object.

This is, of course, a parable. Consider the mind of many a high school girl. Her Latin and algebra are to her, very often just tiddledywinks, and she is really engaged in carrying out curious purposes of her own. But the subject is often enough tiddledywinks to the teacher also, although the object the teacher is pursuing is perhaps religion, or a belief he is training the memory, the obedience or faithfulness of his pupils, simply earning his salary or other aims of social value. The trouble is that the real purposes of the pupils and the teacher hardly ever meet. They are isolated and foreign to one another; they have not been socialized as far as the class is concerned. The teacher rarely knows the real purposes of the pupils, and when he suspects them, they are not usually encouraged. He constantly insists that the subject is to be made the real object or purpose of the pupils' activity. Play tiddledywinks for its own sake.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2595
Pediatrics (journal)
A Semi-Monthly Journal
publisher · 
Dillon Brown, M.D. (owner); George Carpenter, M.D. (editor)
location · 
254 West 54th Street, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
678

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Pediatrics.
published in · 
Pediatrics
date · 
15 May 1899
title · 
The Developmental Influences of Play
by · 
James Herbert McKee, M.D.
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 10 • page 464 • column 1
content

Many games are now played—”duck-on-the-rock,” “black man,” “crokinole,” “leap-frog,”—simple feats of all kinds, turning, somersaults, rolling over backward, marbles, “mumble-the-peg,” “prisoner’s base,” “puss in the corner,” “tiddledy winks,” “touch wood.”

tw-ref-ID · 
2596
People Weekly (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
679

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for People Weekly.
published in · 
People Weekly
date · 
27 November 1978
column title · 
Lookout
title · 
A Guide to the Up and Coming
citation · 
volume 10 • issue 22 • page 138 • column all
summary

Photograph and article about Dave Lockwood .

collection · 
original (NATwA); digital image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2597
published in · 
People Weekly
date · 
22 August 1988
title · 
Playing to Win
citation · 
volume 30 • issue 8 • page 34(6)
summary

About President George H. W. Bush playing tiddlywinks.

tw-ref-ID · 
2598
published in · 
People Weekly
date · 
26 August 1991
title · 
Body and soul
title in English · 
People’s Sexiest Man Alive for 1991 is Patrick Swayze
citation · 
volume 36 • issue 7 • page 56(5)
tw-ref-ID · 
2599
Proceedings of the Philadelpha and National Conferences of the Construction Industries (journal)
location · 
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
692

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Proceedings of the Philadelpha and National Conferences of the Construction Industries.
published in · 
Proceedings of the Philadelpha and National Conferences of the Construction Industries
date · 
15 April 1921
column title · 
Philadelphia Conference on the Construction Industries
title · 
eal Estate and Housing
by · 
John C. Ihlder
citation · 
section Part 1 • page 35 • column 2
content

The real estate men have recently set standards for themselves—adopted a code of ethics. So should the builders. The real estate code is the first step and it provides honesty and a square deal as between realtors and their clients, but it does not take into account the real estate man’s very great responsibility to his community. He, and you, the builders, are peculiarly responsible for the growth and development of your community. It lies in your hands more than in those of any other groups. Consequently, your codes should acknowledge your special responsibility, and you should definitely stand for meeting community standards. There is no game on earth that can be played successfully without rules, whether it is base-ball or tiddledy-winks. There is no game on earth that involves large groups of men that can be played without an umpire.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2637
The Philistine (periodical)
A Periodical of Protest
associated with · 
Society of the Philistines
location · 
East Aurora, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
680

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for The Philistine.
published in · 
The Philistine
date · 
February 1902
citation · 
volume 14 • issue 3 • page 84 • column 1
content

The Professor avers that the Chicago custom of having rat round-ups, where the ladies occupy specially built platforms, urging on their lovers and husbands by applause and gladsome smiles, and the gentlemen & invited guests take up the side-walk in front of the host’s property and chase the rats—does not remedy the evil. As a social pastime, the Professor prefers Pro-gressive Euchre, Parchesi, or Tiddledy-Winks.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2600
published in · 
The Philistine
date · 
December 1908
title · 
Heart to Heart Talks with Philistines by the Pastor of his Flock
citation · 
volume 28 • issue 1 • page 8 • column 1
content

A modicum of prosperity, and the owner of the female mind quits work, and her life is devoted to vacuity, tiddledy-winks, bridge whist, church fairs, the latest play and other society piffle. The books she reads are the six best sellers. But she is a woman and sex is strong in her head, at least.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2601
published in · 
The Philistine
date · 
May 1912
citation · 
volume 34 • issue 6 • page 200 • column 1
content

It admits a man of mediocre ability into a certain society on a basis which a person of similar attainments could never otherwise reach. And this, it should be explained, is the society of affectation, pretense, cheese-straws, tiddledy-winks and poetic parchesi.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2602
The Photographic Times (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
681

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Photographic Times.
published in · 
The Photographic Times
date · 
23 February 1894
column title · 
Pictures Received
citation · 
volume 24 • whole 649 • page 128 • column 1
content

Pictures Received.

No. 775.—Two little genre pictures, ‘” Harmonious Discord” and ” Tiddledy Winks.” Children at play. We are much pleased with these pictures; the arrangement is beautiful in either of them. Let our fair young lady friend get master of the technics of photography, and she will be able to rival our Clarkson or Baldwin.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2603
Pif Gadget (catalog)
location · 
France
tw-pub-ID · 
682

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Pif Gadget.
published in · 
Pif Gadget
citation · 
whole 1528 • page 3
summary

Gadget # 290 with three illustrations

content

MONTAGE: LE CLOWN JEU DE PUCE

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); original (Pascal Pontremoli)
tw-ref-ID · 
2604
Playboy (magazine)
location · 
USA
archive website · 
tw-pub-ID · 
683

Toggle showing 8 tiddlywinks references for Playboy.
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
January 1959
column title · 
Playboy After Hours
citation · 
volume 6 • issue 1 • page 9 • column 1
content

Pardon us if we scuff our feet a little, verbally that is. Our head is hung in shame, and we cough softly in apology as we tell you that we're eight months late in reporting a world's championship sporting event. Last May, the Oxonian Tiddlers of Oxford University defeated the Cantab Winkers of Cambridge at tiddly-winks, and immediately claimed the world's championship. The score was a nip-and-tuck 113-111. The teams represented the cream of the world's winkers -- or tiddlers -- and the match was witnessed by several hundred fans. Tea was served at half time.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Playboy (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1764)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2612
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
September 1969
title · 
Campus Action Chart
citation · 
volume 16 • issue 9 • page 195 • column 8
summary

Entry for MIT

content

21. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

MIT’s two saving graces are the tiddlywinks championship of North America and incredible graffiti

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Playboy (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1757)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2605
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
April 1971
title · 
Great Scott!
by · 
Saul Braun
citation · 
volume 18 • issue 4 • page 200 • column 3
summary

George C. Scott discussing his children

content

“Alex can't stand to lose,” he remarked. “He'd rather die than be beaten. At tiddlywinks, at anything. The most competitive person I’ve ever known.”

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Playboy (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1762)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2610
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
September 1976
title · 
Slapstick or Lonesome No More!
subtitle · 
the strange memoirs of the final american president
by · 
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
citation · 
volume 23 • issue 8 • page 163 • column 1
content

Listen: We began with the mystery of how ancient peoples had erected the pyramids of Egypt and Mexico, and the great heads of Easter Island, and the barbaric arches of Stonehenge, without modern power sources and tools.

We concluded there must have been days of light gravity in olden times, when people could play tiddlywinks with huge chunks of stone.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Playboy (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1763)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2611
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
May 1977
column title · 
The Playboy Forum
title · 
Now Hear This
by · 
(Name withheld by request)
citation · 
volume 24 • issue 5 • page 61 • column 1
content

Our captain has also recently threatened to inform on any many who, as he puts it, “cheats on his wife.”

Shiver me timbers! That leaves darts and tiddlywinks. Frankly, I think we'd all rather raise a little Caine.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Playboy (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1761)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2609
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
April 1981
title · 
Little Annie Fanny
by · 
Harvey Kurtzman and Will Elder
citation · 
volume 28 • issue 4 • page 269 • column all
summary

Cartoon depicting winks being shot into a beer mug

content

YOU WON’T LET ME PUNCH THE BAG OR RIDE THE BULL… NOW, WHY CAN’T I PLAY THE TIDDLY WINKS?

THERE’S JUST SOME THINGS WASN’T MEANT FOR WOMEN, HONEY.

collection · 
original (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Playboy (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1758)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2606
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
December 1986
title · 
Blindsight
subtitle · 
two kinds of people came to this planet—those who wanted to hide and those who wanted to seek
by · 
Robert Silverberg
citation · 
volume 33 • issue 12 • page 212 • column 3
summary

Uses the term "squidge"

content

The Earth was plastered right over the sun, with nothing but one squidge of hot light showing down below, like a diamond blazing on a golden ring.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Playboy (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1759)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2607
published in · 
Playboy
date · 
August 1991
title · 
Boomtown
by · 
Craig Vetter
citation · 
volume 38 • issue 8 • page 162 • column 3
content

This ain’t tiddlywinks

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2608
Playground (magazine)
To Promote Normal Wholesome Play and Public Recreation
associated with · 
Playground and Recreation Association of America
location · 
1 Madison Avenue, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
684

Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for Playground.
published in · 
Playground
date · 
April 1913
title · 
How to Equip a Playroom
subtitle · 
The Pittsburgh Plan
by · 
Alice M. Corbin
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 1 • page 14 • column 1
content

Toys and Playthings for Children from 7 to 9

12. Games

  • Tumbeline
  • Down and Out
  • Jack Straws
  • Dominoes
  • Target games
  • Checkers
  • Tiddledy-winks
  • Messenger boy
  • Crokinole
  • Base ball game
  • Table croquet
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2613
published in · 
Playground
date · 
November 1922
title · 
Progressive Game Party
by · 
J. R. Batchelor
citation · 
volume 16 • issue 8 • page 382 • column 1
content

8. Tiddleywinks. This game may be played in three or four different ways, reference to which are found in the rules accompanying the game.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2614
published in · 
Playground
date · 
January 1924
title · 
Bedside Games
by · 
Edna B. Montgomerie
citation · 
volume 17 • page 568 • column 2
content

Further suggestions for games include checkers, parchesi, jack straws [...]; and target games such as tiddle de winks, table basket ball, ring toss and others.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2615
published in · 
Playground
date · 
January 1929
citation · 
volume 22 • page 576
summary

Tiddlywink Golf

tw-ref-ID · 
2616
published in · 
Playground
date · 
March 1931
citation · 
page 667
summary

Included in a list of games in community centers

tw-ref-ID · 
2617
Playthings (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
685

Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for Playthings.
published in · 
Playthings
date · 
around 1926
title · 
Pioneers in the Toy Business
notes · 
Source for McClintock book. (May not be in Playthings.)
tw-ref-ID · 
2618
published in · 
Playthings
date · 
1928
by · 
Alderman-Fairchild
summary

Advertisement including Blinky Blinx Tiddledy Winks

content source · 
Reproduced in the American Game Collectors Association, Game Times, whole issue 24, Vol. X, number 2, page 519.
tw-ref-ID · 
2619
published in · 
Playthings
date · 
June 1939
citation · 
page 50
summary

“Tidley Hop”

content source · 
Cited in U.S. design patent D367680, in 1996.
tw-ref-ID · 
2620
published in · 
Playthings
date · 
before 1942
summary

Photo prediction of adult winks interest.

content source · 
Reproduced in book by Ruth and Larry Freeman, A cavalcade of toys, © 1942, page 298.
collection · 
photocopy of 1942 Freeman book, page 298 (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2621
Popular Electronics (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
686

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Popular Electronics.
published in · 
Popular Electronics
date · 
December 1956
title · 
4 Electronic Toy Projects
by · 
E. G. Louis
citation · 
volume 5 • issue 6 • page 47, 49 to 51
summary

3 photos and 1 wiring diagram for “Project 2 ‘Electronic Tiddly-Winks'”.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2622
Popular Mechanics (magazine)
Written So You Can Understand It
publisher · 
H. H. Windsor (founder, editor: 1958)); H. H. Windsor, Jr. (editor and publisher: 1958)
location · 
160 Washington Street (1908); 200 East Ontario Street (1958), Chicago, Michigan, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
687

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Popular Mechanics.
published in · 
Popular Mechanics
date · 
April 1908
title · 
A Mystery Solved.
by · 
Carlyle Smith
citation · 
volume 10 • section Advertising Section • issue 4 • page 106 • column 2
content

What is the Navy sailing for?” quoth I to Captain Binks.

“I do not know,” the Sea Dog said. “But this is what I thinks:

Bob Evans wants to teach the Japs the game of Tiddledy-winks.”

I put the question next unto our doughty Admirell.

”I do not know,” said he, “and if I did I wouldn’t tell.”

I thought he muttered something else that bade me go to thunder. […]

notes · 
Reprinted from Harper's Weekly.
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2623
published in · 
Popular Mechanics
date · 
August 1958
title · 
Sandpaper Target Adds Fun to Tiddlywink Game
citation · 
page 178
content
Black and white illustration of a girl and boy kneeling on the floor, with the boy shooting winks at a square target with numbered circles (5, two of 10, 25, two of 50, two of 75, and 100). The square target is angled against a stack of two books.

To add a new twist to the old game of tiddlywinks, cement a sheet of medium-grit sandpaper to a square of plywood, draw circles and numerals on the paper as of [sic] plywood. Draw circles and prop the board at about 45-deg. angle to provide a sloping target for the disks snapped at it. The disks, falling upon the sandpaper, will tend to remain in place unless touched by other disks during succeeding shots. The trick, of course, is to snap the disks so that they come to rest on the highest numbers

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2624
Popular Science Monthly (magazine)
alternate name · 
Appletons’ Popular Science Monthly; Popular Science
publisher · 
D. Appleton and Company; Popular Science Publishing Co., Inc. (1929+)
persons involved · 
William Jay Youmans (editor: 1897); Waldemar Kaempffert (editor: 1919); Raymond J. Brown (editor: 1935, 1939)
location · 
225 West 33th Street (1919); 250 Fourth Avenue (1929); 353 Fourth Avenue (1935, 1939), New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
688

Toggle showing 9 tiddlywinks references for Popular Science Monthly.
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
July 1897
title · 
The Mob Mind
by · 
Professor Edward A. Ross
citation · 
volume 51 • page 395 • column 1
content

As there must be in the typical mob a center which radiates impulses by fascination till they have subdued enough people to continue their course by sheer intimidation, so for the craze there must be an excitant, overcoming so many people that these can affect the rest by mere volume of suggestion. [...]

The fad originates in the surprise or interest excited by novelty. Roller-skating, blue glass, the planchette, a forty days’ fast, the “new woman,” tiddledy-winks, faith-healing, the “13-14-15” puzzle, baseball, telepathy, or the sexual novel attract those restless folk who are always running hither and thither after some new thing.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2625
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
October 1898
title · 
Some Psychical Aspects of Muscular Exercise
by · 
Luther Gulick M.D.
citation · 
volume 53 • page 801
summary

“tiddledywinks” in list of games played by children aged 7 to 12

content

During what I have called later childhood—from seven to twelve in girls—we have the height of the doll plays, elaborate housekeeping arrangements. Two of our children are now in this stage. They have secured all of the broken dishes, bits of tin, and other things that can be used for housekeeping, and in old boxes, in imaginary houses, or whatever is available, are going through with these elementary housekeeping arrangements. At about ten the interest in dolls seems to wane, but taking its place there is an interest in babies. It is a common thing to see girls at this age asking to borrow neighbors' babies to wheel them round in baby-carriages, to play with them, to swing them. Every one of our babies has been borrowed by neighbors' children of about this age. Boys do not borrow our babies; it is distinctly a feminine instinct to play with babies. Boys want knives, to whittle, all sorts of plays with strings, flying kites. The ball games are played, "one old cat," an elementary baseball game, swimming and rowing. Boys delight in the use of tools during this period, and in building all sorts of things; making little streams and dams, paddle-wheels and boats, simple machinery of all kinds. Many games are now played: "duck on the rock," "black man," "blindman's buff," "crokinole," "croquet," "leapfrog"; simple feats of all kinds, turning somersaults, rolling over backward, marbles, "mumble the peg," "prisoner's base," "puss in the corner," "tiddledywinks," "touch wood."

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2626
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
March 1906
title · 
Newspaper Football
by · 
Professor Edwin G. Dexter
citation · 
page 265 • column 1
content

Football is not a gentle game, and the boy who is entirely satisfied with tiddle-dy-winks, as well as his father, who in his day had been satisfied with similar games, may deem it over-strenuous.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2627
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
June 1914
title · 
Is the Montessori Method a Fad?
by · 
Frank Pierrepont Graves
citation · 
volume 84 • page 609 • column 1
content

After all the popular excitement, spectacular magazine articles, and more or less interesting books on the subject, the busy man—even the educator—is still asking: “What is the Montessori Method?” Is it a wonderful discovery of educational principles, an ingenious invention of material and devices, or merely a new fad that has been exalted by manufacturers of educational apparatus and enterprising journalists into a profitable cult and propaganda? Will the inventor of the “didactic apparatus” be eventually enshrined a little above Pestalozzi and Froebel, Mann and Barnard, in the educational pantheon, or will she be relegated to the limbo of the exponents of tiddledy-winks and ping-pong, of Belgian hares and Teddy bears?

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2628
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
January 1919
title · 
Yes, Santa Got Safely through the War Zone
subtitle · 
And with Some Delightful Gifts
citation · 
volume 94 • issue 1 • page 21 • column 1
summary

Includes a photograph of a girl and boy playing a golf version of tiddlywinks on a table

content
Black and white photograph of a girl (at left, with a large bow in her hair) and boy (right, wearing a tie with a white shirt) at a table on which a tiddlywinks golf course is set up. Holes are represented by round wooden targets; hazards by triangular-sided blocks. Styli are held in the hand to shoot the winks.
A nine-hole table golf course that is an improvement on the once familiar tiddledy-winks
collection · 
digitized image (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2629
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
May 1929
title · 
Parlor Baseball Played with Tiddledywinks
citation · 
volume 114 • issue 5 • page 61 • column 2
content

YOU can make “hits,” “runs,” and ”fouls,” with a new table baseball game based on the old pastime of “tiddledywinks.” A diamond, laid out on a board about two square feet in area, is divided into zones. Small celluloid disks representing batted balls are snapped with a larger disk from home plate. They score “base hits,” ”home runs” or ”fouls,” according to the zones in which they land. A player is “out” when a disk comes to rest within or touching the line indicating any fielder’s position.

Each player has nine small disks, representing the members of a baseball team. He “bats” until he has three outs, and the one who has the highest score at the end of nine innings of play is the winner.

Black and white photograph of a girl (at left, holding a squidger in her right hand) and woman (at right), sitting at a table on which a tiddlywinks game board is situated.
Skill in snapping the tiddledywink “ball players” into desired zones of the field decides the winner of the novel game.
collection · 
digitized image (NATwA); original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2630
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
May 1935
column title · 
Our Readers Say
title · 
Batters, too, Are Mystified By Ballistics of Baseball
citation · 
volume 126 • issue 5 • page 10 • column 3
content

Now that all of young America with the exception of those who like tiddledy-winks better are preparing to invade the sandlots of the nation in resuming the great national outdoor battle for baseball honors, why couldn’t we have an article on the ballistics of baseball? I would like to have explained to me the reasons why a speed ball has a lower trajectory than a slow ball, and why no pitcher has ever been able to forecast the gyrations of the old-time spit-ball.—B. R., Portland, Me.

collection · 
digitized image (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2631
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
March 1939
title · 
New Table Game Resembles Tennis
citation · 
volume 134 • issue 3 • page 139 • column 2
content
Black and white photograph of a young man (wearing a white shirt and dotted dark tie) sitting at a table, holding a dark racket-shaped squidger, in his left hand, on a white wink at the baseline of a mat marked as a tennis court, with a net at center held up by two light wooden rectangular pieces. Additional game contents appear in the foreground: 3 additional dark racket-shaped squidgers plus 6 additional white winks, representing tennis balls.
Thin discs are snapped across the “net” with miniature rackets.

Tiddledywinks and tennis are combined in a novel parlor game just introduced. Played on a felt pad measuring twelve by twenty-four inches and marked with white lines as on a real tennis court, the game uses thin disks which are snapped back and forth across a diminutive net by means of tiny rackets. Rules and scoring are similar to those used in tennis. In the photograph reproduced at the left, a player is shown about to serve from the back line of the court. In the foreground are the rackets and the “balls” used.

collection · 
digitized image (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2632
published in · 
Popular Science Monthly
date · 
March 1944
title · 
The Kite That Smashed Berlin
by · 
Hickman Powell; Harold Kulick
citation · 
volume 144 • issue 3 • page 48B • column 2
content
Black and white photograph of hands outstretched, each holding a good luck item as identified in the caption.
For good luck, the tail gunner carries a spanner; Tex, a lucky farthing; upper gunner, a pair of toy boots; engineer, a tiddlywink; bomb-aimer, a sprig of heather.
collection · 
digitized image (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2633
PowerPlant (magazine)
publisher · 
Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, Division of United Aircraft Corporation
location · 
06108, East Hartford, Connectictut, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
184

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for PowerPlant.
published in · 
PowerPlant
date · 
8 May 1970
title · 
Tiddlywinks… the Wave of the Future?
subtitle · 
Phil Villar—Master of the Squidger
citation · 
volume 27 • issue 9 • page 7 • column 1
content

Not many people realize that after the "squidge off" a great deal of "squopping" will take place before any player is able to "pot out".

[...]

Black and white photograph of a television with Phil Villar on Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show on NBC television.
Villar discusses on TV the ins and outs of tiddlywinks with Johnny Carson on "The Tonight Show."

[...]

Black and white photograph of Phil Villar, in profile, potting a wink on a tiddlywinks mat with pot and piles of winks.
Villar keeps his eye on the wink he has just squidged toward the pot. A knowledge of trajectories is useful in tiddlywinks, but only continual practice gives one the feel of the game.

[...]

Black and white photograph of two men watching Phil Villar make a shot on a tiddlywinks mat with pot and piles of winks.
Peter Silverberg, left, and Jerry Vitti, right, both combustion engineering, study Villar's technique as he attempts a strategic squop. Each of the winks is carefully shot into position in preparation for potting out.

[...]

collection · 
original (Drix/NATwA); digital copy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
555
Prevention (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
689

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Prevention.
published in · 
Prevention
date · 
December 1992
title · 
12 days to to tranquility: how to make the countdown to the holidays stress-free and joyful
citation · 
page 40 and later
summary

Includes techniques for self-massage.

tw-ref-ID · 
2634
Printers’ Ink (magazine)
publisher · 
Printers’ Ink Publishing Company
location · 
185 Madison Avenue, New York, New York
tw-pub-ID · 
690

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Printers’ Ink.
published in · 
Printers’ Ink
date · 
14 June 1922
title · 
The Letter That Capitalizes the Present and Kills the Future
by · 
Clifford W. Bent
citation · 
volume 119 • issue 11 • page 163
content

This able sales manager went a step farther in his analysis, in continuing, “[…] But I cannot and will not endeavor to fool any man into thinking that I sit up nights following his personal career and congratulating him on winning a silver mug in auction bridge at a charity affair, when the news comes to me cut from the society columns of his Sunday paper, and I haven’t the slightest idea whether auction bridge is a new structure over the East River or is played with tiddledy-winks.”

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2635
Psychological Science (journal)
publisher · 
SAGE Publications
tw-pub-ID · 
456

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Psychological Science.
published in · 
Psychological Science
date · 
1 April 2009
title · 
Predictive Eye Movements Are Driven by Goals, Not by the Mirror Neuron System
by · 
Rik Eshuis, Kenny R. Coventry, and Mila Vulchanova
citation · 
volume 20 • issue 4 • page 438-440
content

We ran three movement conditions: the human-agent condition, in which a human agent was shown moving a toy frog toward a goal container (i.e., [1human agent, 1human motion]); the self- propelled condition, in which no human agent was shown moving the frog (i.e., [_human agent, _human motion]); and the new condition, in which a human agent was shown with hand behind the starting point of the frog, flicking it so as to propel it along a trajectory (as in the game ‘‘Tiddlywinks’’; i.e., [1human agent, _human motion]; see Fig. 1a). In the latter condition, the human-agent intention is matched to that of the human-agent condition, but human motion is not shown along the trajectory. This allows a clean test of the MNS versus goal-intention explanations for the proactive eye- movement data.

a: Image of a hand pressing on frog-shaped figures to shoot them into a bucket. b: Graph with two axes.
Fig. 1. Example of the video used in the new (Tiddlywinks) condition and experimental results. In the illustration (a), the trajectories traversed by the frogs have been drawn in, but they were not visible during the experiment. The graph (b) shows mean gaze-arrival time relative to the frog’s arrival time (time 0; positive values indicate that gaze arrived before the frog) for the human-agent, new (Tiddlywinks), and self-propelled conditions with and without end effects. Error bars indicate _1 SEM.

[...[

For each condition, we also compared gaze arrival times to the arrival times of the frog. Significant proactive goal-directed eye movements occurred for the human-agent condition with end effects (i.e., [1human agent, 1human motion, 1end effects]), t(11) 5 4.34, prep 5 .99, d 5 1.25, and the new (Tiddlywinks) condition with end effects (i.e., [1human agent, _human motion, 1end effects]), t(11) 5 2.38, prep 5 .93, d 5 0.69, but not for any of the other four conditions, all t(11)s _ 1.99, all preps _ .90, all ds _ 0.57. Most notably, predictive eye movements do not occur for the human-agent condition without end effects (i.e., [1human agent, 1human motion, _end effects]), t(11) 5 0.35, prep 5 .59, d 5 0.10.

collection · 
digital PDF (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
1903
Public Libraries (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
693

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Public Libraries.
published in · 
Public Libraries
date · 
December 1910
title · 
Circulation of Games by the Library
citation · 
volume 15 • issue 10 • page 430
content

Some of the games are as follows: A B C, anagrams, American battles, authors, checkers, chess, city life, consequences, store-keeping, dominoes, electrical wonder, flag game, flinch, fortune telling, geography, guess again, hidden titles, house that Jack built, Humpty Dumpty, Jack Horner, jack of all trades, jack-straws, luck, magic spelling, Mother Goose, nations, numericals, Old Glory, our country, pastime puzzle, picture reading, pit. Punch and Judy, quotations, ring toss, Robinson Crusoe, shopping, snap, tiddledy winks. United States map puzzle, useful knowledge, etc., etc.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2638
The Publishers’ Weekly (magazine)
The American Book Trade Journal
location · 
Franklin Square (330 Pearl Street), New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
694

Toggle showing 17 tiddlywinks references for The Publishers’ Weekly.
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
5 December 1891
column title · 
Weekly Record of New Publications
citation · 
volume 40 • issue 23 • whole 1036 • page 932 • column 2
content

Bangs, J. Kendrick. Tiddledywink tales; il. by C: Howard Johson. N. Y., [De Witt Publishing House,] 1891. c. 5-236 p. il. D. cl., $1.25.

Jimmieboy was a little lad of four years, who had just been presented with a set of Tiddledywinks. After playing with his gift all day, Jimmieboy went to bed and was immediately transported to the realm of the Tiddledywinks. The strange and amusing sights that the young hero saw did not prevent a constant interchange of thourght between himself and the small pieces of celluloid that comprise the game.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1783)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2639
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
26 March 1892
title · 
Descriptive Summary of the Spring Announcements
citation · 
volume 41 • issue 13 • page 483 • column 2
content

The De Witt Publishing House will bring out shortly a most entertaining volume in the “ Tiddledywink’s Poetry-Book,” a collection of verse for children, by John Kendrick Bangs, illustrated by Charles Howard Johnson, and prettily gotten up.

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1790)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2646
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
17 September 1892 to 24 September 1892
citation · 
volume 42 • issue 12 to 13 • whole 1077 to 1078 • page 381 to 382 • column 2 (page 381), 1 (page 382)
content
THE DEWITT PUBLISHING HOUSE [...] also announce [...] several new juveniles, chief of which is a new book by John Kendrick Bangs, illustrated by Charles Howard Johnson, entitled “In Camp with a Tin Soldier,” a successor to the popular “Tiddledy Wink Tales;” and this bright writer has also prepared a collection of verses for boys to be entitled “ The Tiddledy Winks Poetry Book and “ In Savage Africa," a book for boys, in which E. J. Glave, one of Stanley’s officers, tells of six years of adventure in Congoland. Titles are fully given under the headings, Sports, Games and Amusements ; Education, Language, etc., and Juvenile Literature, in the classified list preceding this department.

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1785)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2641
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
24 September 1892
by · 
L. Prang & Co.
citation · 
volume 42 • issue 12 to 13 • whole 1077 to 1078 • page 525 • column 1
content

PRANG's Holiday Publications.

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT

Our travellers show during their second trip a number of additional publications of a highly attractive character. Among them are four humorous animal pictures by Miss S. A. Winn, the painter of our popular publication, “The Prize Piggies.” The animals are attentive players of various games, as follows:

  • TIDDLEDY-WINKS (CATS).
  • WHIST (OWLS).
  • HIGH-LOW-JACK (DONKEYS).
  • EUCHRE (DOGS).

L. PRANG & CO., Flne Art Publishers,

NEW YORK: 43, 45, 47 E. 10th St., near B’way. BOSTON, MASS.

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1791)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2648
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
19 November 1892
by · 
L. Prang & Co.
citation · 
volume 42 • issue 21 to 22 • page 174 • column 2
content

PRANG's Holiday Publications.

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT

Our travellers show during their second trip a number of additional publications of a highly attractive character. Among them are four humorous animal pictures by Miss S. A. Winn, the painter of our popular publication, “The Prize Piggies.” The animals are attentive players of various games, as follows:

  • TIDDLEDY-WINKS (CATS).
  • WHIST (OWLS).
  • HIGH-LOW-JACK (DONKEYS).
  • EUCHRE (DOGS).

L. PRANG & CO., Flne Art Publishers,

NEW YORK: 43, 45, 47 E. 10th St., near B’way. BOSTON, MASS.

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 2218)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2647
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
10 December 1892
column title · 
Weekly Record of New Publications
citation · 
volume 42 • issue 24 • whole 1089 • page 1050 • column 2
content

Bangs, J: Kendirck. In camp with a tin solider; il. by E. M. Ashe. N. Y., [DeWitt Publishing House,] R. H. Russel & Son, 1892. c. 5-194 p. il. D. cl. $1.25.

A sequel to the ”Tiddledywink tales.” Jimmieboy is the hero, as he was in the former story. In the present tale he is for a time subject to the orders of his tin regiment in a proposed encounter with a “parallelopipedon.” The adventures of this pair are humorously told.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1784)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2640
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
17 November 1894
column title · 
Books for Young People
citation · 
volume 46 • issue 20-11 • page 114g • column 2
content

Tiddledywinks Poetry Book. Bangs. Il. $1… Russell

Tiddledywink Tales. Bangs. Il. $1.25… Russell

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1787)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2643
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
24 May 1924
column title · 
The Weekly Book Exchange
subtitle · 
Books Wanted
citation · 
volume 105 • issue 21 • page 1766 • column 2
content

Brentano's, New York—Continued

Tiddledy Winks, John Kendrick Bangs.

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1786)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2642
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
30 July 1949
by · 
Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co., Inc.
citation · 
volume 156 • issue 5 • page 50 • column 1
content

Lothrop BOOKS

A LOTHROP discovery!

We fondly expect Miss Flora McFlimsey to become the most popular doll-character since Raggedy Ann. Miss Flora is an old forgotten doll who lives in an attic with a torn box of tiddlywinks and an old, old doll’s trunk. But anything can happen on Christmas Eve, and wonderful things do happen to Miss Flora... and to any little girl who is lucky enough to receive this most delightful children’s book in years.

Miss Flora McFIimsey’s Christmas Eve

Written and illustrated in full color by MARIANA. October 3, ages 4-8, $1.00

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1793)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2650
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
18 May 1959
column title · 
Lower Priced Paperbacks Fiction
title · 
BEN HUR
subtitle · 
Lew Wallace.
citation · 
volume 175 • issue 20 • page 65 • column 1
content

The battle between paperback houses to cash in on the publicity attendant upon the forthcoming $15,000,000 MGM movie production of Lew Wallace's biblical epic makes that chariot race in “Ben Hur” look like tiddledy winks!

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1788)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2644
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
22 July 1968
title · 
Next Month's Best!
by · 
Parliament News Inc.
citation · 
volume 194 • issue 4 • page 65 • column 3
content

BRANDON HOUSE ORIGINALS

Illustration of book cover

TIDDLYWINKS by John Drummond… A very funny cartoon book for adults, with introduction by comic Jack Carter. (01021—$1.00)

PARLIAMENT NEWS, INC.

7311 Fulton Ave., N. Hollywood, Calif. 91605

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1796)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2653
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
16 June 1975
by · 
The Two Continents Publishing Group, Ltd.
citation · 
volume 207 • issue 24 • page 36 • column 1
content

Compare— you'll agree that its 2000 games and 5000 color illustrations make it incomparable

Illustration of book cover.

THE WAY TO PLAY

The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the games of the World by The Diagram Group

It’s from the creators of the continuing best seller, Rules of the Game.

It includes the rules, techniques, scoring, materials, and equipment used in playing more than 2000 games, from the very newest to those centuries old, throughout the world.

And its 5000-plus charts, diagrams, and drawings blended with a remarkably clear text, make it the most comprehensive reference book of its kind ever written—

For beginners and novices and experts; for adults and children; for activists and armchair enthusiasts. A book for every home.

The games? Where do we begin? Backgammon, Table Tennis, Pool, Darts, Three-handed Bezique, Blow Football, Polish Checkers, Hasami Shogi, Tiddlywinks Golf, Baccarat, Memory, Battleships, Mah Jongg, Nine Men’s Morris—the list is virtually endless.

No wonder the first printing is 100,000. No wonder the Literary Guild has made it an All-Club offering. Without question, this is the most spectacular games book ever published—and will be one of 1975’s truly spectacular gift books.

A Two Continents/Paddington Press book

LCCN 75-11169 ISB 0-8467-0060-3 $15.95

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1794)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2651
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
24 January 1977
by · 
New American Library
citation · 
volume 211 • issue 4 • page 153 • column 1
content

The New Adulthood—a revolutionary idea whose time has come. And here is its manifesto...

THE MATURE PERSON’S GUIDE TO KITES, YO-YOS, FRISBEES AND OTHER CHILDLIKE DIVERSIONS

by Paul Dickson

Whether you are an armchair Frisbee coach, a collector of antique marbles, or a secret devotee of the yo-yo, you are in for a treat with this guide to gentle, non-polluting fun for millions of recreation-minded grownups. Flere is a complete Baedeker of games too good for children alone to play—featuring such pastimes as kite-fighting, skateboarding, paper airplanes, jump-rope rhymes, the definitive rules for marbles, tiddlywink strategy and tactics, and how to win at Monopoly without cheating. With names of suppliers, profiles of superstars, bibliography, and over 100 stunning illustrations. 10-copy counter display available. A Plume Original Z5143 $5.95

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1792)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2649
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
17 October 1986
column title · 
Forecasts
title · 
CALL OF THE GAME
citation · 
volume 230 • issue 16 • page 50 • column 3
content

CALL OF THE GAME Steve McKee. McGraw-Hill, $15.95 ISBN 0-07-045354-3

The year 1983 was a sports junkie’s dream come true for New York schoolteacher McKee, who took a sabbatical to attend sporting events throughout the U.S. He began with bobsled racing at Lake Placid in January and ended with the Super Bowl at Tampa the following January. In between were contests like the first night game of the U.S. Football League in Birmingham, the NCAA basketball championships in Albuquerque and the World Series in Philadelphia and Baltimore. Then there were the games of less moment like the National Jousting Tournament in the nation’s capital, the National Juggling Festival in New York State and the Continental Team Tiddlywinks Championships in Boston. McKee describes some 55 events—the participants, the spectators and the sites—with infectious enthusiasm, and the result is unadulterated fun for the reader. 15,000 first printing $15,000 ad/promo. (December 1)

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1797)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2654
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
16 November 1990
column title · 
Forecasts
title · 
Fiction
citation · 
volume 237 • issue 46 • page 43 • column 3
content

EVENINGS AT MONGINI'S: And Other Stories

Russell Lucas. Summit, $17.95 ISBN 0-671-72746-X

[...]But a barrage of salacious encounters numbs the reader: these are the kind of entertainments in which a disproportionate number of the femal characters turn out to be lesbians, as reported in the final paragraphs, and in which voyeurism is as common as tiddledywinsk, brothels as banal as parking lots. (Jan.)

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1789)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2645
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
14 September 1992
title · 
Stomping Grounds: A Pilgrim's Progress Through Eight American Subcultures
citation · 
volume 239 • issue 41 • page 94 • column 3
content

W. Hampton Sides.

Morrow, $20 (320p) ISBN 0-688-09049-4

Contemplating the various subcultures into which Americans organize themselves, freelance journalist Sides once mused, “If an American was into tiddlywinks, he could start a national association, and tiddlywinkers in their thousands would come crawling from the woodwork.” Finding to his surprise that there actually was such an association, he set off to explore the national passion for joining. Sides attended the annual gatherings of eight associations that particularly titillated him; he reports here on a reunion of the power elite at the campy but exclusive Bohemian Club in San Francisco and the religious ardor he observed at annual meetings of Tupperware saleswomen, recreational-vehicles owners, sledders, aging hippies and Church of God disciples, among others. Almost always curious and entertaining, his descriptions of the settings, the members, the mystiques, the hoopla, the charismatic leaders and the histories of these groups throw revealing light on an idiosyncratic aspect of the national character. Photos not seen by PW. (Oct.)

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1795)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2652
published in · 
The Publishers’ Weekly
date · 
11 March 2002
column title · 
Forecasts
title · 
THE BANANA SCULPTOR, THE PURPLE LADY, AND THE ALL-NIGHT SWIMMER: Hobbies, Colleting, and Other Passionate Pursuits
citation · 
volume 249 • issue 10 • page 64 • column 3
content

THE BANANA SCULPTOR, THE PURPLE LADY, AND THE ALL-NIGHT SWIMMER: Hobbies, Collecting, and Other Passionate Pursuits

Susan Sheehan and Howard Means.

Simon & Schuster, $25 (288p) ISBN 0-7432-0122-1

Lots of people have hobbies—golf, knitting, collecting baseball cards —but the subjects of this lively oral history have bypassed the obvious pursuits. Instead, they collect Noah’s arks and Gore Vidal memorabilia, swim the Great Lakes and play competitive tiddlywinks. Sheehan (Is There No Place on Earth for Me?) and Means (Colin Powell: Soldier/Statesman Statesman/Soldier) interviewed 40 Americans with unusual hobbies. They provide some narrative, but mainly allow their subjects to speak for themselves—and the individuals aren't shy. They hold forth on everything from walking across suspension bridges to having the largest marble collection in the country'. Other subjects include a one-handed bonsai gardener, a competitive kite-flying couple and “the Purple Lady,” a Tennessee woman named Sonia Young who dresses in purple, lives in a purple-decorated house, drives a purple car and admits “without being the Purple Lady I don’t think I have an identity.” Some common themes emerge: many refer to their obsessions as life changing; they value the connections they make with kindred spirits or appreciate the relaxation their activity provides; and most find chasing their goal more satisfying than actually completing a collection or setting a record. Although the authors provide no analysis of their topic, the book is an enjoyable read—in short snatches—and offers an unusual insider’s look at America’s unconventional pastimes. Agents, Robert Lescher and Rafe Sagalyn. (Apr. 5)

links · 
Publishers’ Weekly (tw-ref-link-id 1798)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2655
Puck (magazine)
publisher · 
Keppler & Schwarzmann (publishers)
location · 
Puck Building, corner of Houston & Mulberry Streets, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
695

Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Puck.
published in · 
Puck
date · 
22 October 1890
title · 
A Pleasing Change
by · 
Jack Wylie
citation · 
volume 28 • whole 711 • page 135 • column 1
content

Jack Wylie—Have you been playing any poker lately?

Mr. B. T. Flush.— No; I’ve quit. My luck was too bad. But I’ve got a cinch on that new game, “Tiddledy Winks.” Ever hear of it?

Jack Wylie.— Oh, yes; they call it “Idiot’s Delight.” But why do you do better at that?

Mr. B. T. Flush. — Because the man who puts in the most chips wins.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2656
published in · 
Puck
date · 
4 March 1891
title · 
TIDDLEDY WINKS.
citation · 
volume 29 • whole 730 • page 20 • column 1
content

SAY BLAINE, whatever do you mean
When you wink the other eye?
Say, don’t you think we’re awful green
When you wink the other eye?
You talked about the tariff, and you told us it would bring
Health and wealth and happiness; we thought it quite the thing.
But when you got us on the string,
Then you winked the other eye.

Say, Blaine, whatever can it be,
When you wink the other eye?
You gave us reciprocity,
Then you winked the other eye.
We took our little ballots, and how gayly did we speed!
Oh, what’s become of Ingalls, Quay, and little Tommy Reed?
Oh, Jeems, we ‘re on to you, indeed,
When you wink the other eye.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2657
published in · 
Puck
date · 
8 April 1891
title · 
TOO MUCH.
by · 
Harry Romaine
citation · 
volume 29 • whole 735 • page 99 • column 2
content

A thrill of mortifying pain
Darts through my large and lofty brain,
When some young lady thinks
That I can spend a futile night,
And play with infantile delight,
”Progressive Tiddledy Winks.”

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2658
Punch (magazine)
alternate name · 
Punch, or the London Charivari; Mr. Punch's Almanack
location · 
London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
696

Toggle showing 6 tiddlywinks references for Punch.
published in · 
Punch
date · 
15 April 1843
title · 
NARRATIVE OF AN EXCURSION TO THE FROZEN LAKE OF THE GLACIARIUM.
subtitle · 
UNDERTAKEN BY MR. TIDDLEDY WINKS, THE CELEBRATED TRAVELLER,AND COMMUNICATED BY HIM.
by · 
Mr. Tiddledy Winks
citation · 
volume 4 • whole 93 • page 164 • column 2
content

NEXT to the ascent of Haverstock Hill, and passage of HampsteadHeath, perhaps there is no excursion in the vicinity of London, requiringsuch great exertions or heedlessness of danger as the one I am about to describe. It should only be attempted by those capable of bearing intense bodily fatigue, as well as those favoured individuals to whom a shilling isnot a coin of too great rarity, for at the very lowest rate of expenditure,the trip cannot be accomplished under that sum. [...]

(Signed)

Tiddledy Winks.

notes · 
Very early (1843) use of the term “Tiddledy Winks”, though not in the context of the game.
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2659
published in · 
Punch
date · 
30 September 1843
title · 
THE INSTITUTION AT HOOKHAM-CUM-SNIVEY.
citation · 
volume 5 • whole 117 • page 146 to 147 • column 2 (page 146); 1 (page 147)
content

The following particulars have been furnished by our friend, Mr. TiddledyWinks, the indefatigable secretary, and also editor of the Peckham RailwayTimes & Camberwell-Green Chronicle: [...]

Hon. Sec.
Mr. Tiddledy Winks

<--! Page 147, column 1: -->

(Signed) Tiddledy Winks Hon. Sec.

notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
2660
published in · 
Punch
date · 
28 June 1899
title · 
In the Toys and Games Department.
citation · 
volume 116 • section 1899 Almanack • page "The First of October" • column 3
summary

Almanack entry for October 1899

content

Particular Lady. I—a—want some sort of game for two small boys about eight or nine.

Assistant. For juveniles of that age I can strongly recommend the game of “Ascot.” You wind the little horses along on a reel at the end of a string, and the one which gets in first is the—ah—winner.

P. L. (severely). I should be sorry, indeed, to give any boys a game that encourages a taste for the turf.

A. Of course it—ah—might have that tendency. Here is a highly amusing game called—ah—“Tiddledywinks.”

P. L. (icily). Tiddledy-I beg your pardon?

A. (with dignity). Tiddledy-winks, madam.

P. L. And pray how do you—a—tiddledywink?

A.It is—ah—not one of my recreations, madam, but you will find full instructions supplied with each set, and I understand that they are so simple that the merest child can easily become—ah—proficient.

P. L. And go tiddledywinks all over the place? A most undesirable accomplishment in my opinion.

A. Pardon me—I think, madam, you are misled be the associations of the title, which may, perhaps—ah—verge on vulgarity, but the game itself is perfectly free from objection, and popular with the most select and refined circles.

P. L. (firmly). The name is quite sufficient.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2661
published in · 
Punch
date · 
4 November 1908
title · 
AMUSINGS.
subtitle · 
II. UNEMPLOYED.
by · 
S. John Otsakura
citation · 
volume 135 • page 341 • column 2
content

“Mr. BURNS, whose ethics have been so ably eviscerated by the first speaker, is not up to much. It is obvious as a pike-shaft that if we all adopted the course of the sweet singer of Battersea we should finish up as feathered habitués of the privet-hedge of P.C.-ishness. Counting noses, on this hypotenuse, I can see at one blow forty-odd working-men each drawing from the well two thousand quids per annum as easy as tiddledy-winking! [...]”

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2662
published in · 
Punch
date · 
3 December 1913
title · 
BIFF-BALL.
subtitle · 
THE NEW GAME THAT EVERYONE WILL SOON BE PLAYING. (With acknowledgments to many of our contemporaries.)
citation · 
volume 145 • page 474 • column 1
content

INTENT upon learning what game is to fill our homes with innocent merriment tliis Christmas, our representative yesterday visited the vast emporium of Tiddledy, Winks & Co., and interviewed the genial manager.

The game of the coming season?” repeated the latter. ” Undoubtedly Biff-Ball. Come with me.”

Our representative followed him into another room, where a large green cloth was found to be laid on the floor, securely pegged at the four corners. Two goals were placed at opposite ends of this cloth, and a wooden ball about the size of an orange reposed in the middle of it.”

This is all the apparatus required,” said the manager. ”The rules are equally simple. Two players insinuate themselves between the cloth and the floor, and at a given signal each endeavours to urge the ball from underneath through his opponent’s goal. We claim that Biff-Ball will promote more hilarity among spectators in ten minutes than any other sport in a week, while among players it has already been found to cure gout, indigestion and obesity and to conduce to a beneficial thickening of theskull. Mr. SHAW has praised it on the ground that it abolishes the absurd tradition of chivalry roward women (for, of course, “mixed” matches will be infrequent). Mr CHESTERTON has challenged the Bishop of London to a series of three matches to be played on Boxing-Day, and Bombardier Wells, the eminent pugilist, is using it as his principal means of traing in preparatoin for his great fight with CARPENTIER.

Biff-Ball is destined to be among indoor games what the Tango is among dances. In a few weeks it will have swept the country from John o’Groats to Land’s End, not excluding John Bull’s Other Island, as MR. KIPLING has wittily termed it… Good morning, if you must go. I think we shall have rain shortly, but Biff-Ball will keep you amused through the most depressing weather.” [...]

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2663
published in · 
Punch
date · 
15 July 1914
title · 
TOO MUCH CHAMPIONSHIP.
subtitle · 
Once life was an easy thing.
citation · 
page 69
content

And the Olympic games are coming! Who are England's hopes in the discus-throwing and the fancy diving? What Britisher must we rely on in the javelin hop-skip-and-jump?

Your brain reels at the prospect. We must decide to ignore all future championships. We must decline to be aggravated if a Japanese Badminton champion appears. We must cease to be interested if Britain's Hope beats the Horrible Peruvian at Tiddly-winks.

There are three admirable reasons for this.

The first is that we must play some games ourselves.

The second, that, unless a check be put to championships, the Parliamentary news will be crowded out of the papers and we shall find ourselves in an unnatural state of peace and goodwill.

The third, which one puts forward with diffidence, is that somebody, somewhere, somehow, sometime must do a little work.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2664
The Puritan (magazine)
A Journal for Gentlewomen
publisher · 
Frank A. Munsey (publisher)
location · 
111 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
697

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Puritan.
published in · 
The Puritan
date · 
December 1900
title · 
Suggestions for Small Parties
by · 
Mary Louise Graham
citation · 
volume 9 • issue 3 • page 483 • column 2
content

A Salmagundi party was the entertainment prepared for one evening. A different kind of game was played at each of the little tables with which the room was filled. The winners progressed from one table to the next, and prizes were distributed at the end of the evening. There are a great many games that are suitable for a Salmagundi party, Lotto, for instance, and tiddledywinks, shooting with air pistols at a target, parlor golf, crokinole, authors, angling, and various games of cards.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2665
The Radio Times (magazine)
The Official Organ of the B.B.C.
associated with · 
British Broadcasting Corporation
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
698

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Radio Times.
published in · 
The Radio Times
date · 
around 10 March 1958
summary

Reference to the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club vs. the Goons royal tiddlywinks match.

tw-ref-ID · 
2666
Rarities (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
699

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Rarities.
published in · 
Rarities
date · 
July 1982 to August 1982
title · 
Board Games
by · 
Robert Hencey
citation · 
page 37 to 38; 64 to 65
summary

Includes 2 photographs and references.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2667
Reader's Digest (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
701

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Reader's Digest.
published in · 
Reader's Digest
date · 
October 1987
title · 
Caution: Geniuses at Work and Play
citation · 
page 215
summary

Mention in an article about MIT.

notes · 
Reprint from the New England Monthly, October 1986.
collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2668
Relief Society Magazine (magazine)
associated with · 
Relief Society of the Church of the Latter-day Saints
location · 
Room 29, Bishop's Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
702

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Relief Society Magazine.
published in · 
Relief Society Magazine
date · 
August 1917
title · 
Lesson IV. Home Economics
subtitle · 
Fourth Week In September. The Child's Recreation and the Parents' Cooperation
citation · 
volume 4 • issue 8 • page 476 to 477 • column 1
content

Recreation is the refresment of body of mind after toil.

Recreation is absolutely necessary for the proper growth and development of every normal child and the parent who does not recognize this part of the child's training and provide for it is losing valuable time. The time for recreation, the place, the companionship and the kinds are all important. Beginning with the infant, he is trained to regular habits by giving him his little exercise and play at stated intervals and as he grows older it is still best to have plav hours. If a child is allowed to play continuously, he soon becomes tired and cross. The wise mother does not allow this, but by giving him simple tasks, not by way of punishment, she diverts his energies in another direction and joy and contentment are the results.

In many happy homes immediately following the evening meal is a favorite time for a romp. One evening each week may be spent by the family when every kind of work is forgotten and play is indulged in freely during the early hours.

Place. There is no other place for recreation that can possibly equal the home. Home is where father, mother and all the children are united in making each other happy and in learn- ing those things that will fit them to meet the stern realities of this life. The home that fails to prepare the child to take his part in the community has failed to that extent in its great mission and the hours of recreation are the t:mes when the very best lessons may be taught.

Companionship. Parents cannot afford to let the days and months pass and not have time to play with the children. We must be companions to them wh:le they are small or we never can gain that coveted place at all, and in order to do this we must be with them. Many fathers are of necessity away from home a great deal and that places an added burden on mothers but in such cases if father is present with his family only at meal time he outfit to make it possible to spend five minutes in play with the little ones before leaving them. Fathers and mothers must not grow too old to play; the old idea was that mother should play with baby, and there all ended; the modern idea is that father and mother must plav with all their babies no matter what age if they would keep their love, sympathy and confidence.

Kinds of Recreation. There is no recreation or sport that is good legitimate pastime but we can afford to enjoy it with our children. When they are small teach them to play games. There are marbles, ten pins and others for the floor, and tiddledy winks, dominoes, checkers, flinch, carrum and many others for the table. In all games the child must be taught to play for the pleasure of the game and the training he gets but never for what he wins. Playing marbles for "keeps," as the boys call it, should be forbidden by the Latter-day Saint parents, because it is the first step towards gambling. For a boy to keep the marble he wins in a game may seem of little consequence at the time, but watch him as he grows to love the game merely for what he wins and we need not be surprised when in later years he plays for money. Tiddledy winks is enjoyed by parents and children at the same time. The baby soon learns how hard to press the tiddledy on the wink and the proper position of each in order to gain his point. He uses judgment and he also trains his sense of touch, which are two pood lessons: but the greatest things accomplished are teaching him to use only his own color in winks, also to wait his turn to play. In this way he learns to respect the rights of others. There is no better time or way to teach honesty than in gaming. The boy who will play a good clean game no matter who wins or loses will be strong enough in character to deal honestly in examinations at school and in every act of life. How often in social gatherings, where games were indulged in, have we seen grown ups who were not satisfied to follow the rules but would cheat or play unfair in order to gain points. I think one is safe in concluding that the person who allows himself to do such a thing even in a game would take advantage of his neighbor and would not be honest in business.

Parents who play with their children have a chance to teach them the games according to rules, and the children who play them correctly for years will find no pleasure in doing otherwise. When such children enter the public school they will not feel tint the rules are hard to follow, and when grown up they are not apt to be the law breakers in the community. Parents, we cannot be impressed too seriously with the importance of the first lessons we teach our children. Their characters are formed under our immediate care and we are responsible for their conduct.

Going back to the games. With tiddledy winks, we may class—crocinole, carrum, marbles, etc., in which the hand and eye are trained. For number work, flinch cards on which the figures from 1 to 15 are found are useful, and dominoes are good in the hands of the little folks. [...]

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2669
Report of the Commissioner of Education (annual report)
publisher · 
Government Printing Office
location · 
Washington, District of Columbia, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
703

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Report of the Commissioner of Education.
published in · 
Report of the Commissioner of Education
date · 
1897 to 1898
title · 
Chapter XXV. Child Study in the United States
subtitle · 
Games
by · 
Arthur MacDonald
citation · 
volume 2 • section Parts II and III • whole 258 • page 1343 to 1344
content

Games.

Sec. X. What games have you preferred and what has been their influence in developing manlines or womanliness, sense of justice and fair play, honesty, perseverance, hardihood, physical strength, and what recreations do you prefer, and why? What is their effect?

The following list shows the games played by the girls: Hide and seek, 56; croquet, 43; tag, 41; tennis, 36; checkers, 23; parchesi, 22; authors, 10; dolls, 18; house, 17; cards 16; baseball, 15; blind man's buff, 15; pigs in clover, 12; prisoner's base, 12; jackstones, 11; jumping rope, 9; halma, 9; dominoes, 9; I spy, 6; chess, 5; duck on the rock, 5; fox and geese, 5; hopscotch, tiddledy winks, 5; school, 5; messenger boy, 4; old maid, 4; euchre, 4; pussy wants a corner, 4; hoop rolling, 3; drop the handkerchief, puzzles, whist, marbles, solitaire, kick the wicket, football, 3 each; anagrams, Antony over, colors, shuttlecock, battledore, basketball, pull away, horse, jackstraws, casino, seesaw, mumblety peg, bluebird, ambassadors, robbers, lotto, black bear. 2 each; beanbag, fish pond, twenty questions, hearts, color of the bird, come to supper, dog on wood, crack the whip, charades, sense steps, hide the thimble, puzzle fifteen, kick the can, red soldier cap, cribbage, bowling, London bridge is falling down, Jacob and Rachel, hare and hounds, my ship's arrived, bright idea, spider and the fly, Louisa, wild horse, golden pavement, cousequences, snap, hunt the slipper, kick the stick, geography cards, dice, Peter Coddle's dinner party, putting together our country, princess and captain, tenpins, gymnasium, cars, cross and wood, can can, old witch, running on cans, walking on stilts, backgammon, crisscross, here we go round the mulberry tree, tollgate, giants, Copenhagen, needle's eye, word making, catch, jack-a-bow, innocence abroad, go bang, mother goose, catch fish, circus, church, babmintor, Indians, and guessing games.

Perseverance.—Pigs in clover, 9; parchesi, 9; tennis, 9; checkers, 8; ball, 8; croquet, 5; halma, 5; cards, 5; puzzles, 5; hide and seek,5; I spy,2; authors 2; tag, 2; chess, 2; tiddledy winks. 2; black bear, 1; robber, puss in corner, backgammon, crisscross, anagrams, solitaire, duck on rock, the spider and the fly, messenger force, jacks, 1 each.

Honesty.—Croquet, 19; hide and seek, 18; cards, 12; checkers, 11; parchesi, 7; ball, 7; authors, 6; blind man's buff, 5; jacks, 5; tennis, 4; I spy, 3; tag, 2; halma, 2; prisoner's base, 2; hunt the slipper, black bear, puss in corner, tollgate, fish pond, seven steps, colors, hopscotch, chess, tiddledy winks, innocence abroad, go bang, 1 each.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2670
Report of the Superintendent of Indian Schools (annual report)
publisher · 
Government Printing Office
location · 
Washington, District of Columbia, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
704

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Report of the Superintendent of Indian Schools.
published in · 
Report of the Superintendent of Indian Schools
date · 
1901
column title · 
Appendix
title · 
Extracts from Papers and Discussions at Summer Schools
subtitle · 
Department of Indian Education and Congress of Indian Educators, Detroit and Buffalo, July 8–20.
by · 
Miss Augusta S. Hultman
citation · 
page 66
content

What to Do in the Night School

Another evening is spent in the study of Sunday-school lesson and in letter writing. The “Social” claims from twenty minutes to half an hour of each evening. The time should be long enough to allow an easy settling into sociability and the satisfactory introduction of games like tiddledy winks, crokinole, karems, their beloved dominoes and checkers, and the like.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2671
The Review of Reviews (magazine)
publisher · 
W. T. Stead (editor)
location · 
39 and 40, Whitefriars Street, E.C. (publisher), London, London, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
706

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Review of Reviews.
published in · 
The Review of Reviews
date · 
March 1906
title · 
Football An Ancient Chinese Game
citation · 
volume 33 • whole 195 • page 288
content

In the Nineteenth Century, Mr. H. A. Giles, Professor of Chinese at Cambridge, writes on football and polo in China. He remarks that football was played by the Chinese several centuries before Julius Cæsar landed in Britain. Its invention has been ascribed to the mythical Yellow Emperor of the third millennium B.C. He quotes an ancient record:—

The Emperor, Ch’eng Ti, B.C. 32-6, was fond of football; but his officers represented to him that it was both physically exhausting and anlso unsuitable to the Imperial dignity. His Majesty replied: “We like playing; and what one chooses to do is not exhausting.” An appeal was then made to the Empress, who suggested the game of tiddlywinks for the Emperor’s amusement.
collection · 
excerpt (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2673
Road and Track (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
707

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Road and Track.
published in · 
Road and Track
date · 
December 1951
summary

Figurative usage of “tiddley-wink”.

content

Front tire flips off rim like a tiddley-wink, ending up hundreds of yards away.

collection · 
excerpt (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2674
The Royal Magazine (magazine)
publisher · 
C. Arthur Pearson Ltd.
location · 
London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
185

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Royal Magazine.
published in · 
The Royal Magazine
date · 
May 1901
title · 
TABLE GOLF
by · 
Stanley White
citation · 
volume 6 • page 81-84 • column 1
content
Illustration of a young woman (white blouse, dark dress) standing at a table, pressing a squidger in her right hand on a wink and aiming at the gap between two books standing vertically on their open sides, with a pot in the foreground

Parlour golf is a sort of hot-house variety of the great parent stock. It has this advantage, that the principle of the old game is preserved, though the means employed are necessarily varied. And it is in this elasticity of playing that one of the chief charms of the new games consists.

The player of that most exquisite of musical instruments, the violin, must make his own notes, while the parlour golfer very largely makes his own game. The results vary in both examples, with the skill and ingenuity of the players. No two people without previous consultation every played parlour golf in exactly the same way. The beauty of the thing is that while following out a general idea, the mode of playing can be modified according to the conditions imposed by the surroundings; and in this it resembles real golf.

To begin with, a good sized table covered with a thich springy cloth is required. Instead of balls, which obviously would be impossible to manage in a room, counters are used in the same way as in that popular pastime, tiddley-winks.

[...]

media description

9 B&W illustrations

collection · 
original (Rick Tucker)
tw-ref-ID · 
556
RQ (magazine)
location · 
Northbrook, Illinois, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
708

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for RQ.
published in · 
RQ
date · 
Fall 1973
title · 
The Exchange/Fun and Games
by · 
Mary Jo Lynch
citation · 
page 57
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2675
published in · 
RQ
date · 
Spring 1986
title · 
The Exchange
citation · 
page 303
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2676
The Saturday Evening Post (magazine)
publisher · 
The Curtis Publishing Company (1918)
location · 
Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
710

Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for The Saturday Evening Post.
published in · 
The Saturday Evening Post
date · 
27 July 1918
title · 
Common Cause
by · 
Samuel Hopkins Adams
citation · 
volume 191 • issue 4 • page 6 • column 2
content
Realistic black-and-white illustration of two men in chairs, talking.
“What's This We're Up Against Right Here in Fenchester? Are We Fighting> Or Playing Tiddledywinks?”
collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2681
published in · 
The Saturday Evening Post
date · 
September 1986
title · 
Etiquette: from soup to nuts
continuation title · 
Etiquette
subtitle · 
Help, at last, for the formal diner who handles a fork as if he’s spearing frogs and winds up the meal drinking from the finger bowl
citation · 
volume 258 • page 98 • column 1
content

After everyone has called it “quits,” the table is cleared of dinner plates and unused silver that hasn't found its way into pockets or purses; the table is crumbed, stopping all games of tiddlywinks, and the dessert plates are served, along with the finger bowls.

links · 
Saturday Evening Post (tw-ref-link-id 1814)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2678
published in · 
The Saturday Evening Post
date · 
October 1989
title · 
The wrong stuff
subtitle · 
Putting words between punctuation marks is hard enough… without your wife throwing a sheet over you if company comes
by · 
Maynard Good Stoddard
citation · 
volume 261 • issue 7 • page 57 • column 1
content

Our kids, however, never took after my dear wife. They took after me—at every possible opportunity. [...] I'm talking about their sticking bubble gum on my typewriter and their playing tiddlywinks with my paper clips.

When the last tiddlywinker had left home for college, I exhaled for the first time in decades and said to myself (I was talking a lot to myself by then): That is that.

links · 
Saturday Evening Post (tw-ref-link-id 1815)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2679
published in · 
The Saturday Evening Post
date · 
September 1990
title · 
Tiddlywinks, Anyone?
by · 
Maynard Good Stoddard
citation · 
volume 262 • issue 6 • page 66 to 67 • column all 3
summary

About President George H. W. Bush playing tiddlywinks; includes an illustration of kids shooting wink into pot

content

Oh, yes. An item in Time recently set my memory buds in gear by recounting George Plimpton's weekend at Camp David with our sports-minded President. What Plimpton thought would be three days of nothing more strenuous than bird watching turned out to be a period of open sweat glands from bowling… horseshoe pitching… wollyball (no, not volleyball)… skeet shooting… tennis… and even tiddlywinks.

Tiddlywinks did it. I, in all modesty, was once the top tiddler in all of Richfield Center, Michigan. I can remember tiddling all my winks into the cup while my opponent was still looking for his first one, which he often found lying on the piano keyboard. The secret was in luring my victims onto the spongy surface of our living room carpet. They never did get the hang of it.

Color illustration by Don Trawin of a boy (with glasses) kneeling to shoot a wink to the right into a cup, with the wink shown flipping in the air. A girl stands to the left, and an upright piano appears behind her.
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2680
Saturday Night (magazine)
location · 
Canada
tw-pub-ID · 
711

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Saturday Night.
published in · 
Saturday Night
date · 
March 1994
title · 
The Dalai Lama of Generation X
by · 
Douglas Coupland
citation · 
volume 109 • issue 2 • page 8(2)
tw-ref-ID · 
2682
The School Journal (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
712

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The School Journal.
published in · 
The School Journal
date · 
1 February 1902
column title · 
Letters
title · 
Heroism and Heroes.
by · 
Louis H. Bailey
citation · 
volume 64 • page 134 • column 2
content

If we should teach our children to consider such acts as that of Lieut. Hobson “cheap;” if we should teach our children that the soldier is an inferior type of man, and that any kind of rough sport is harmful; if we should teach that any exercise more exciting or dangerous than tiddledy winks is to be avoided, and our teaching was believed in and followed; if such a condition were arrived at, which God forbid, and the “Wrong but necessary war” was upon us, our flag and our nation would go down to well deserved oblivion. Our ethical superiority and our “Heroes of Life” would hardly save us.

notability rating · 
ridicule
tw-ref-ID · 
2683
Scribner's Magazine (magazine)
publisher · 
Charles Scribner's Sons (New York); F. Warne & Co. (London)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
700

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Scribner's Magazine.
published in · 
Scribner's Magazine
date · 
December 1890
column title · 
Sporting Goods
by · 
E. I. Horsman
citation · 
edition Holiday Number • volume 8 • issue 6 • page 65 • column all
content
Illustration of the box cover of “HORSMAN'S TIDDLEDY WINK TENNIS AND TIDDLEDY WINKS COMBINED”, which depicts 4 adults sitting at a table playing Tiddledy Wink Tennis.

The Latest Craze.

By the introduction of this game Tennis players are enabled to indulge in their favorite pastime in the Parlor as well as upon the lawn. Singles and doubles as well as three-handed games may be played.

Each player is provided with a large bone counter, which is termed a “racket.” A number of small bone counters represent tennis balls. A miniature tennis court of heavy green felt, accurately marked out with tennis net, accompanies the game.

A cup and the full number of counters is also provided for the regular Game of Tiddledy Winks.

Packed complete in box. WIll be sent free on receipt of One Dollar.

E. I. Horsman, Publisher, 80 & 82 William St., N.Y.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2684
Shorthand Educator (magazine)
publisher · 
Norman P. Heffley (editor)
associated with · 
Heffley Shorthand Company
location · 
62 Broad Street, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
713

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Shorthand Educator.
published in · 
Shorthand Educator
date · 
January 1898
title · 
“Tiddledywink” Stenographers
citation · 
volume 4 • issue 9 • whole 45 • page 262 • column 2
content

The impression seems to prevail among some women stenographers that the subject of their occupation is not being treated with proper seriousness. They would like to abandon all discussion of the so-called pretty and frivolous members of their craft and to see the unscrupulous owners of short-term, lightning-method schools handled with "bare knuckles to a finish."

The desire is entirely creditable, but unless attention is drawn to the complete stenographic incompetence of the graduates of such schools, how is their deception to be proved and made clear to the public? Investigation will show that nine pupils out of ten who have taken a course of lessons belong to the “chewing gum” or “tiddledywink” variety. A great many employers are aware of that fact and refuse to engage a stenographer who, in actual work, is found to be incompetent. One of the best ways, therefore, to discourage and uproot the humbug shorthand colleges of the country is to emphasize the exasperating worthlessness of their graduates.

The "tiddledywink" stenographer, so-called, is, for the most part, a product of the last ten years; and there are several explanations of his and her appearance. One is that in recent years, a hundred, more or less, mongrel "systems" of short- hand writing have sprung up, and the advocates of these methods have tried to outdo each other in an attempt to popularize their respective methods. As a result, schools were started, and those that advertised to teach the art of making pothooks in the shortest time were naturally supposed to have the best systems of shorthand. The victims of those institutions did not discover the fraud until it was too late. […]

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2685
Signals (catalog)
A Catalog for Fans & Friends of Public Television
associated with · 
Public Broadcasting Service
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
714

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Signals.
published in · 
Signals
date · 
Summer 1992
title · 
Tiddlygolf… $29.00
by · 
Townsend Croquet Ltd.
citation · 
page 23 item J
summary

Photograph of the Tiddlygolf game.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2686
Smithsonian Magazine (magazine)
associated with · 
Smithsonian Institution
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
715

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Smithsonian Magazine.
published in · 
Smithsonian Magazine
date · 
September 2003
title · 
A Rousing Walk Across England
citation · 
page 105 and later
summary

Coverage and photograph of Charles Relle and Alan Dean’s walk across England

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2687
Journal of Social Science (journal)
publisher · 
Damrell & Upham and the Boston Book Company (Boston); G. P. Putnam's Sons (New York)
associated with · 
American Social Science Association
location · 
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
716

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Journal of Social Science.
published in · 
Journal of Social Science
date · 
December 1898
title · 
Obligations of the State to Public Education
by · 
Hon. Charles Bulkley Hubbell
citation · 
issue 36 • page 214 • column 1
content

Persons high in authority even insist that the A, B, C’s, are all that the State should concern itself with in its relation to the schools, that the kindergarten serves no better purpose than to make children expert in tiddledy-winks, assert that physical culture only serves the ends of pugilism, and that the daily inspection of children with reference to contagious diseases in our schools is an invasion of the line of parental duties.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); digital image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2688
The Speaker
A Review of Politics, Letters, Science, and the Arts
location · 
London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
718

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Speaker.
published in · 
The Speaker
date · 
21 March 1891
title · 
A Man Should Marry
citation · 
volume 3 • page 344 • column 2
content

He plays an absurdly juvenile game called Tiddledy Winks with them, and talks about Eton or Harrow for Jack, and Girton or a husband for Milly.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2689
The Spectator (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
717

Toggle showing 14 tiddlywinks references for The Spectator.
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
11 May 1945
column title · 
A Spectator's Notebook
title · 
University Sport
citation · 
volume 174 • page 424 • column 2
content

I quote from the Cambridge Review the following impressive intelligence:

UNIVERSITY SPORT

TIDDLEYWINKS.

Sidney Sussex College won their first victory at tiddleywinks last Saturday, when they beat Newnham College by 84 points to 71 (eight a side).

In its exhilaration over a victory comparable in its way with Naseby, Cromwell’s college, I understand, proposes to re-christen this great game SIddneywinks.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2690
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
18 October 1957
title · 
Does Prince Philip Cheat at Tiddlywinks?
by · 
Strix
citation · 
page 508 • column 1
summary

This article is important to the history of tiddlywinks due solely to the headline, which triggered the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club to challenge Prince Philip to defends his honor, which resulted in the pivotal, highly publicized match between Cambridge University and The Goons on 1 March 1958.

content

It is almost a tradition in England that very plain women discover, early in life, an affinity with horses; and it is thus natural that her subjects should view with an indulgent if not perhaps a truly sympathetic eye Queen Elizabeth II's obsession with the Turf. What few of them suspect (save only for the fact that the Duke of Edinburgh cannot read, no Palace secret is more closely guarded) is her morbid passion for publicity. A well-loved Cabinet Minister was telling me only the other day that the destinies of the Commonwealth and Empire are constantly being jeopardised by the Queen's inability to tear herself away from her press-cutting albums for long enough to affix her signature to some State paper. Even the janissaries of the Court, in their tweed frock-coats, are disturbed by this. It is not enough, as the Duke of Bedford reminded the College of Heralds at their recent speech-day, to get your name into the papers, however regularly and with whatever prominence; and the Queen's growing unpopularity with Mr. Kingsley Martin and other important sections of the community—

But flippancy is creeping in, and it is one of the rules of this boring game that, when denigrating the Royal Family, one must preserve an owl-like solemnity. One is writing with deep conviction, and if one is middle-aged this conviction is the deeper for having had so long to mature. The Queen, like her forebears, has been 'in the news' ever since she came to the throne; and when a journalist in regular employment launches an attack on the Monarchy, it is most desirable that his diatribe should bear the hall mark of spontaneity and should appear to be the expression of stalagmitic sentiments which, strive as he will, he can no longer repress.

Otherwise people will say: “If you feel so strongly on this important matter, why did you not say so before?” In this context the memoirs of the better class of defecting Communist can be recommended as offering useful guidance.

* * *

But there are pitfalls on all the paths to frame, and on this particular short cut they are few, shallow, and innocuous. If you write a criticism of a book or a play you are supposed to have some sort of vague qualifications for doing so. The only qualification you need for criticising the Queen is to be one of her subjects; criticisms by foreigners are rank bad form, cut no ice and don't count.

The Sovereign's subjects are, by convention, loyal, and a certain breach of protocol, if of nothing more fundamental, might seem to be involved if I, as one of them, wrote for gain an offensive article about the Queen, especially if I did it at the behest of a foreigner. But there is of course nothing incompatible between loyalty—the truest kind of loyalty at that--and the frank expression of personal opinions about the Sovereign to whom I owe it.

I would make this quite clear to the numerous people (professional sycophants to a man) who would accuse me of a gross and unpardonable breach of taster. I would explain that it was because of my loyalty that I felt impelled to bring certain facts and opinions to the attention of the world. Were it not that I revered the Monarchy as an institution and admired the Queen enormously as a person, I should not have found it necessary to point out that she was an inept ruler, a misguided mother and a very moderate linguist. As for my suggestion that Prince Philip was indifferent to grand opera and had a bad seat on a horse -- well, surely free speech is the very essence of democracy. And so on.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA); photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2691
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
28 February 1958
title · 
Quail at Querryton
subtitle · 
Non Sequitur
by · 
Strix
citation · 
page 261
content

Non Sequitur

Several months ago i wrote an article which was intended to be a skit on all those fearless, readily marketable articles attacking the Royal Family. I called it ‘Does Prince Philip Cheat at Billiard Fives?’ At the printer’s this was found to be too long to fit the space available, and ‘billiard fives’ was altered to ‘tiddlywinks.’

This (according to my newspaper) inspired some Cambridge undergraduates to challenge Prince Philip to a match at tiddlywinks. Prince Philip—or so the newspaper says—declined the challenge but nominated the Goons as his champions; and on Saturday the contest will take place in the Cambridge Guildhall, where all the available seats, to the number of 600, have been sold.

Thus we are reminded of the curious ways in which history is made, and of the powerful and beneficent influence which the Spectator exerts upon the affairs of the nation.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA); photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2692
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
11 December 1971
title · 
Sharp and Roth
by · 
Auberon Waugh
citation · 
edition online • page 19
content

With infinite delicacy and skill, Miss Sharp employs exactly the right hesitant, spinsterish tone to tell us that the child called Antoinette is not exactly as other children. She is an 'innocent,' retarded ' — a half wit. When the war ends and the mother, now a widow, comes to reclaim her child, Antoniette is a timid eight-yearold, unable to speak more than four or five words, with great trust in her fostermother and a passionate concern for animals; but easily frightened and with a morbid interest in dead frogs, rabbit droppings, dog's turds etc. Perhaps Miss Sharp lays it on a bit strong here — I don't think it would be possible to play tiddlywinks with rabbit droppings, even if they had fossilised, because of their shape.

Nevertheless, our spinster heroine and her idiot toddler have a very happy time playing tiddlywinks with these rabbit droppings until Mum comes along to take Antionette back. The spinster — in any other, book, I would describe it as a tiresome affectation that she is never given a name — worries that the child will suffer if she is taken away too suddenly, and starts scheming to delay her removal.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2697
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
7 December 1974
column title · 
Review of the Arts
title · 
Cinema
by · 
Duncan Fallowell
citation · 
edition online • page 22
content

If you want the earth to open up in fissures and cough Biblical flame you will not see it. Apparently this phenomenon operated horizontally. Yet the visual disorientation is often brilliant. There is one brief shot of a main street rippling in waves and flipping Cadillacs like tiddlywinks which may not be quite correct seismologically but nonetheless conveys the spirit creepily well.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2698
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
13 April 1984
title · 
Centrepiece
by · 
Colin Welch
citation · 
edition online • page 25 • column 1
content

South Africa is doubtless a flawed and cruelly distorted society, but it is not specially or uniquely so in degree, even if it is in kind. Blacks and coloured people are denied many rights and privileges we h. ere think they should have, but no more in fact rather less — than are denied to all subjects of communist tyrannies with which we happily play games. Indeed, unless memory errs, the fatuous former Sports minister Howell had to hurry home from a football match in Russia, probably against one of the Dynamo (i.e. secret Police) teams, hypocritically to condemn some previous attempt to play tiddlywinks m the Transvaal.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2701
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
24 September 1999
title · 
The Sport of Crooks
by · 
Charlie Methven and Andrew Simon
citation · 
edition online • page 15 • column 1
content

There's the famous north London criminal family which is known to launder money through the betting rings, and there are worrying rumours of money from Belfast starting to find its way on to British tracks. In fact, all told, the Sport of Kings is attracting a cast of characters which make boxing look like tiddlywinks.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2702
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
17 March 2001
title · 
Foot and Mouth and Self-Pity
by · 
Ross Clark
citation · 
edition online • page 16
content

ONE hates to put ideas into the minds of the Countryside Alliance, but I shouldn't be surprised if they are already lobbying the BBC to kick off this Sunday's omnibus edition of The Archers with a two-minute silence. The trains and buses really would stop, too. Not since the Few has so much public emotion been invested in one group of people. Prayers are being said, tears wiped from eyes and the national village tiddlywinks championships in Lower Poopleford has been cancelled, not because of a genuine risk of spreading foot-and-mouth, but out of empathy with farmers. Thou shalt not have fun while a British farmer is having a tough time.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2693
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
25 April 2003
title · 
Pig in a Silk Suit
by · 
Helen Osborne
citation · 
edition online • page 41
content

Spiegel may have been dismissed as an erudite guttersnipe or, by Katharine Hepburn, as ‘a pig in a silk suit’, but glory days there had been. His four great achievements — On the Waterfront, The African Queen, The Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia — are lasting testaments to a unique and relentless tenacity. As the director John Huston put it, 'Sam made them with spit.' Spiegelese became a euphemism for Sam's lifelong crusade to cover his tracks and Fraser-Cavassoni hacks away like a gillie in the jungle of camouflage to find her man. He was born in 1901 in western Galicia, which branded him a lowly Ashkenazi Jew, and so he claimed to come from Vienna and, later, to have dodged all manner of Nazi atrocities. In fact, after dumping his young wife and child and a wodge of debts in Palestine in 1927, he flipped across Europe and the Atlantic like a tiddly-wink, and not always one jump ahead of the police.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2694
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
22 November 2003
title · 
The Threat to Rugby
by · 
Rachel Johnson
citation · 
edition online • page 13 • column 1
content

Sensible parents can recognise that all contact sports are a lot more dangerous than tiddlywinks or snooker, and the RFU insists that there is no evidence to suggest that fear of litigation has caused the decline in school participation; indeed, the Union points out that there are 3,036 schools affiliated to the RFU, which is a lot, and that two thirds of secondary schools offer some sort of rugby.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2703
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
29 November 2003
title · 
Rare Finds
by · 
Susan Moore
citation · 
edition online • page 74
content

Auction-houses neglect niche markets at their peril. The most marginalised and least publicised departments will invariably flourish the lion's share of thrilling discoveries — be they Assyrian reliefs, carved ‘unicorn’ horns or monumental Islamic bronze beasts. Take the spectacular Renaissance bronze roundel to be offered by Christie’s on 11 December. Its recent fate was not so unlike the V&A's celebrated Donatello bronze relief — currently taking a bow in the NACF's anniversary show, Saved! — the Chellini Madonna, a gift of thanks from the great sculptor to his physician.

Although well known to scholars as a documented piece, the roundel was being used by the heirs of the English milord who acquired it — depending on which version you believe — as an ashtray or for the family version of Tiddlywinks. This one had no less ignominiously languished in a cupboard under the stairs for decades because the family long presumed it was 19th century. And one can see why anyone might have thought it a showy piece of Regency historicism.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2695
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
17 November 2007
title · 
Women's Ways
by · 
Melissa Kite
citation · 
edition online • page 58 • column 1
content

Of course no woman can refuse an invitation to an all-girls' poker evening outright. You could get a name for yourself doing that. So you accept and pencil it in the diary in the same tiny, ultra-light handwriting you use for 'dentist' and 'clear credit card balance'.

Knowing all this, it was indeed foolish to go to such trouble over finger food, which my friend Catherine, the host on this occasion, duly did.

I was the first to arrive and for a good while we sat and stared at the bowls of corn snacks and wheat-free Chinese alternatives — you know, the ones that look like Tiddlywinks counters and taste like you imagine Tiddlywinks counters might taste if you baked them in the oven for a bit.

At 8.30 p.m. the excuses started pouring in. A lot of people suddenly discovered they couldn't play poker after all. Carole won the prize for stretching credulity by texting to say she was busy buying a car. What? At 9 p.m.? Who was she buying it off, Del Boy Trotter? 'I thought we were having dinner at my house'; 'My mother's just arrived from Portugal and I haven't seen her for 20 years'; 'Oh, poker! I thought you said pop over if you're at a loose end and the moon's in Scorpio ... ' On and on it went.

We ate the olives, and the nachos, and the gherkins, and indeed became so desperate that we were about to launch into the gluten-free Tiddlywinks when an idea occurred to us. It was perfect. We wondered why we hadn't thought of it before. We made the calls and the first man arrived within half an hour.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2696
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
3 October 2015
title · 
Hurrah! Demi Moore is Pugs club’s new Mistress of Chamber
subtitle · 
She beat Lady McCartney and Naomi Campbell to the job
by · 
Taki
citation · 
edition online
content

If cheating is the cancer of sport, losing has to be its halitosis. I stunk out the joint in Amsterdam last week, and even managed to be thrown (a first) for my troubles. Winners, for some strange reason, never have an excuse. Losers tend to. Mine is that my opponent was born after the war, whereas I was in an age group that was born before it. The rules are that one fights opponents within five years of one’s birthday, either way. My opponents were double that, but I should have registered an objection before the matches began. Some did and stayed out. I did not. I arrogantly thought I could win, and suffered the consequences. End of story and of my career in judo tournaments. It’s sad but normal. Sportsmen don’t always go out on top. They leave after being humiliated. Goodbye judo, hello tiddlywinks.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2699
published in · 
The Spectator
date · 
11 April 2016
title · 
Wentworth Butterfly
citation · 
edition Australia; online
content

Where Ali would famously taunt, tease, mock, ridicule, endlessly bignote himself and then go in for the killer punch (and all that before he got anywhere near the boxing ring), the contest between our two national leaders is a dreary, uninspiring, bloodless affair more akin to a game of tiddlywinks between Bjorn Borg and Pete Sampras. Leave your passions at the door.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2700
Spin (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
719

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Spin.
published in · 
Spin
date · 
August 1985
title · 
Who's That Girl?
by · 
Simon Garfield
citation · 
volume 1 • issue 4 • page 46 • column 2
summary

About Annie Lennox, singer

content

People who really love playing and writing songs aren’t usually interested in business. Really, it’s like they play tiddledy-winks with you. […]

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2704
Sport (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
720

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Sport.
published in · 
Sport
date · 
December 1994
citation · 
volume 85 • issue 12 • page 66(1)
summary

Silver screen sportswriter: with “Cobb,” Ron Shelton establishes himself as the top sports filmmaker.

tw-ref-ID · 
2705
The Sporting News (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
721

Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for The Sporting News.
published in · 
The Sporting News
date · 
27 October 1921
column title · 
Stove League Stories
by · 
J. C. Kofoed
citation · 
page 6 • column 4
content

GOLF certainly has taken a strangle hold on the interest of ball players and sporting writers. I used to sniff when I heard about the links activities of Irvin Cobb, Grantland Rice and other big leaguers of the typewriter. “They are probably getting a little feeble in the upper story,” was my song. “Golf! Why don't they take up tiddledy-winks?“

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2747
published in · 
The Sporting News
date · 
1 January 1925
title · 
Hornsby Hits for 373 Total Bases
citation · 
page 2 • column 6
content

Now, there wasn't anything far out of the way in that. George believes that baseball—not golf, tiddledy winks nor dominoes—should be the subject around a ball park, and he is right. In days gone by baseball players lived the game as they played it. There were no side issues. It was baseball first, last and always for the men who played it. What we need is baseball nuts in the clubhouse, not golf nuts.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2748
published in · 
The Sporting News
date · 
3 January 1944
title · 
A cup full of doubts
citation · 
volume 217 • issue 1 • page 41(3)
summary

About the Los Angeles Kings and Montreal Canadiens

tw-ref-ID · 
2706
published in · 
The Sporting News
date · 
25 January 1950
title · 
Phil's Trainer Gives Waitkus the ‘Works’
by · 
Stan Baumgartner
citation · 
page 12 • column 4
content

But Frank Wiechec is playing Simon Legree with this Topsy better than any fictional character, and doing the job with a wicked snap of the whip. You know how conscientious he is! Well, that conscientiousness has been doubled in spades. Thank goodness Sunday comes once a week. It is the only day I get away from the constant bendings and pavement poundings that would make a debutante's reducing routine look like a simple game of tiddly-winks.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2749
published in · 
The Sporting News
date · 
7 January 1953
title · 
Thrills
subtitle · 
Bobby's All-Star Feat
citation · 
section 2 • page 6 • column 3
content

We might not have been able to beat the Commies at tiddly-winks, deep-knee bends and the other obscure ‘sports’ by which they calculated their over-all Olympic victory, but we beat ’em at basketball and their prized soccer team fizzled out, too. Pardon the patriotism, but would Uncle Joe’s boys like to try their hand at baseball or football?

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2750
published in · 
The Sporting News
date · 
17 September 1966
title · 
Tulsa's Smith Urges New Triple-A Loop in Mid-USA
by · 
John Ferguson
citation · 
page 33 • column 6
content

“If we didn't offer Tulsa the best product possible, whether it be baseball, ping pong or tiddlywinks, we would be derelict, for this is a sophisticated, prosperous city.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2751
published in · 
The Sporting News
date · 
24 May 1969
column title · 
Auto Racing
title · 
More than Money at Stake in ‘500’
citation · 
page 54 • column 1
content

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — No one has won the “500” four times. But no one has ever driven a racing machine quite like A. J. Foyt. And few have ever wanted to win anything—foot race, canoe, race, marbles or tiddlywinks—quite like A. J. Foyt, either.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2752
Sports Illustrated (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
210

Toggle showing 27 tiddlywinks references for Sports Illustrated.
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
23 July 1956
column title · 
The Wonderful World of Sport
title · 
STORM ON LONG ISLAND SOUND
citation · 
edition online • page 20 • column 3
content

A heavy squall, unruly and unwelcome as a drunk at a tea party, clapped down hard midway in the opening day of the 58th annual Larchmont (N.Y.) Yacht Club's race week. Two dozen small boats, including the entire Turnabout class of 13, flipped like tiddlywinks in Long Island Sound. Among those bottoms up was A.E. Smith's Thistle Heather (above), out of the Port Washington Yacht Club. Smith and his sons Donald, 17, and Richard, 15, hung on under the blackface sky until rescuers saved all. The opener drew 378 boats, ranging from lordly International sloops to a blizzard of Blue Jays in the biggest turnout since 1947. Nine units of the brand new 5.5-meter Olympic competition class showed up for their first national championship match.

links · 
Sports Illustrated – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 251)Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1539)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
641
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
31 March 1958
title · 
'Wink Up and Fiddle'
subtitle · 
So advised Prince Philip last month as England's tiddlywinks 'season' moved into high gear
by · 
John Lovesey
citation · 
edition regional; online • page E6 to E8 between pages 76 and 77
summary

Cambridge University vs. Goons match

content

Master tactician David Arundale, elegant in dinner jacket, club bow tie and gray knee pad, coolly faced the tightly packed crowd of over 600 in Cambridge University's Guildhall and announced with simple dignity, "My men are fit. Whatever form of Goonsmanship we have to face, we have our own secret tactics."

As any close reader of the British press already knew, Mr. Arundale was referring to tiddlywinks. The "Goons," of course, were the Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Champions who last month, with the university's senior proctor, students and townspeople looking on, met the Cambridge Tiddlywink Club in mortal battle. Mr. Arundale was reacting bravely and, as it turned out, with a certain degree of prescience (Cambridge won 120½ to 55½) to a fairly staggering amount of Goonsmanship perpetrated by none other than the duke himself, who missed the match but wired: AT ONE TIME I HAD HOPED TO JOIN MY CHAMPIONS BUT, UNFORTUNATELY, WHILE PRACTICING SECRETLY, I PULLED AN IMPORTANT MUSCLE IN THE SECOND OR TIDDLY JOINT OF MY WINKING FINGER. Prince Philip concluded: WINK UP, FIDDLE THE GAME AND MAY THE GOONS' SIDE WIN.

The much neglected and artful game of tiddlywinks was having a day for itself. Actually, the revived interest in tiddlywinks began when Bill Steen, a thin-faced graduate student in chemical engineering at Cambridge, decided with the aid of a friend that, as they stood little chance of obtaining one of the university's coveted sports "Blues," they might form a tiddlywinks club. To Steen's utter surprise, his father, a Cambridge don, encouraged the idea, and in January 1955 the first club meeting was held. The Cambridge tiddlywinkers, as they called themselves, designed a club tie (dark background with light blue pots and descendent gold winks) and set out to discover the history of the noble game. Their conclusions: Stone Age men may have played an occasional game while chipping flints. The French had something similar to tiddlywinks as early as the 18th century, but since the sport is known disparagingly as "the flea game" on the Continent, the game's real home is in England. Tiddlywinks came to England about the time of the Industrial Revolution, when carpets, essential to playing, first became plentiful. This supposition has been authenticated by the discovery of an English manufacturer who has been producing winks, as the disks are called, for over a hundred years.

Rules for the game are embarrassingly simple, a fact the Cambridge devotees manage to conceal under a superfluity of pseudotechnical nomenclature. The tiddlywink arena is called a pitch and is normally a 6-by-3-foot carpet. The receptacle for winks, placed in the center, is about 1½ inches high and 1¾ inches in diameter. Each tiddlywinker plays with two large and four medium-size winks and, to hoist them, uses a wink of suitable size. It is called a squidger.

A tiddlywinks team normally consists of eight men playing as four pairs. Players of two opposing pairs place their winks in the pitch's four corners, partners opposite each other. Each takes a first round shot at the pot. Starting with the one closest, turns are taken clockwise and the aim is to "wink out," that is, to sink all one's winks. First person to do so scores five points, next three points, third two points and fourth one. In a complete match, each pair should play each of the opposing pairs.

If a tiddlywink lands on another during a game, the one beneath cannot be played until the covering wink is removed. If both members of a pair have all their winks covered, they are said to be squopt. This entitles the opposition to three moves for each of its winks not engaged in covering. When these moves are exhausted, one wink belonging to the opposition has to be released.

Each Cambridge club member is expected to master four basic strokes. The initial shot is the difficult long drive from the corner. Measuring approximately 3‚Öì feet in length, a wink up from this distance is almost, but not quite, as rare as a hole in one in golf. Two strokes more readily mastered are the approach shot and the short putt. A softer, slightly vertical squidge is the proper form here. Fourth in the tiddlywinker's equipment is the cover-up shot, a delicate maneuver which, if successful, places a wink atop an opponent's. All other strokes (e.g., the backwards and sideways squidges and the illegal "down-the-tie" shot, which is squidged into a player's tie so that it slides down into the pot) are derived from these and can only be acquired through experience and much hard practice. To keep squidging muscles in supple condition before a match, Cambridge tiddlywinkers twiddle their thumbs during lectures.

In its infancy the club quickly verified that a mat is the factor which makes a wink rise. It also found that pile carpets suffer fatigue. At least once, a descent was made on the showroom of an unsuspecting Cambridge carpet dealer, where winks were systematically squidged on all the samples displayed. It was eventually decided that a carpet which is suitably resilient and yet has no pile is best.

In further researches, this time involving winks alone, an immense difference in shapes, diameters and thicknesses was discovered. Even in apparently uniform sets, sometimes "borrowed from small brothers and sisters for an indefinite period," measurement has often shown one wink is twice as thick as another. Such "frivolousness" on the part of manufacturers is condemned by the club, which hopes to establish uniform standards. By its definition, the optimum tiddlywink shape and nature is 1½ to 2 millimeters thick, 16 to 22 millimeters in diameter, has flat, smooth surfaces, beveled edges and is constructed of plastic.

The Cambridge club has also considered spin (which it says is forward after squidging) and rolling—nothing is more frustrating than to successfully get a wink near the pot, only to see it roll away. During one particular study, several winks were squidged from an upstairs college window and observed as they fell. It was noticed that spin increased with increased speed, but the axis appeared to remain constant. A deduction has yet to be made.

Opposition has been hard to come by. The Cambridge club has sent out invitations to, among others, Harvard and Yale and Moscow, Peking and Tokyo universities, the Scott Polar Base and the Speaker of the House of Commons. It was a fortuitous headline in a British journal—DOES PRINCE PHILIP CHEAT AT TIDDLYWINKS?—that brought the Duke of Edinburgh and the Cambridge tiddlywinkers together. The club wrote to him, suggesting he appoint Royal Champions to scotch the canard once and for all. The duke, a subtle man, asked some British comedians, the Goons, who specialize in a surrealistic form of fun (it consists of quips, unearthly chuckles, gurgles and squeaks and is popular with a huge British audience) to defend his royal honor, the proceeds of the match to go to his favorite charity, the National Playing Fields Association.

Cambridge Club President Arundale attributes his great victory to a formula his teammates developed for squidging a wink into the pot: R equals P plus A plus S, R being the normal reaction of "the isotropic compressible medium, or carpet"; P being the applied force; A the angle between the wink and the squidger; and S the "steen factor." Mr. Arundale, playing it cozy, did not choose to elucidate what, precisely, he meant by the steen factor.

Will there always be tiddlywinks? Yes! reply the tiddly winkers, and an undergraduate wrote a tune to prove it. At the match's end everybody, including the audience, joined in singing, to the tune of Men of Harlech, the Tiddlywinks Anthem:

Other nations are before us,
With their Sputniks and Explorers.
What can confidence restore us?
Nought but Tiddlywinks.
On the fields of Eton
Former foes were beaten.
But today all patriots play,
This sport which needs such grit and concentration.
Through the game of skill and power,
England knows her finest hour;
And her stronghold shield and tower,
Must be tiddlywinks.

media description

Photographs

collection · 
original (NATwA); digital transcript (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
642
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
7 April 1958
title · 
'Wink Up and Fiddle'
subtitle · 
So advised Prince Philip last month as England's tiddlywinks 'season' moved into high gear
by · 
John Lovesey
citation · 
edition regional • page M5 to M8 after page 4 or 96
summary

Cambridge University vs. Goons match

content
Black and white photograph of a winker shooting a wink from the corner directly at the camera, with two onlookers.
FRONTAL SQUIDGE, executed by David Moreton, is a basic tiddlywinks maneuver.

Master tactician David Arundale, elegant in dinner jacket, club bow tie and gray knee pad, coolly faced the tightly packed crowd of over 600 in Cambridge University's Guildhall and announced with simple dignity, "My men are fit. Whatever form of Goonsmanship we have to face, we have our own secret tactics."

As any close reader of the British press already knew, Mr. Arundale was referring to tiddlywinks. The "Goons," of course, were the Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Champions who last month, with the university's senior proctor, students and townspeople looking on, met the Cambridge Tiddlywink Club in mortal battle. Mr. Arundale was reacting bravely and, as it turned out, with a certain degree of prescience (Cambridge won 120½ to 55½) to a fairly staggering amount of Goonsmanship perpetrated by none other than the duke himself, who missed the match but wired: AT ONE TIME I HAD HOPED TO JOIN MY CHAMPIONS BUT, UNFORTUNATELY, WHILE PRACTICING SECRETLY, I PULLED AN IMPORTANT MUSCLE IN THE SECOND OR TIDDLY JOINT OF MY WINKING FINGER. Prince Philip concluded: WINK UP, FIDDLE THE GAME AND MAY THE GOONS' SIDE WIN.

The much neglected and artful game of tiddlywinks was having a day for itself. Actually, the revived interest in tiddlywinks began when Bill Steen, a thin-faced graduate student in chemical engineering at Cambridge, decided with the aid of a friend that, as they stood little chance of obtaining one of the university's coveted sports "Blues," they might form a tiddlywinks club. To Steen's utter surprise, his father, a Cambridge don, encouraged the idea, and in January 1955 the first club meeting was held. The Cambridge tiddlywinkers, as they called themselves, designed a club tie (dark background with light blue pots and descendent gold winks) and set out to discover the history of the noble game. Their conclusions: Stone Age men may have played an occasional game while chipping flints. The French had something similar to tiddlywinks as early as the 18th century, but since the sport is known disparagingly as "the flea game" on the Continent, the game's real home is in England. Tiddlywinks came to England about the time of the Industrial Revolution, when carpets, essential to playing, first became plentiful. This supposition has been authenticated by the discovery of an English manufacturer who has been producing winks, as the disks are called, for over a hundred years.

Rules for the game are embarrassingly simple, a fact the Cambridge devotees manage to conceal under a superfluity of pseudotechnical nomenclature. The tiddlywink arena is called a pitch and is normally a 6-by-3-foot carpet. The receptacle for winks, placed in the center, is about 1½ inches high and 1¾ inches in diameter. Each tiddlywinker plays with two large and four medium-size winks and, to hoist them, uses a wink of suitable size. It is called a squidger.

A tiddlywinks team normally consists of eight men playing as four pairs. Players of two opposing pairs place their winks in the pitch's four corners, partners opposite each other. Each takes a first round shot at the pot. Starting with the one closest, turns are taken clockwise and the aim is to "wink out," that is, to sink all one's winks. First person to do so scores five points, next three points, third two points and fourth one. In a complete match, each pair should play each of the opposing pairs.

If a tiddlywink lands on another during a game, the one beneath cannot be played until the covering wink is removed. If both members of a pair have all their winks covered, they are said to be squopt. This entitles the opposition to three moves for each of its winks not engaged in covering. When these moves are exhausted, one wink belonging to the opposition has to be released.

Each Cambridge club member is expected to master four basic strokes. The initial shot is the difficult long drive from the corner. Measuring approximately 3‚Öì feet in length, a wink up from this distance is almost, but not quite, as rare as a hole in one in golf. Two strokes more readily mastered are the approach shot and the short putt. A softer, slightly vertical squidge is the proper form here. Fourth in the tiddlywinker's equipment is the cover-up shot, a delicate maneuver which, if successful, places a wink atop an opponent's. All other strokes (e.g., the backwards and sideways squidges and the illegal "down-the-tie" shot, which is squidged into a player's tie so that it slides down into the pot) are derived from these and can only be acquired through experience and much hard practice. To keep squidging muscles in supple condition before a match, Cambridge tiddlywinkers twiddle their thumbs during lectures.

In its infancy the club quickly verified that a mat is the factor which makes a wink rise. It also found that pile carpets suffer fatigue. At least once, a descent was made on the showroom of an unsuspecting Cambridge carpet dealer, where winks were systematically squidged on all the samples displayed. It was eventually decided that a carpet which is suitably resilient and yet has no pile is best.

In further researches, this time involving winks alone, an immense difference in shapes, diameters and thicknesses was discovered. Even in apparently uniform sets, sometimes "borrowed from small brothers and sisters for an indefinite period," measurement has often shown one wink is twice as thick as another. Such "frivolousness" on the part of manufacturers is condemned by the club, which hopes to establish uniform standards. By its definition, the optimum tiddlywink shape and nature is 1½ to 2 millimeters thick, 16 to 22 millimeters in diameter, has flat,

Black and white photograph of winker in profile at left shooting with two onlookers at right.
SIDEWAYS SQUIDGE, delicate winking shot, is assayed by Malcolm Hurleston
smooth surfaces, beveled edges and is constructed of plastic.

The Cambridge club has also considered spin (which it says is forward after squidging) and rolling—nothing is more frustrating than to successfully get a wink near the pot, only to see it roll away. During one particular study, several winks were squidged from an upstairs college window and observed as they fell. It was noticed that spin increased with increased speed, but the axis appeared to remain constant. A deduction has yet to be made.

Opposition has been hard to come by. The Cambridge club has sent out invitations to, among others, Harvard and Yale and Moscow, Peking and Tokyo universities, the Scott Polar Base and the Speaker of the House of Commons. It was a fortuitous headline in a British journal—DOES PRINCE PHILIP CHEAT AT TIDDLYWINKS?—that brought the Duke of Edinburgh and the Cambridge tiddlywinkers together. The club wrote to him, suggesting he appoint Royal Champions to scotch the canard once and for all. The duke, a subtle man, asked some British comedians, the Goons, who specialize in a surrealistic form of fun (it consists of quips, unearthly chuckles, gurgles and squeaks and is popular with a huge British audience) to defend his royal honor, the proceeds of the match to go to his favorite charity, the National Playing Fields Association.

Cambridge Club President Arundale attributes his great victory to a formula his teammates developed for squidging a wink into the pot: R equals P plus A plus S, R being the

B&W photograph of a winker explaining the game of tiddlywinks on a blackboard with illustrations.
CHALK TALK is used by Hugh Mellor to expound the basic tiddlywinks theory.
normal reaction of "the isotropic compressible medium, or carpet"; P being the applied force; A the angle between the wink and the squidger; and S the "steen factor." Mr. Arundale, playing it cozy, did not choose to elucidate what, precisely, he meant by the steen factor.

Will there always be tiddlywinks? Yes! reply the tiddly winkers, and an undergraduate wrote a tune to prove it. At the match's end everybody, including the audience, joined in singing, to the tune of Men of Harlech, the Tiddlywinks Anthem:

Other nations are before us,
With their Sputniks and Explorers.
What can confidence restore us?
Nought but Tiddlywinks.
On the fields of Eton
Former foes were beaten.
But today all patriots play,
This sport which needs such grit and concentration.
Through the game of skill and power,
England knows her finest hour;
And her stronghold shield and tower,
Must be tiddlywinks.

media description

Photographs

collection · 
original (Library of Congress); photocopy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 257)
tw-ref-ID · 
643
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
13 April 1959
column title · 
They Said It
citation · 
page 26 • column 1
content

Harold Haydon, dean of students at the University of Chicago, on being informed that his school had accepted a challenge from Cambridge University for an international tiddlywinks match: "Only students who maintain the university's scholastic standards will be eligible."

tw-ref-ID · 
644
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
30 November 1959
title · 
The Question: Do You Care Whether Or Not Your School Has A Good Football Team?
by · 
Jimmy Jemail
citation · 
edition regional • page M2 after page 4 • column 2
content

JACK WALKER

Mexico City and Acapulco Mining operator

Sure I do. I played halfback for Canisius College in Buffalo for three years. I'd like to see Canisius win the national championship, that's how much I care. Isn't that better than the University of Chicago, formerly a great football power, winning the tiddlywinks championship from Cambridge University?

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1542)
tw-ref-ID · 
645
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
20 March 1961
title · 
Czech Giant Killers
by · 
Jack Olsen
citation · 
page 23 • column 1
content

With the puck at last in play, the sly Czechs would start another private game. Often for as long as 30 or 40 seconds they would skate aimlessly back and forth in their own defensive zone, passing the puck to one another with no more purpose than kids playing tiddlywinks at recess time.

links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1543)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
646
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
18 December 1961
column title · 
Scorecard
title · 
DEATH OF POOL
citation · 
page 7 • column 3
content

[...]

If that isn't enough to turn your stomach, here's the clincher: BRPAA [Billiard Room Proprietors Association of America] will attempt to "attract potential women players to the game." In this connection the new organization is already gloating over widely printed newspaper pictures of Queen Mother Elizabeth wielding a cue at London's Press Club.

To all of this nonsense, we say: BRPAA, go home. Or go out and organize the Tiddly-Winkers. Let pool alone. Pool is the last refuge of the harassed male. The pool hall is the last place you can tell a gamy joke without lowering your voice. It is the last place you can tell a guy what you really think of him and then whip him on the table at a nickel a ball. Pool shooters don't want "a wholesome recreational atmosphere at all times." They revel in the thick pall of blue smoke and the shiny spittoons and the seedy hustlers and bums sitting around lending local color.

[...]

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1544)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
647
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
30 July 1962
column title · 
Scorecard
title · 
WINKS AND CUBES
citation · 
page 7 to 8 • column 3; 2
summary

Notice of upcoming Oxford tour of the United States.

content

The Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society, an honored if not very ancient organization, is about to land on our shores with the purpose of competing against such American tiddlywinks teams as The Cin Cin Irregulars, a New York club that meets in a pub, and various similarly attuned groups along the Atlantic seaboard from the Lake Tarleton Club at Pike, N.H. down through the Berkshires to Philadelphia

One purpose of the excursion is to extend to America the international rules that prevail in the British Isles and France but perhaps do not prevail elsewhere. It seems, as a matter of fact, that they

Illustration in red, black and white with a man standing at left holding the Union Jack flag, another man at left holding papers, and both watching a young man crouching at left with arms in front of him, and another young man sittle in a chair, with a wink being tossed between them.
may not even prevail in England, where Oxford permits women to play and Cambridge won't even let women watch.

One of the more prominent Oxonian winkers, Mr. P. J. Freeman, has solicited our aid in finding even more challengers than he now has. Any team that feels competent to give Oxford a good tussle at tiddlywinks may address Mr. Freeman in care of the William Sloane YMCA, 356 West 34 Street, New York, N.Y. "One of our chief endeavors," Mr. Freeman advises, "will be to try to spread interest in tiddlywinks within the United States; rather a big job, perhaps."

Rather bigger than you might think, Mr. Freeman. Some parts of the country are now preoccupied with a new sport, one that may well represent a challenge to tiddlywinks. Just the other day the Phelps brothers of Anderson, Ind., aged 14 and 11, claimed a new world record in the sport. Theytosses an ice cube back and forth between them 743 times before it melted. A few days later in Albuquerque, Larry Prawitz, 15, and Phil Vickers, 14, tossed the cube 1,403 times. American rules prevailed.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 254)
tw-ref-ID · 
648
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
17 December 1962
title · 
The Harvards and the Yales
by · 
Robert H. Boyle
citation · 
page 22; 28 • column 2; 2
summary

Coverage of the Harvard-Yale football game and the tiddlywinks match held in the morning

content

Wednesday morning. The Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society posted a notice in Phillips Brooks House: "It's so colossal only the mighty parlor of P.B.H. could hold it! So stupid that Sports Illustrated is covering it—Saturday only, Yale vs. the undefeated G.U.T.S. 10 a.m. Free.

"The Dartmouth boys were very rude," said an alumnus. "Yes," said a woman, "why when I went to the ladies' room…" A cheer for Harvard's victory in tiddlywinks blotted out her remarks.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1546)
tw-ref-ID · 
649
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
7 January 1963
column title · 
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
title · 
WONKS AND PREPPIES
by · 
Lloyd H. Selby (Orlando, California)
citation · 
page 60 • column 2
content

Sirs:

Having been non-U my entire life, I humbly suggest your reporters concern themselves less with the self-conscious mewings of the Harvards, their tiddlywinks, light touch-tacklers and shy but acne-faced football team and more with such solid sports as model train construction (HO), water ballet and cut the pie.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 278)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
650
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
7 January 1963
column title · 
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
title · 
WONKS AND PREPPIES
by · 
Edward J. Smith Jr. (Cambridge, Massachusetts)
citation · 
page 60 • column 2
content

Sirs:

It is true that the Harvard-Yale game is no longer a meeting of powerhouses. However, the game is no less important to the players and the spectators. If Robert Boyle had been on the athletic fields that day, instead of mooching drinks from the clubs, he would have seen over a thousand Harvard and Yale men playing against one another on various levels of football ,soccer and tiddlywinks. Where else does a student body get a chance to participate so fully in a meeting of two universities?

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 279)
tw-ref-ID · 
651
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
7 January 1963
column title · 
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
title · 
PAWNS AND TIDDLIES
by · 
R. McCutcheon (London, Ontario)
citation · 
page 60 • column 3
content

Sirs:

In reference to the letter or Mr. Lemuel Roberts II (19th Hole, Dec. 10) I would like to suggest that perhaps Mr. Roberts ought to discontinue his subscription.

What would he like to see in Sports Illustrated: "action" shots of chess? Or tiddlywinks? To say that football and boxing represent everything "unclean, unfair, and dishonest" in sports is absolutely ludicrous. I would even go so far as to suggest that Mr. Roberts might consult the nearest psychiatrist. Our youth is getting soft only because certain people like Mr. Roberts are attempting to take all exertion out of sports.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 280)
tw-ref-ID · 
652
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
25 November 1963
column title · 
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
title · 
DISHING THE DIRT
by · 
Don Streeter (Westminster, Mass.)
citation · 
page 118 • column 2
content

Sirs:

I for one have enjoyed watching the rough and tough play of pro football, the savage fighting play of the lines, the crisp tackles, the running of Jim Brown, the keying of Huff on Brown, etc.

Now Walter Bingham comes along and wants to go to touch football. He should go to Harvard. They have a good tiddlywinks team there; that seems to be his sport.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1550)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
653
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
19 July 1965
column title · 
Letter from the Publisher
by · 
Sidney L. James
citation · 
edition online • page 4 • column 1
content

During the past fortnight or so, the byline of Staff Writer John Lovesey has appeared over three major stories from well-separated European sporting venues: Le Mans (June 28 issue), the Henley Regatta (last week) and the British Open at Royal Birkdale (page 16 of this issue). The pace is not at all atypical of Lovesey, who happens to be the foreign source upon which SPORTS ILLUSTRATED depends most heavily. John, you see, is as unique as the Cantabrigian tiddly winks team that he once wrote about: he is SI's only editorial staff member based outside of New York, lucky bloke.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1562)
tw-ref-ID · 
665
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
27 September 1965
title · 
They Love Herman and Willie
by · 
Jack Mann
citation · 
page 31 • column 1
content

Winning is good, even if it's tiddledy-winks against your mother, but isn't there a certain satisfaction in just being Willie Mays?

"It's two ways," Mays said. "Sure, there's a lot of guys who would like to play the game the way I'm able to play it. But it's a lonely life, too. Sometimes, especially when you lose, you'd just like to be left alone, but you can't be."

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1560)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
663
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
31 October 1966
title · 
For Indians, It Was A Day to Bite the Dust
by · 
Gwilym S. Brown, Tom C. Brody
citation · 
page 46 • column 3
content

Ric Zimmerman, the tall, intelligent, left-handed quarterback whose poise and passing have helped Harvard to serve up the kind of vitamin-rich, well-balanced offense that has been lacking in Cambridge for many years, would not go that far, but he has a few ideas of his own on why the Harvards love beating the Dartmouths at anything, even tiddlywinks.

"Those Dartmouth guys come down here in their green jackets," he says with a slight tone of distaste. "They come to our weekend parties and they lounge around on the floor with our dates and give you the idea it would be the easiest thing in the world to take our girls away from us. The Dartmouth game is always a good one to win."

links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1551)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
654
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
28 February 1972
column title · 
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
title · 
DEFINITION
by · 
Franklin F. Russell (Captain Oxford University chess team 1914, Englewood, N.J.)
citation · 
page 71; 72 • column 1; 2
content

Sirs:

Mr. Garr M. Kluender claims (19th Hole, Jan. 31) that chess is not a sport "in the true sense of the word" or in contrast, for example, to marbles, which involves "a degree of physical coordation." Cambridge University has awarded a half-blue to its chess team representatives since 1873, when annual matches with Oxford began, thus putting chess in the same categroy with minor sports like golf, fencing, lacross, and cross-country.

In 1910 the Oxford chess club awarded "colours" to its teams, given them the right to wear a tri-colored necktie or scarf (dark blue, white and red). Cambridge representatives appeared in natty blazers, with light blue (the Cambridge color) pipings and crossed chessboards on the left breast. They also wore the standard Cambridge half-blue tie.

The Oxford tie and scarf were forgotten when the chess matches were resumed after World War I, due in part, perhaps, to the fact that Oxford's best player was almost blind. But efforts have recently been made to revive them so that this year's team can appear duly attired at the annual match in March. (In 1900 the Oxford team showed up in frock coats and top hats.) The Oxford club has also asked the Blues Committee for a half-blue, citing Cambridge as an example, but it has been turned-down on the ground that if half-blues were given for chess, the bridge and tiddlywinks chaps would not be far behind.

In the February issue of Reader's Digest, it is said that tests at Temple University show that "the physical strain of tournament chess, as measured by pulse rate, skin temperature and other indexes, is equivalent to a 10-round boxing match or five sets of tennis." I personally have felt more fatigued after a three-hour chess game than after rowing a mile and a quarter in a race. At least after the rowing had been over for three or four minutes I felt quite myself.

The recent achievements of America's Bobby Fischer in the chess world have aroused enormous interest in the game. Certainly SPORTS ILLUSTRATED is justified in devoting articles to him.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1552)
tw-ref-ID · 
655
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
19 February 1973
title · 
Cook It Up And Dish It Out
by · 
Jeannette Bruce
citation · 
page 43; 49 • column 3; 3
content

By the time I left I had acquired a sack of unbleached, unmilled, whole-grain flour, Biblical honey—so named because it comes from the manna plant, which I thought was very cute—and organic cookies, carob candy bars for instant stamina, dried apricots and a snack of toasted tiddley-winks.

She had no way of knowing, of course, that I had a new technique, too; that my intestinal tract was awash daily with carrot juice, that my digestive juices were grappling with muscle-building proteins, that in the end her inner-thigh throw would be no match for my toasted tiddley-winks.

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1553)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
656
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
23 April 1973
column title · 
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
title · 
YESTERDAYS HEROES
by · 
Tim Schiller (Cambridge, Massachusetts)
citation · 
page 95 • column 1
summary

Letter from Tim Schiller comparing tiddlywinks with Gene Tenace's plight in baseball

content

Sirs:

While reading your article on Gene Tenance, I was struck by the similarity between his plight and our own. Although tiddlywinks doesn't quite yet command the public attention that baseball does, we have experienced similar feelings. The game of tiddlywinks that we play is a far cry from the trivial nursery game that we all gave up at the age of five. Its sophistication and strategy rival that of tournament chess, according to those who have played both. Although the game has been played at this level in this country for some time now (the eigth annual North American Tiddlywinks Champinoships were held this past February) it is still generally unnoticed. At the moment, our team at MIT, which again won the Continentals this year, is having a very difficult time finding sponsorship for the trip to England to defend its world title. Any interest or help you would have for NATwA would be most appreciated.

TIM SCHILLER

Cambridge, Massachusetts

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA); digital web page copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1554)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
657
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
26 May 1975
title · 
Beating Their Brains Out
by · 
John Underwood
citation · 
volume 42 • issue 21 • page 89 • column 2 to 3
summary

About MIT winning the world tiddlywinks championship in England in 1972

content

"It's not just sports at MIT, it's everything. There's something like 170 activities on campus. The rule is, if a group of kids wants something, it's made available. We had the world Frisbee champion here giving classes. A couple years ago somebody wanted to start a tiddlywinks team. They went to the student government. They got the money for it."

(When asked about the latter, Publicist [Peter] Close [Sports Information Director] looked as though he had been hit with a cream pie. "Oh, don't mention that," he said, grinning sheepishly. Why not? "It's embarrassing. Tiddlywinks." What prompted it? "The world championships. In London. Please don't mention it." The team went to London? "Yes"' How'd it do? Subdued voice: "They won." [...])

collection · 
original (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA); digital web page copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1555)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
658
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
14 March 1977
column title · 
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
title · 
Sputtering Engine
by · 
Michael F. Manore (Fort Wayne, Indiana)
citation · 
page 90 • column 1
content

Sir:

Unbelievable! Detroit General Manager Oscar Feldman says, "Most of the players have no-cut multi-year contracts. Why they can't be happy in winning whether they make a contribution or not is beyond me."

Every player who has the good fortune of reaching the NBA has paid a price to get there. These players have made sacrifices that others with similar talents have not made. If it is Feldman's belief that recognition and the exercising of the skills that these players have perfected are not important to them, he should be running a kindergarten tiddly-winks tournament, not a professional basketball team. Come on, Oscar. Professional athletes are competitors, not contented bench-warmers, regardless of their income.

links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1563)
notability rating · 
ridicule
tw-ref-ID · 
666
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
19 August 1986
title · 
Lost In History
subtitle · 
From 1929 to 1931, the Philadelphia A's were the best team in baseball, with four future Hall of Famers and a lineup that dominated Babe Ruth's legendary Yankees. So why hasn't anyone heard of them?
by · 
William Nack
citation · 
page 84 • column 3
content

[...] [Robert (Lefty)] Grove had a Vesuvian temper that was quite as famous as his fastball, and he left behind him a trail of wrecked watercoolers and ruined lockers. There were many days when players, particularly skittish rookies, dared not speak to him as he observed the world from the long shadows of his bony scowl. One day in 1931, against the woeful St. Louis Browns, Grove was trying to win his 17th straight game without a loss--and thereby set an American League record--when a young outfielder named Jim Moore, substituting for the ailing Simmons, misjudged an easy fly ball and, ultimately, cost Grove the game, 1-0. Grove swept into the clubhouse like the Creature from the Black Lagoon. He picked up a wooden chair and smashed it into splinters. He then tried to rip off his locker door and settled for kicking it in. His rage unappeased, he tore off his uniform, sending buttons flipping like tiddlywinks, and shredded it like a rag. He bellowed, "Where is Simmons? He could have caught that ball in his back pocket!" Grove refused to speak to anyone for a week, and it was years before he forgave Simmons for staying out sick that day. [...]

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated – digitized text (free) (tw-ref-link-id 259)Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1558)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
661
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
22 December 1986
title · 
A Grand And Heavy Legacy
by · 
Kevin Cook
citation · 
volume 65 • page 86; 93 • column 3; 1
content

"The only strain on Richie is Rick," she says. "I've never seen anything get him down except Rick. They used to go out to play one-on-one, and come home separately. Richie would be so mad. It wasn't fair—Rick is bigger and stronger. He knew everything Richie was going to do, knew his every move. He'd block Richie's shot. It's important to Rick that Richie be as good as he was, but I think Richie needs encouragement. After one of Richie's [Rich Mount] games, immediately Rick will find something negative to say. It's that competitive instinct. Rick's probably right. But I'm a mother, I don't think like that. If I were raising Richie by myself, he would probably play tiddlywinks instead of basketball."

links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1556)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
659
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
27 November 1995
title · 
Tiddlywinks!
subtitle · 
To Squop, or Not to Squop? Winks Wizards on Both Sides of the Pond Face Such Agonizing Dilemmas Every Day
by · 
Mark Wexler
citation · 
edition mail subscription edition only
summary

The rivalry of Larry Kahn and Dave Lockwood

content
Color photograph of Larry Kahn and Dave Lockwood, by Rick Tucker

LARRY KAHN bent over a felt-covered table and contemplated his predicament. “O.K., so I can't pot my nurdled wink,” he said smugly. “I sure as heck won't let you piddle free so you can boondock my red.&rquo;

Standing nearby, Kahn's opponent, Dave Lockwood, was a study inintensity. "Go ahead," he challenged. "I'll gromp the double anyway, and then I'll lunch a blue."

Piddle? Pot? Gromp? Sounds like a debate over bathroom etiquette. But such banter is part of the game when the two superstars of competition tiddlywinks meet in one of the most enduring rivalries in U.S. sporting history. Forget Ali and Frazier, Chamberlain and Russell, Evert and Navratilova. Kahn and Lockwood have been dueling one another since the early 1970s, when they met across a six-foot tiddlywink table as students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Since then the engineers, both of whom now live in the suburbs ofWashington, D.C., have won 70% of the U.S. tiddlywink championships and half of the world titles.

Last month they took their rivalry to a Cleveland mansion for the 1995 U.S. pairs championship. But when they and 20 other"winkers" squared off, the event was overshadowed by another local attraction—something to do with a team called the Indians. "We had hoped the mayor would toss out the first wink," says Lockwood, "but he was busy."

Tiddlywinks is believed to have been invented in 1888 in England, and with its formal rules and strange terms such as "squidger," "nurdle" and "squop," the game seems indelibly British. Joseph Assheton Fincher, a London shop owner, came up with the idea of flipping disks into a cup as a way to keep pub customers happy. Tiddly fever spread like crazy during the1890s. On both sides of the Atlantic, winks parties were the rage. But soon the fad faded, and the game was banished to children's playrooms. Then, in 1955, some Cambridge University students organized the first official tiddlywinks tournament.

Seven years later a winks team from Oxford University toured the U.S., trouncing every American in its path. "We were not going to take it lying down," says Alexandria, Va., engineer RickTucker, another MIT grad and self-appointed tiddlywink historian. In 1966 a group of college students formed the North American Tiddlywinks Association to attract players and perfect the U.S. game. International play began in earnest when the MITteam traveled to England in 1972 and crushed the British champs. "I think the American winkers have more of a killer instinct. Winning seems to matter more to them than to us," says Charles Relle, a Cambridge grad who at 54 may be the world's oldest competitive winker.

In competition tiddlywinks, the best shots are not always those that land in the pot but rather the ones that mess up an opponent's game. These include "squops," with which a player immobilizes his opponent's winks by covering them with his own. "It's a probabilistic decision-theory game," says Lockwood. Say what? "It's like chess, only you have to shoot your piece where ou want it," says Kahn.

Many winks players have science or engineering backgrounds. "The game requires an unusual combination of mental and physical skills," says Relle. Or as Kahn puts it, "In what other game do players take into account the coefficients of friction and Hooke's law?" (The latter is a theory of physics stating that the amount that an elastic body bends out of shape is in direct proportion to the force acting on it.)

Perhaps that's why the competitors in Cleveland didn't look like hulking jocks. Lockwood's partner was Brad Schaefer, a Yale physics professor. Kahn was paired with Tucker, a 23-year winks veteran. As expected, the tournament came down to these teams.

"Dave and I are very good friends, but each of us wants to beat the other more than anything in the world," says Kahn, who has won more titles than any winker ever.

"It's always intriguing when Larry plays Dave—it's like a very skilled boxer against a very hard puncher," says Andy Purvis, a British Royal Society Research Fellow and one of England's top winkers. "Larry wins through skill," adds Tucker, "whereas Dave wins through the force of his will."

On this day Lockwood's will won out, and he breathed a sigh of relief. "At least when you win," he says, "it's easier to go home and rationalize to your wife why you were out again playing tiddlywinks."

National Wildlife editor Mark Wexler admits that he's a klutz when it comes to winking.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1557)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
660
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
31 January 2005
title · 
Fear Factor
by · 
Rick Reilly
citation · 
page 80 • column 2
summary

About Sean O'Hair, professional golf player

content

Golf became what he [golfer Sean O'Hair] did, not who he was, and he started to love the game again. At the second stage of Q school last fall, he birdied the last three holes to make it to the final round, then finished an astonishing fourth to earn his PGA Tour card. He's played two tournaments, including the Buick Invitational last week, and made one cut. Pressure? The Tour is tiddlywinks compared to the pressure he has known.

links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1559)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
662
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
21 April 2008
column title · 
Letters
title · 
Cheer and Loathing
by · 
Douglas Pearson
citation · 
edition online
content

If you consider cheerleading a sport, then I would nominate my favorite pastimes of lefthanded tiddlywinks, modern ballroom dancing and the annual off-terrain Easter egg hunt for similar inclusion.

Douglas Pearson, East Lansing, Mich.

links · 
Sports Illustrated (tw-ref-link-id 1824)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2707
published in · 
Sports Illustrated
date · 
3 July 2014
column title · 
Extra Mustard
title · 
A critical review of the albums released by professional wrestlers
by · 
Luke Winkie
citation · 
edition online
content

Captain Lou Albano – Lou and the Q

Image of the cover to a music album by NRBQ & Captain Lou Albano entitled: "Lou and the Q"

He may not be a household name to modern wrestling fans, but Lou Albano was an ostentatious​ ring staple as a grappler and manager between the '60s and the '90s. In 1985, he teamed up with equally ridiculous band NRBQ to release Lou and the Q, an album which included several long forgotten hits such as "Tiddlywinks Radio Ad" and "Tiddlywinks TV spot." If you dig around enough Florida garage sales, you'll probably find a copy of this record.

links · 
Sports Illustrated – web page (free) (tw-ref-link-id 258)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
664
St. Nicholas (magazine)
An Illustrated Magazine for Young Folks
publisher · 
Mary Mapes Dodge (conducted by); The Century Co. (New York); T. Fisher Unwin (London)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
709

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for St. Nicholas.
published in · 
St. Nicholas
date · 
August 1891
column title · 
The Riddle Box
title · 
Star Puzzle
citation · 
volume 18 • issue 10 • page 807 • column 2
summary

"Tiddledy Winks" is the nom de plume of the puzzle-maker.

content

”TIDDLEDY-WINKS”

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2677
The Stage Yearbook (magazine)
publisher · 
“The Stage” Offices; L. Carson (editor)
location · 
16, York Street, Covent Garden, London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
722

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Stage Yearbook.
published in · 
The Stage Yearbook
date · 
1914
title · 
Modern Scenic Art. In Two Parts.
subtitle · 
Part II: Non-Technical
by · 
Arthur Scott Craven
citation · 
page 24 • column 1
content

Part II. Non-Technical

In connection with our illustrations, it is of interest to note a few details concerning the production of three well-known scenic artists whose names have not been very prominently mentioned in the foregoing discussion on the future of stage mounting.

Mr. Joseph Harker.

“As regards my life, apart from my work, my mistress, ART, is an exacting one, and I have little time for relaxation — an occasional pious evening at tlie Savage Club or the London Sketch Club, of which this year I have the honour to be president; an hour or two snatched occasionally to plunge into my favourite sports — polo, yachting, shove-ha'penny, and hunt-the-slipper. Tiddleywinks, too, once held me in its toils, but it proved too engrossing. But how the memory lives of that glorious night when, after an appalling struggle, I brought home in triumph the Championship Shield of the Tottenham Tiddleywinks Tournament.”

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2708
The Strand Magazine (magazine)
An Illustrated Monthly
publisher · 
George Newnes (editor); George Newnes Ltd. (publisher)
location · 
7 to 12, Southampton Street; Exeter Street, Strand, London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
723

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Strand Magazine.
published in · 
The Strand Magazine
date · 
December 1899
title · 
Gamage's Grand Christmas Bazaar
citation · 
edition Grand Christmas Double Number • volume 18 • issue 108 • page (unnumbered)
content

Chess, Draughts, Dominoes, Billiards, Bagatelle, Table Croquet, German Billiards, Tiddledy Winks, Playing Cards, and Indoor Games of Every Description

A. W. GAMAGE, Ltd., HOLBURN, LONDON, E.C.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2709
The Strand Musical Magazine (magazine)
A Musical Monthly
publisher · 
George Newnes, Limited (publisher); E. Hatzfeld (editor)
location · 
7 to 12, Southampton Street; Exeter Street, Strand, London, London, England, UK
tw-pub-ID · 
724

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Strand Musical Magazine.
published in · 
The Strand Musical Magazine
date · 
July 1896 to December 1896
title · 
Lady Composers
citation · 
volume 4 • issue 10 • page 137 • column 2
content

CAROLINE LOWTHIAN.

Amongst her polkas, “Black and Tan,” “Mother Hubbard,”, and “Tiddledy-Winks” are the most known

notability rating · 
music
tw-ref-ID · 
2710
The Student's Journal (magazine)
Devoted to Graham's Standard Phonography
publisher · 
Andrew J. Graham & Co.
location · 
744 Broadway, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
725

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Student's Journal.
published in · 
The Student's Journal
date · 
January 1896
title · 
“Tiddledywink” Stenographers
citation · 
volume 27 • issue 1 • page 3 to 4 • column 2; 1
content

The impression seems to prevail among some women stenographers that the subject of their occupation is not being treated with proper seriousness. They would like to abandon all discussion of the so-called pretty and frivolous members of their craft and to see the unscrupulous owners of short-term, lightning-method schools handled with "bare knuckles to a finish." That desire is entirely creditable, but unless attention is drawn to the complete stenographic incompetence of the graduates of such schools, how is their deception to be proved and made clear to the public? Investigation will show that nine pupils out of ten who have taken a course of lessons in those institutions belong to the "chewing gum" or "tiddledywink" variety. A great many employers are aware of that fact and refuse to engage a stenographer who, in actual work, is found to be in-competent. One of the best ways, therefore, to discourage and uproot the humbug shorthand colleges of the country is to emphasize the exasperating worthlessness of their graduates.

The "tiddledywink" stenographer, so-called, is, for the most part, a product of the last ten years; and there are several explanations of his and her appearance. One is that in recent years, a hundred, more or less, mongrel "systems" of shorthand writing have sprung up, and the advocates of those methods have tried to outdo each other in an attempt to popularize their respective methods. As a result, schools were started, and those that advertised to teach the art of making pothooks in the shortest time were naturally supposed to have the best systems of shorthand. The victims of those institutions did not discover the fraud until it was too late.

It is curious to find that a majority of the short-term graduates are blissfully ignorant of their own incapacity. If they fail to obtain work or get only low wages, they complain that the shorthand field is overcrowded or that business men have too low an estimation of stenography.

As regards "plug" stenographers, it is fair to say that they have never been underpaid. In their case, no wages are too low. The less pay they receive, the sooner they will be made to see their error and will give their time to other things. And only so far as concerns stenographers of that sort is the shorthand field overcrowded. The managers of employment bureaus declare that there is a constant demand for first-class stenographers, and there are not half enough applicants who can fill the places.

Stenography, as it is practiced by the competent reporter or by the skilful office amanuensis, is not an easy thing to master, and many who once thought differently have lived to change their minds. It would doubtless be a good thing for members of the fraternity who are thoroughly capable and experienced if every stenographer applicant were obliged, before taking a position, to pass a satisfactory examination before a board of shorthand experts.

Time rights all things, and it will probably not be long before the difference between a competent and an incompetent stenographer will be more generally understood. Then good-by to the " tiddledy winks !"—N. Y. Sun, Dec. 8th, 1897.

notes · 
Reprinted from the New York Sun, 8 December 1897.
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2711
Sunset (magazine)
The Pacific Monthly
publisher · 
Woodhead, Field, and Company
location · 
San Francisco, California, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
726

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Sunset.
published in · 
Sunset
date · 
April 1917
title · 
Close-Ups of Home Props
citation · 
volume 38 • issue 3 • page 39 • column 1
content

A cat is likewise concerned with the affections of Fanny Ward. Jack Dean, when asked what Fanny loved next best to him, replied: “O, a sort of fur-bearing cockroach she calls a doc.” That betrayed jealousy for Jack, and when his rival died that very week he was suspected of beingsecretly resigned to the loss. But Fanny came home in a few days with Tiddledy-winks, the cat that has cornered her present affections.

notability rating · 
cat
tw-ref-ID · 
2712
T.P’s Weekly (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
736

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for T.P’s Weekly.
published in · 
T.P’s Weekly
date · 
13 March 1914
title · 
What is Spoof?
citation · 
page 330 • column 2
content

Tiddleywinks. Spoof (turf), deception, swindle, sell. Properly a childish kind of game like “tiddleywinks.” […]It no doubt owes its origin to the game of “spoof,” played on a draught-board with counters, which have to be whisked on the top of the adversary’s own counters by means of a small stick.

A correspondent has asked for the origin and derivation of the word "spoof." The "Oxford Dictionary" has not yet reached spoof or doubtless it would give a satisfactory reply, but it appears to be a fact that current dictionaries, both the respectable and the slang types, do not know the origin of the word. Perhaps the best description is that given in "The Dictionary of Slang, Jargon and Cant," by Barrere and Leland. This I quote, and my readers may be able to give further information. As was to be expected, examples come from the sporting pross.

Tiddley winks.

Spoof (turf), deception, swindle, sell. Properly a childish kind of game like "tiddley winks."

Next day 1 put all my oof
On to Gold (sixteen to one),
And now I hear the cry of "spoof,"
The race is o'er, and he's not won.

"Bird o' Freedom."

"Spoof" has been defined by Sir P. Colquhoun as "an unintelligible shibboleth, invented to indicate an idiotic game—a sell. Exactly as 'the loud laugh proclaims the empty mind' so to be an adopt in the spoof cult indicates, as the first qualification for that dubious distinction, softening of the brain." It no doubt owes its origin to the game of "spoof," played on a draught-board with counters, which have to be whisked on the top of the adversary's own counters by means of a small stick. It has been suggested, however, that "'spoof' is from provincial English spoffle, to busy oneself overmuch about a matter of small consequence, to rage over a trifle, as 'a great cry and little wool,' i.e., a cheat or sell. Hence disappointment, deceit" :—

Love lie used to think, I've said before, a riddle;
To-daly he says the mot d'enigme is oof, And that lovers play a very second fiddle
To markers at the noble gambe of spoof.

"Sporting Times."

'Tis oh! to be the people's "pug"
Who is paid at halls to spar,
Who's a lovely, unscratched, scarless mug,
Who lives like a La-de-da!
Big battles he fights which are always drawn,
But draw much golden oof,
He boasts of his biceps and "Boston" brawn,
'Tis oh! for the game of spoof.

"Bird o' Freedom."

Journalistic Spoof

An example of journalistic "spoof" from the "Referee " runs :—

The alligators and crocodile are just in the prime of life at 100. There are parrots in the gardens who are seventy-five years, and still cheerful, and the swan begins to think about putting away youthful follies at 200. I hope the keeper who told me all this knows that it is wicked to play spoof on Sunday. I believed all he told me, and kept saying "Really," in such a sweetly innocent way that lie may have been tempted to put the pot on.

In addition to the noun there is the verb "to spoof," which also is associated with the turf :—

"T," said Uie wicked nobleman, having previously arranged to spoof the crowd with the word taint."—"Sporting Times."

His railway carriage he will choose and pick
Till he spots a likely lot
To royally spoof at the three card trick,
And to lift of a cosy "pot."
And he patters the while of mysterious tips
And dollars he cops for "stable" snips.

"Bird o' Freedom."

To-day "spoof" has a wider application and "spoofed " is synonymous with gulled, whether on the racecourse, in business or private life.

notability rating · 
potentially interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2731
The Table Tennis Collector (magazine)
Journal of the Table Tennis Collectors’ Society
publisher · 
Chuck Hoey (editor)
associated with · 
International Table Tennis Federation
tw-pub-ID · 
727

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Table Tennis Collector.
published in · 
The Table Tennis Collector
date · 
Summer 2007
title · 
Collectibles from the Early Era… As Seen through U.S. Newspapers of the Day
subtitle · 
Part II: Choose Your Weapons
by · 
Steve Grant
citation · 
whole 45 • page 6 • column 1
content

In Part I of our journey through U.S. newspaper archives, in the last issue, we explored the pre-1901 era, when equipment such as dice, disks, cards, tennis balls, or tiddledy-winks delivered lawn tennis version to the parlor with limited success.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2714
published in · 
The Table Tennis Collector
date · 
August 2012
title · 
1888 Patents for Table Games
by · 
Alan Duke
citation · 
whole 65 • page 21 • column 1 to 2
content

And finally from that year (also on the 22 December), Harold Charles Wilson (Gentleman from Norfolk) and Alice Constance Inverarity Margary (Spinster of Tunbridge Wells) submitted Application No. 18,789 for “A modification of Lawn Tennis Forming an Indoor Game”.

This is an example of the tiddledy winks type mentioned by Chuck [Hoey] (TTC 63). The aim was to flip the ‘ball’ over the net in the correct court marked out ‘to scale with an ordinary lawn court’. “Flitterkins” was registered as a Trade Mark (91920) by John Jaques on 31 July 1889.

Photograph of THE NEW GAME of “Flitterkins.” Trade Mark. By Letters Patent. Published by J. Jaques & Son. London.

Although it turned out that none of these Patents were for table tennis as we know it, their importance lies in their existence as examples of the many ideas proposed in attempting to transfer lawn tennis indoors. They illustrate that it took just that little extra flash of inspiration to arrive at a table version played in a similar manner to the parent game. Whilst these finds take their position in the historical development of such games, it still leaves David Foster as the first known Applicant for a Complete Patent for the game that we still play and enjoy today.

(With grateful thanks to Michael Thomson for the photo of the ‘Flitterkins’ box lid.)

collection · 
digital PDF (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2715
Table Tennis History Journal (journal)
Excellent Research for Historians, Collectors and All Lovers of Our Great Sport
publisher · 
Chuck Hoey (editor, publisher)
associated with · 
International Table Tennis Federation
tw-pub-ID · 
728

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Table Tennis History Journal.
published in · 
Table Tennis History Journal
date · 
June 2019
title · 
"Read All About It"—Part 5 (Early January 1902)
citation · 
whole 88 • page 53 • column 1 to 2
summary

Reprints of articles about table tennis from early 1902.

content

The Globe 10 January 1902

“THE ISLANDERS.”

Sir,––As a patriot and a Briton, I have been deeply interested in the accounts given in the papers of a recent meeting of the presidents of various clubs established in the more intelligent of our suburbs to promote the national game of Ping-Pong. While fully sympathising with the objects of that meeting, I would ask your permission to recall to the minds of your maturer readers the names of two games notable in their day, the revival of which appears to me to be especially appropriate at the present time, when all the energies of our country are required to meet a distant war and nearer trade crises. I refer to “Tiddlywinks” and “Flitterkins,” names which must bring a flutter to the hearts of many now, alas, no longer young, and which, at this stage, require no detailed description. The first was termed by a then living philosopher “the game that has made England what she is,” and the second is like unto it. These noble, and I trust again to become national games, may not, perhaps, be termed athletic, but they demand tact, patience, and temper, all points that tend to the making of a nation. The sympathetic manner in which you are treating the subject of Ping-Pong in your admirable paper must be my excuse for addressing you on this occasion. Your obedient servant,

January 7.

T. Tabes

collection · 
digital PDF (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2713
Teachers College Record (journal)
tw-pub-ID · 
729

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Teachers College Record.
published in · 
Teachers College Record
date · 
May 1904
title · 
The Playroom at the Speyer School
by · 
Laura E. McDowell
citation · 
volume 5 • issue 3 • page 64 • column 1
content

Of the games suitable for children from six to ten there may be found a considerable number. Some of these appeal especially to the imagination, some have only a few simple rules,others test more the physical powers. Under the sliced animals and picture blocks; under the second are anagrams, lotto, snap, and the flag games; and under the third, jackstraws, ring toss, faba baga, fish pond, and tiddledy winks. These are the different types of games that the majority of children who come to the playroom would enjoy.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2716
Themis of Zeta Tau Alpha Fraternity (magazine)
associated with · 
Zeta Tau Alpha
location · 
Menasha, Wisconsin, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
336

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Themis of Zeta Tau Alpha Fraternity.
published in · 
Themis of Zeta Tau Alpha Fraternity
date · 
22 March 1922
title · 
Three Books
by · 
Marguerite P. Fisher
citation · 
volume 20 • issue 3 • page 166 • column 1
content

In Erik Dorn we have the triumph of verbosity. Here is a great style run amuck. Where the author forgets to make brilliant phrases, he treats his reader to a page or two of limpid writing. At first we delight in such as these:—"Politics—a deformity of the imagination; a game of tiddledy winks played with guns and souls," and "I've been long convinced that intrigue is nothing more than fantastic imbecilities unimaginative men palm off on one another for cleverness."

collection · 
digitized PDF (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
1429
Tiddlywinks and Marbles Player (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
730

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Tiddlywinks and Marbles Player.
published in · 
Tiddlywinks and Marbles Player
date · 
May 1964
title · 
1964 Tiddly Winks Tournament
by · 
Daniel Wickes
citation · 
whole 186
summary

Picture story and full report is on pages 22-38

content
Photograph of adults playing on a table without a mat.

Tiddlywinks and Marbles Player magazine has brought joy and information to people of all ages for many years now.

tw-ref-ID · 
2717
Time (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
website · 
tw-pub-ID · 
212

Toggle showing 31 tiddlywinks references for Time.
published in · 
Time
date · 
14 May 1928
column title · 
The Press
title · 
In Iowa
citation · 
volume 11 • issue 20 • page 26 • column 1
summary

About publisher John Cowles (coincidentally a cosigner of Harvard Crimson 1919 letter)

content

The smart set of Des Moines (pop. 148,900), biggest city in Iowa, often amuse themselves with a parlor game: a modern variation of famed tiddle-dy-winks. An ashtray is placed on the floor. The players (any number from two to eight), equipped with dimes and quarters, squat. In turn, they use their quarters to try to flick their dimes into the ashtray in a graceful arc. It is a game requiring firm thumbs, keen eyes. It was invented by that skillful player, John Cowles, 29, who is to Des Moines what a dynamo is to a powerhouse.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA); photocopy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 303)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1572)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
678
published in · 
Time
date · 
15 February 1932
column title · 
International
title · 
Arms for Disarmament
citation · 
volume 19 • issue 7 • page 21 • column 3
content

Only 20 of the 57 participating delegates [to the Geneva Conference] were found to hold plenary powers from their governments. This meant that they might as well be at home playing tiddlywinks.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 304)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 335)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
679
published in · 
Time
date · 
6 March 1933
column title · 
Theatre
title · 
New Plays in Manhattan: Mar. 6, 1933
citation · 
volume 21 • issue 10 • page 29 • column 1
content

Hangman's Whip (by Norman Reilly Raine & Frank Butler; William A. Brady Jr., producer). [...] For 30 years, with whip and gun, Cockney Trader Prin (portly Montague Love, who muscles people around with his stomach) has put the fear o' hell into the natives living far up an African river. He has also broken most of the white assistants that have served under him for, as he says, "I ain't run this river playing tiddly-winks."

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 334)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
680
published in · 
Time
date · 
15 June 1936
column title · 
Books
title · 
Sesquipedalian
citation · 
volume 27 • issue 24 • page 75 • column 1
summary

Book review of This Way to the Big Show: The Life of Dexter Fellows by Dexter W. Fellows and Andrew A. Freeman

content

Mother gorillas in equatorial Africa speak his name to hush their young. He has crossed Australia in the pouch of a kangaroo. He has followed the edge of the Gulf Stream in a rowboat to determine the exact date of spring. He [Dexter Williams Fellows] has taught Ubangi women to play tiddlywinks on their platter lips. He owns an adjective factory in New Britain, Conn., whence he sallies forth each year, like a vernal Santa Claus, to scatter his sesquipedalian largess to thirstily gaping yokels. These and hundreds of such amiable Munchausenisms have been printed in the U. S. Press about Dexter William Fellows.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 336)Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1573)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
681
published in · 
Time
date · 
1 January 1940
column title · 
Political Notes
title · 
1940
citation · 
volume 35 • issue 1 • page 11 • column 2
content

The work of administering his Federal Security Administration last week took Paul Vories McNutt into New Jersey, for a luncheon at Newark with bankers, corporation officers, and politicos of both parties. The tall "Orchid Man" said the visit had no political significance, but "we weren't playing tiddlywinks."

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 307)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 337)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
682
published in · 
Time
date · 
23 June 1941
column title · 
National Defense
title · 
ARMY: Girls for Our Boys
citation · 
volume 37 • issue 25 • page 21 • column 3
content

Who should visit Camp Joseph T. Robinson, Ark. but rotund Elsa Maxwell, professional party-liner for café society. Last week, interviewed by the New York World-Telegram, Miss Maxwell had some unexpectedly shrewd observations to make about the U.S. Army's morale. Said she:

"……You can't relegate them to the nursery or 1918. The pace has changed. These men are not going to stand for… rationed entertainment. It's the bunk to them. Tiddlywinks is no substitute for a girl.…"

"I asked them what they wanted in the way of entertainment. They said, 'We'd like girls. Why shouldn't we? It's perfectly human. . . . We want to take her to a movie, or dancing, or maybe just walk her up and down Main Street and buy her an ice-cream cone. . . .' "

The Maxwell Plan for the U.S.: let girls' colleges, women's clubs, Junior Leagues arrange blind dates for the boys. "It would be my idea to write the girls' telephone numbers down on slips of paper and let the boys draw them from hats. Have it done entirely with the cognizance of the parents."

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 341)Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1575)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
684
published in · 
Time
date · 
1 September 1941
column title · 
Sport
title · 
Tiddlygolf
citation · 
volume 38 • issue 9 • page 59; 60 • column 1; 1
content

If the accident rate rises in suburban U.S. communities this fall because citizens are hit by flying sticks, insurance companies can blame a game called Kangaroo Golf. Invented and patented by internationally famed Composer-Organist Pietro Yon, virtuoso at Manhattan's St. Patrick's Cathedral, it has the same object as golf and can be set up in any good-sized yard (see cut).

In the game, wooden pegs (kangaroos) are used instead of balls and they are driven from a portable, slope-topped wooden tee—the projecting end of the kangaroo is struck with a sharp downward chop to send it jumping as in tiddlywinks.

Black and white graphic in three parts: 1) a kneeling man holding a bat in the air to strike a target to propel it, with a hole number marker nearby; 2) a house, lawn, and driveway with a golf course laid out with hole number markers, with dashed lines between the holes; and 3) a photograph of Pietro Yon sitting at an organ.

KANGAROO GOLFER, COURSE AND INVENTOR YON

Turtles are carried in the pouch.

Composer Yon, who thought up the game five years ago while summering in his native Italian Alps, has shot 9 holes in 19, claims to be world's champion by virtue of victories over such experts as Cinemactor Roland Young, Tenor Giovanni Martinelli, various members of the Italian royal family.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 338)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 339)Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1574)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
683
published in · 
Time
date · 
12 July 1943
column title · 
Army & Navy
title · 
AIR: Sascha's Show
citation · 
volume 42 • issue 2 • page 63 • column 2
content

In Hollywood last summer Walt Disney, restless creator of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and many another cinanimal, was playing mental tiddlywinks with the idea of putting together a monthly animated-cartoon digest.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 340)Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1576)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
685
published in · 
Time
date · 
3 January 1944
tw-ref-ID · 
706
published in · 
Time
date · 
8 November 1948
column title · 
Education
title · 
The Eternal Apprentice
citation · 
volume 52 • issue 19 • page 72 • column 3
content

With a Stetson on his head and a bar of chocolate in his pocket, [Jay] Oppenheimer liked to ride his horse Chico 40 rugged miles in a day, exploring the Sangre de Cristo Mountains up to the peaks. In the evenings, he would nibble on canned artichoke hearts, drink fine Kirschwasser, and read Baudelaire by the light of an oil lamp. He invented an abstruse variety of tiddlywinks, played on the geometric designs of a Mexican rug.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 311)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 342)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
686
published in · 
Time
date · 
10 March 1958
column title · 
People
citation · 
volume 71 • issue 10 • page 34 • column 3
content

To British film leaders, alarmed over the advance of TV, Prince Philip brought soothing words. Said he at a dinner of the British Film Academy: "I don't think books have suffered much from magazine competition. I don't see why films, which are, after all, animated books, should suffer from television, which is simply an animated magazine." Later in an arduous week, the Prince [Philip] scratched himself from a tiddlywinks joust to which he had been challenged by the Cambridge University team. He said with regret that he would have liked to lead his team, the Goons, but "unfortunately, while practicing secretly, I pulled an important muscle in the second or tiddly joint of my winking finger. Wink up. fiddle the game, and may the Goon side win.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 312)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 343)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
687
published in · 
Time
date · 
14 September 1962
column title · 
Sport
title · 
Winking In
citation · 
volume 80 • issue 11 • page 56; 61 • column 2; 1
summary

Oxford's tour of across the United States playing tiddlywinks matches, sponsored by Guinness.

content

For the visiting British players, the U.S. tour was a ruddy marvel. The five-week campaign carried them from the towers of Manhattan to the arch of the Golden Gate, from the green hills of Stratford, Conn., to the quiet lanes of Philadelphia. They gamely took on all comers, from the New York Giants to a pickup squad of actors and writers at the Bucks County (Pa.) Playhouse Inn. The result after a dozen matches: a dozen triumphs for the Britons. "It appears," said British Team Captain Peter Freeman with sovereign contempt, "that America's best players are only slightly superior to America's worst."

British Stratagems. It may also be that U.S. players are not yet attuned to tiddlywinks. As the British see it, the game is played under two sets of rules&—children's and international. Yankee players, when they are able to recall the game at all, play only children's rules, thereby missing the delicate stratagems that color international play. In understanding the international version, two specialized verbs are crucial: to "squidge" is to press a small wink with a large one (the squidger), sending it flipping through the air toward the target cup at the center of the table; to "squop" is to squidge a wink onto an opponent's wink, thereby temporarily retiring the enemy wink from play.

Black and white photograph of a hand at right holding a squidger on a wink with the pot nearby, and a hand with a white shirt and dark sleeve at left. No faces are shown. Photograph by Frederick A. Meyer.
SQUIDGER DESQUOPPING. Terrific tension, unbearable pressure.

A squopped wink cannot be squidged again until it is de-squopped, either by the original squopper or by a squopped player's partner who manages to squidge a third wink atop the second and spill the squopper off.

U.S. players usually manage to recall squidging techniques from their childhood days. But the squop shot is entirely new to them, and on the tour the usual death knell to a strong U.S. squidging attack was the glad British cry, "Well squopped!" The English winkers — Freeman. 23, Philip Moore, 21, David Willis, 23, and Eliza beth King, 22 — found most U.S. opposition easy, but the easiest was the team of New York Giants, including Offensive Tackle Roosevelt Brown and Halfback Bob Gaiters. The match was defaulted by the Giants. "We apparently were too frightening in our warmup." said Free man. "Brown would have been putty in my hands."

Shockingly Superior. The most arduous contest was a six-hour winkathon in San Francisco, in which seven U.S. teams were shut out in quick succession. The touring Britons dashed off a challenge to President Kennedy, asking him to field a team. Back came a meek refusal from Football Coach Bud Wilkinson, the President's consultant on physical fitness: "This challenge is appreciated, but it would be most difficult to assemble here a pickup team that would offer any challenge at all to such a redoubtable group as yours." Last week, when the British winkers met the likes of S. J. Perelman and Stage Director-Producer Mike Ellis in Bucks County, there was a hint of opposition. Perelman lost with a debonair, hand-in-pocket flair; Ellis' keen squidging eye and steady wrist made him one of the few Yanks who avoided a shutout.

Good as they looked in the U.S.. the British visitors are not champions back home. Playing for the Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society (the OUTS), they won the Prince Philip Silver Wink Tournament last spring, but lost to Bristol in the All-England Tiddlywinks Open. The loss, Freeman explains unwinkingly, was outrageous: "It was merely because we were so shockingly superior that we were inevitably shockingly overconfident."

But it is not whether you win or lose. The game itself is a national asset, says Freeman. "There is an enormous amount of physical strain on wrists and elbows and to the squidging fingers. There is terrific mental pressure and unbearable tension. The game provides excellent mental conditioning. Had the Empire been built on tiddly winks, perhaps we would never have lost it."

collection · 
original (NATwA); digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 313)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1577)Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 2051)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 2052)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
688
published in · 
Time
date · 
8 January 1965
column title · 
Cinema
title · 
Game Night
citation · 
volume 85 • issue 2 • page 54 • column 1
content

Rattle of a Simple Man. "Have ye got a dartboard?" asks the scoutmaster from Manchester. There are no tiddlywinks at hand, and the London prostitute with whom he is spending the night to win a £50 bet on his virility has grown weary of ticktacktoe. "You're not oldfashioned, darling," she coos at last. "You're unbelievable."

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 344)Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1578)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
689
published in · 
Time
date · 
12 March 1965
column title · 
The World
title · 
Bechuanaland: Walking the Tightrope
citation · 
volume 85 • issue 11 • page 29 • column 1
content

Cynics called it "the tiddlywinks poll," but when all the cardboard disks were counted last week, Bechuanaland had wisely and overwhelmingly elected as its first Prime Minister an African leader with just the right qualifications: moderation, modesty and multiracial understanding.

"The Black Englishman." The man who won at tiddlywinks is Seretse Khama, 43, a tall, bearded Oxonian who 16 years ago threw away his right to the paramount chieftainship of the powerful Bamangwato tribe to marry an English girl.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 315)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 345)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
690
published in · 
Time
date · 
14 July 1967
column title · 
Sport
title · 
ROWING: Parker's Pachyderms
citation · 
volume 90 • issue 2 • page 50 • column 1
summary

A brief mention.

content

Harvard University has not fielded a national championship team in football since 1919. It has never won even an Ivy League title in basketball, and its tiddlywinks team is 0-for-one against Oxford. So the record of the Crimson crew is somewhat irregular. No college crew has beaten Harvard's varsity in more than four years, and nobody at all has beaten this year's crew.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 346)Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1579)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
691
published in · 
Time
date · 
2 May 1977
title · 
Show Business: A Messy Fight for the Final Cut
citation · 
volume 109 • issue 18 • page 70 • column 1
content

After making Last Tango in Paris back in 1973, Italian Director Bernardo Bertolucci was prosecuted for obscenity, buffeted by public controversy and caught in a crossfire of critical overkill —pans on one side, panegyrics on the other. But at least he got his movie into the theaters.

Now Bertolucci, 36, has come in with 1900, one of the most eagerly awaited films of recent years, and already his troubles over Last Tango look like tiddlywinks. The new picture is a year late, $5 million over budget, and—with a running time of five hours, ten minutes —a full two hours beyond the contractual limit.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 328)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 347)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
703
published in · 
Time
date · 
15 August 1977
column title · 
The Presidency
title · 
L.B.J.: The Softer They Fall
by · 
Hugh Sidey
citation · 
volume 110 • issue 7 • page 10 • column 2
content

Horace Busby, who was Johnson's press secretary then, remembered that the Stevenson folks rushed out and found Judge T. Whitfield ("Tiddlywinks") Davidson at a fishing hole and got him to issue an order holding up certification of the primary winner. Lyndon's forces went on up to Justice Black, who did not like Johnson but overruled Tiddlywinks' order just the same.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 317)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 348)
notability rating · 
not tiddlywinks game
tw-ref-ID · 
692
published in · 
Time
date · 
8 January 1979
column title · 
Nation
title · 
Nation: Why Moscow Stalled SALT
citation · 
volume 113 • issue 2 • page 21 • column 1
content

Says one Administration official: "Compared with SALT II, passing the Panama Panal treaties was playing tiddlywinks."

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 318)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 349)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
693
published in · 
Time
date · 
21 April 1980
column title · 
Show Business and Television
title · 
Arfs Gratia Arfis
citation · 
volume 115 • issue 16 • page 36 • column 2
content

According to a survey by Dancer Fitzgerald Sample Inc., a Manhattan ad agency, just about every sport except tiddlywinks has a shot at a fall spot [as a television show]

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 319)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 351)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
694
published in · 
Time
date · 
28 September 1981
column title · 
Law
title · 
We, the Jury, Find the…
by · 
Otto Friedrich, Evan Thomas
citation · 
volume 118 • issue 13 • page 48 • column 3
content

Three jurors adamantly held out for conviction. Says Yurack: "The rest of us could have gone home and played tiddly winks." On the eighth day, the jury gave up.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 320)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 350)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
695
published in · 
Time
date · 
9 March 1987
title · 
Sport: Par Cut Off at the Knees
by · 
Tom Callahan
citation · 
volume 129 • issue 10 • page 72 • column 3
content

Almost no amateur golfers play by the rules. They have come to an accommodation with themselves and one another to bump the ball in the fairways or nonchalant it on the greens. The game most of them play combines croquet with tiddledywinks.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 322)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 352)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
698
published in · 
Time
date · 
23 April 1990
column title · 
Grapevine
title · 
To Which George Do You Wish to Speak?
by · 
Paul Gray
citation · 
volume 135 • issue 17 • page 21 • column 2
summary

George Plimpton visting George Bush and playing tiddlywinks

content

Author, gadfly and bon vivant George Plimpton found his recent weekend with George Bush at Camp David strenuous. Among the activities: bowling, tiddlywinks, horseshoes (a presidential triumph), skeet shooting and wally ball (a version of volleyball played on a handball court). Plimpton was surprised that there were no interruptions or calls all weekend—until their tennis game. "He threw the ball up to serve and the phone rang—a very odd thing to hear in a forest." The Commander in Chief strode over, picked it up, listened for a moment, and looked at Plimpton. "It's for you," he said.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 325)Time magazine – digitized image (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 353)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
696
published in · 
Time
date · 
30 July 1990
title · 
Los Angeles: Uncovering the Manhole Men
citation · 
volume 116 • issue 4
content

The disappearance of 300 manhole covers weighing as much as 300 lbs. each over the past three weeks had Los Angeles police mystified. It seemed unlikely that tourists were swiping them as souvenirs or that many people could easily use them as tiddledywinks or Frisbees.

links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1581)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
697
published in · 
Time
date · 
4 April 2001
title · 
Why I'm 'Postal' Over the Prospect of No Saturday Delivery
by · 
Jessica Reaves
citation · 
edition online
content

This time, the Postal Service may have gone too far.

Citing ballooning costs and slowing business, the USPS board is considering a truly dire cost-cutting measure: The elimination of Saturday mail delivery.

That's right — try to imagine no more mail on Saturday. Your five-year-old's much-anticipated birthday greetings don't arrive on Friday, and her birthday is on Saturday. Tough tiddlywinks. You'll wait until Monday and you'll like it. Waiting for a paycheck on Saturday? Sorry.

links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 323)
notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
699
published in · 
Time
date · 
24 January 2005
title · 
The Great Game
by · 
Michael Schuman
citation · 
edition online
content

I've lost my nerve, and I'm not even gambling. The VIP room at the new Sands casino in Macau isn't for anyone with a weak stomach or a tight wallet, and I, unfortunately, have both. I'd need to put down $62,500 up front just to get a seat at one of the baccarat tables, and then ante up a minimum $1,250 for each hand. Yet at one table half a dozen Chinese tourists are tossing chips like they're playing tiddlywinks, while at another a Japanese man smokes a long cigarette and serenely studies his cards. I feel my blood pressure rising just watching them. For me, this is a rare glimpse into the exclusive realm of high rollers and high stakes, a world of expensive wines, private masseuses, and gourmet steaks. Here in Macau, excess is a 24-hour industry. The superrich get whatever they want, whenever they want it—palatial suites with steam rooms, karaoke machines, Jacuzzis, massage tables, plasma TVs and personal butlers. But don't even think of booking a room. The Sands invites only its highest high rollers to stay—and gives them use of the suites for free.

links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 329)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
704
published in · 
Time
date · 
31 January 2005
title · 
The Great Game
by · 
Michael Schuman
content

I've lost my nerve, and I'm not even gambling. The VIP room at the new Sands casino in Macau isn't for anyone with a weak stomach or a tight wallet, and I, unfortunately, have both. I'd need to put down $62,500 up front just to get a seat at one of the baccarat tables, and then ante up a minimum $1,250 for each hand. Yet at one table half a dozen Chinese tourists are tossing chips like they're playing tiddlywinks, while at another a Japanese man smokes a long cigarette and serenely studies his cards. I feel my blood pressure rising just watching them. For me, this is a rare glimpse into the exclusive realm of high rollers and high stakes, a world of expensive wines, private masseuses, and gourmet steaks. Here in Macau, excess is a 24-hour industry. The superrich get whatever they want, whenever they want it—palatial suites with steam rooms, karaoke machines, Jacuzzis, massage tables, plasma TVs and personal butlers. But don't even think of booking a room. The Sands invites only its highest high rollers to stay—and gives them use of the suites for free.

links · 
Time magazine – digitized text (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1835)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2719
published in · 
Time
date · 
18 December 2007
column title · 
The Morning After
title · 
Mrs. Tuned In Calls It
by · 
James Poniewozik
content

Speaking of cruel judges, what did Mrs. Tuned In have to say about the contestants? She was so-so on Team Shelton and Team Lachey, slightly more positive on Team Rowland: “They didn’t sing a lot of harmony. A lot of unison. Which actually made them sound more amateurish, in a good way.” She gives the first night nod to Team LaBelle: “That was the only one that resembled a choir.” But Team Bolton, pack your bags: comments ranged from “This isn’t really choir music”–it was basically a lead vocal with backup singers–to “They really blew.”

Tough? Maybe. But this ain’t tiddlywinks, baby. This is choir.

links · 
Time magazine – web page (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1836)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2720
published in · 
Time
date · 
26 October 2008
column title · 
Miscellany
title · 
Top 10 Fringe World Titles
subtitle · 
6 of 11 - Tiddlywinks
citation · 
edition online
content

Tiddlyinks [sic correct=tiddlywinks] is played with either two or four people (singles or pairs). The winks—small button-sized disk—come in four colors: blue, red, green and yellow. Each color has six winks, and the goal is to get them into a pot by flipping them with a “squidger” (a slightly larger wink). A player who gets all six of his or her winks in the pot wins by “potting out.” The rest of the winks are scored with a series of rules that are too elaborate to explain here.

The best part of tiddlywinks is the terminology: to “squidge” is to press a small wink with the squidger. “Squop” is to land your wink on top of your opponent’s. Then there’s a boondock (to squop a wink from far away); a scrunge (when your wink bounces out of the pot) and something called the John Lennon Memorial Shot (a boondock and squop combo move, very difficult to pull off).

The game dates back to the Victorian era, but competitive tiddlywinks didn’t start until 1955. A group of Cambridge University students took up the game, believing it was one of the few sports they knew their school could win. By the 1960s, tiddlywinks clubs had sprouted up at dozens of British universities. The sport is now overseen by the English Tiddlywinks Association (ETA), which organizes a series of regional, national and international competitions.

The pasttime reached America in 1962, when a group of Oxford students traveled around the U.S., challenging everyone from the New York Yankees to local theater troupes to a game. The first world championships were held in 1973. Oddly enough, the Americans dominated the sport for the first 22 matches.

collection · 
digital webpage copy (NATwA)
links · 
Time magazine – web page (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1582)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
700
published in · 
Time
date · 
17 February 2011
title · 
Watson vs. the Humans, Night Three: GUI Defeats Human!
by · 
James Poniewozik
citation · 
edition online
content

In other words, Jeopardy looks like a trivia competition. But in reality, it’s thumb-wrestling for smart people. Tiddlywinks with a trivia component. That’s easy enough to ignore when you’re playing along at home and it’s human against human. But Watson made it too obvious.

links · 
Time magazine – web page (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1587)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
705
published in · 
Time
date · 
8 May 2013
title · 
Syria: Intervention Will Only Make it Worse
subtitle · 
The various schemes that have been proposed for a kind of tiddlywinks intervention from around the edges of the conflict—no-fly zones, bombing Damascus and so forth—would simply make the situation worse.
by · 
Zbigniew Brzezinski
citation · 
edition online
content

The various schemes that have been proposed for a kind of tiddlywinks intervention from around the edges of the conflict—no-fly zones, bombing Damascus and so forth—would simply make the situation worse. None of the proposals would result in an outcome strategically beneficial for the U.S. On the contrary, they would produce a more complex, undefined slide into the worst-case scenario. The only solution is to seek Russia’s and China’s support for U.N.-sponsored elections in which, with luck, Assad might be “persuaded” not to participate.

links · 
Time magazine – web page (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1584)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
702
published in · 
Time
date · 
3 June 2015
column title · 
Politics
title · 
Morning Must Reads: June 3
by · 
Zeke J. Miller
citation · 
edition online
content

“It’s kind of hard to imagine that my good friend, Marco, would be critical of his good friend, Jeb … This isn’t Tiddlywinks we’re playing.”—A sarcastic Bush to reporters on the likelihood of “sharp elbows” being thrown by Rubio

links · 
Time magazine – web page (subscription) (tw-ref-link-id 1583)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
701
TImes Educational Supplement (magazine)
alternate name · 
TES
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
731

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for TImes Educational Supplement.
published in · 
TImes Educational Supplement
date · 
19 May 1995
column title · 
Diary
by · 
Carborundum
summary

About winker Peter Downes.

content

Dark secrets are emerging about the past of Peter Downes, president of the Secondary Heads Association and a man who hitherto has appeared to lead an entirely blameless life. His vice? Using his squidger to viciously squop his opponents.

Perhaps we should explain. It has come to light that, while a student at Cambridge back in the 1950s, Mr Downes was a leading light in the university’s victorious Tiddlywinks team. Did we say victorious? So accurate was this lot’s squopping that they awarded themselves quarter-Blues on the strength of their performance.

In the innocent world of the 1950s, these champions were accorded some status and publicity - although it is not recorded whether John Major followed the team's progress with any great interest from his Brixton hideaway. And thus it came to pass that the undergraduate upstarts challenged Prince Philip to a match after he made some rude remarks about this new sporting craze. He declined, but put forward The Goons in his place for a match in aid of his favourite charity - ironically, enough the National Playing-Fields Association. And so it came to pass that in 1958 Spike Milligan, Harry Secombe, Michael Bentine and Peter Sellers were smuggled past the crowds and through a secret passage into the Cambridge Guildhall for the match of the decade.

"It was widely covered on television and radio, with live commentary from Brian Johnston. And we were on Sportsnight," recalls Mr Downes cheerfully.

"The Goons played in nighties over their clothes, and they kept doing the voices like Bluebottle. Harry Secombe sang an anthem specially written for the occasion. The tickets were sold out weeks in advance and forgeries were in circulation. The media interest was astonishing." Such was the nature of stardom in those days, however, that the comedians' method of transport (they had busy lives) was a Fisons' Pest Control helicopter. Mr Downes took retirement at the ancient age of 23, but still takes a keen interest in the game, which he describes as "very complicated". Which may explain his interest in the arcane world of local authority and school finance.

"It's not just a question of getting the wink in the cup with your squidger, you also have squopping [putting an opponent's wink out of action]. You need the dexterity of a snooker player, and the brain of a chess player, which makes it a good all-round game in which strategy is very important," he explains.

So exactly what is a player called? Mr Downes adds, hurriedly: "We say tiddlywinker rather than winker. It's less open to misunderstanding."

Still, is it better to be a Winker or a Winkler? Derek Norcross, the chairman of the education committee in East Sussex, is a member of the Hastings-based charity organisation, the Winkle Club. Members must carry a shell at all time, and must show the same on the challenge "Up Winkle". Apparently the late great Sir Winston Churchill was also a member, but Carborundum doubts whether anyone dared ask to see his winkle.

As the country's children sit their national tests this week, parents and schools up and down the country are no doubt referring to said papers as SATs - just like the American Scholastic Aptitude Tests. Unusually among acronyms, this trips off the tongue and is descriptive and easy to remember. So easy that the School Curriculum and Assessment Authority has been forbidden from using it.

Apparently, the frighteners were put on in the form of a stern lawyer's letter from the firm in Princeton which has trademarked both the test and the name. Only by extreme grovelling was it agreed that no action would be taken over the historic use of the acronym, but SCAA had to promise - practically in blood - that it would never be uttered again. And now we've done it. Oops.

Not content with inflicting national tests upon us, SCAA seems determined to foist new Americanese jargon on a wary world. To coin a confusing metaphor, Carborundum hopes that by giving the latest the oxygen of publicity we might somehow suffocate it at birth.

Appropriately enough in this week of SATs - oops, national tests - the new word is levelness, and appears to have been coined deep in the Notting Hill Gate bowels of SCAA - the same august body charged with removing the linguistic excrescences of the nation's youth.

We consulted an insider to find out what it means. Muttering about bureaucracy, he sighs: "Well, it's nothing to do with levellers. It's a shorthand way of describing the concept that teachers will look at the child in front of them, and its work, and in a flourish of inspiration would intuitively and immediately see the levelness which was being presented. It's looking across the whole range of a child's performance. It's a noun. It's a quiddity. It's an expression of quality."

Any course whose title concludes in the word "studies" is suspect as far as Carborundum is concerned, so we're delighted to come across this succinct definition of management studies, provided by George Bain of the London Business School: "Casting false pearls before real swine."

With Gillian Shephard's long-promised assault on estuarine English still apparently waiting to be unleashed on a breathless world, the Diary thoroughly enjoyed the following remark as two University College London finals students emerged, exhausted, from an examination: "Gawd, did you see all them bleedin' questions on Proust? I never done him."

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2721
Town & Country (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
732

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Town & Country.
published in · 
Town & Country
date · 
December 1978
title · 
Monopoly's Parker Brothers
by · 
Patricia Linden
citation · 
page 68
content
The Gay Nineties was the era of Tiddley Winks and its Parker spinoffs.
collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2722
Toy Novelties (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
734

Toggle showing 6 tiddlywinks references for Toy Novelties.
published in · 
Toy Novelties
date · 
1944 to 1945
citation · 
volume 24th • page 187
summary

Annual directory listing manufacturers.

tw-ref-ID · 
2723
published in · 
Toy Novelties
date · 
1947
citation · 
page 299
summary

Annual directory listing manufacturers.

tw-ref-ID · 
2724
published in · 
Toy Novelties
date · 
1959
citation · 
page 303
summary

Annual directory listing manufacturers.

tw-ref-ID · 
2725
published in · 
Toy Novelties
date · 
28 June 1963
summary

Annual directory listing manufacturers.

tw-ref-ID · 
2726
published in · 
Toy Novelties
date · 
1964
citation · 
page 334
summary

Annual directory listing manufacturers.

tw-ref-ID · 
2727
published in · 
Toy Novelties
date · 
1969
citation · 
page 402
summary

Annual directory listing manufacturers.

tw-ref-ID · 
2728
Toy Topics (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
733

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Toy Topics.
published in · 
Toy Topics
date · 
February 1979
by · 
Fred Shapiro
tw-ref-ID · 
2729
TV Guide (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
739

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for TV Guide.
published in · 
TV Guide
date · 
23 February 1980 to 29 February 1980
citation · 
edition Eastern New England Edition • page A100
summary

NBC advertisement for Real People program with Dave Lockwood, tiddlywinks player.

tw-ref-ID · 
2733
published in · 
TV Guide
date · 
23 February 1980 to 29 February 1980
citation · 
edition Eastern New England Edition • page A103
summary

Listing for the Real People program with Dave Lockwood, tiddlywinks player, on 27 February 1980.

tw-ref-ID · 
2734
United Stated Congressional serial set (official records)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
740

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for United Stated Congressional serial set.
published in · 
United Stated Congressional serial set
date · 
1898
title · 
Education Report, 1897-98
subtitle · 
Moral Education [page 1330]
citation · 
edition 55th Congress, 3rd Session • issue Document Number 5 • page 1343 to 1344
content

Games.

Sec. X. What games have you preferred and what has been their influence in developing manliness or womanliness, sense of justic and fair play, honesty, perseverance, hardihood, physical strength, and what recreations do you prefer, and why? What is their effect? [...]

In regard to the moral import of games, the following classification shows the way they are viewed by the boys and girls:

Womanliness.—Dolls, 17; house, 12; school, 3.

Manliness.—Ball, 12 (football 6, baseball 6); tennis, 1; cricket, 1.

Mental power.—Authors, 5; checkers, 3; music, 2; chess, 1; cards, 1; parchesi, 1; charades, 1; ball, 1; my ship's come home, 1; anagrams, 1; putting our country together, 1.

Perseverance.—Pigs in clover, 9; parchesi, 9; tennis, 9; checkers, 8; ball, 8; croquet, 5; halma, 5; cards, 5; puzzles, 5; hide and seek, 5; I spy, 2; authors, 2; tag,2; chess, 2; tiddledy winks. 2; black bear, 1; robber, puss in corner, backgammon, crisscross, anagrams, solitaire, duck on rock, the spider and the fly, messenger force, jacks, 1 each.

Justice and fair play.—Croquet, 22; hide and seek, 18; cards, 14; checkers, 12; ball, 12; authors, 7; tag, 6; parchesi, 6; tennis, 6; halma, 4; blind man's buff, 4; I spy, 3; jacks, 3; prisoner's base, 2; hunt the slipper, black bear, puss in corner, backgammon, crisscross, tollgate, puzzles, bowling, dominoes, hopscotch, ambassodor [sic], bright idea, Indians, tenpins, lotto, chess, innocence abroad, messenger force, quoits, 1 each.

Honesty.—Croquet, 19; hide and seek, 18; cards. 12; checkers, 11; parchesi, 7; ball, 7; authors, 6; blind man's buff, 5; jacks, 5; tennis, 4; I spy, 3; tag, 2; halma, 2; prisoner's base, 2; hunt the slipper, black bear, pass in corner, tollgate, fish pond, seven steps, colors, hopscotch, chess, tiddledy winks, innocence abroad, go bang, 1 each.

Cheating.—Cards, 4; checkers, 1; croquet, 1; dominoes, 1.

notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2735
published in · 
United Stated Congressional serial set
date · 
23 February 1905
title · 
Man and Abnormal Man Including a Study of Children in Connection with Bills to Establish Laboratories under Federal and State Governments for the Study of the Criminal, Pauper, and Defective Classes with Bibliographies
by · 
Arthur MacDonald
citation · 
edition 58th Congress, 3rd Session • issue Document Number 187 • page 303 to 304
content

Games.

Sec. X. What games have you preferred and what has been their influence in developing manliness or womanliness, sense of justic and fair play, honesty, perseverance, hardihood, physical strength, and what recreations do you prefer, and why? What is their effect? [...]

In regard to the moral import of games, the following classification shows the way they are viewed by the boys and girls:

Womanliness.—Dolls, 17; house, 12; school, 3.

Manliness.—Ball, 12 (football 6, baseball 6); tennis, 1; cricket, 1.

Mental power.—Authors, 5; checkers, 3; music, 2; chess, 1; cards, 1; parchesi, 1; charades, 1; ball, 1; my ship's come home, 1; anagrams, 1; putting our country together, 1.

Perseverance.—Pigs in clover, 9; parchesi, 9; tennis, 9; checkers, 8; ball, 8; croquet, 5; halma, 5; cards, 5; puzzles, 5; hide and seek, 5; I spy, 2; authors, 2; tag,2; chess, 2; tiddledy winks. 2; black bear, 1; robber, puss in corner, backgammon, crisscross, anagrams, solitaire, duck on rock, the spider and the fly, messenger force, jacks, 1 each.

Justice and fair play.—Croquet, 22; hide and seek, 18; cards, 14; checkers, 12; ball, 12; authors, 7; tag, 6; parchesi, 6; tennis, 6; halma, 4; blind man's buff, 4; I spy, 3; jacks, 3; prisoner's base, 2; hunt the slipper, black bear, puss in corner, backgammon, crisscross, tollgate, puzzles, bowling, dominoes, hopscotch, ambassodor [sic], bright idea, Indians, tenpins, lotto, chess, innocence abroad, messenger force, quoits, 1 each.

Honesty.—Croquet, 19; hide and seek, 18; cards. 12; checkers, 11; parchesi, 7; ball, 7; authors, 6; blind man's buff, 5; jacks, 5; tennis, 4; I spy, 3; tag, 2; halma, 2; prisoner's base, 2; hunt the slipper, black bear, pass in corner, tollgate, fish pond, seven steps, colors, hopscotch, chess, tiddledy winks, innocence abroad, go bang, 1 each.

Cheating.—Cards, 4; checkers, 1; croquet, 1; dominoes, 1.

notes · 
Identical tiddlywinks content to edition of: 55th Congress, 3rd Session, 1898.
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2736
Us (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
741

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Us.
published in · 
Us
date · 
29 May 1979
title · 
Contents
subtitle · 
The world's best winker
by · 
Alan Ebert
citation · 
volume 3 • issue 3 • page 3 • column 3
content

David Lockwood is putting in weeks on training before defending his tiddlywinks title /by Alan Ebert

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2737
published in · 
Us
date · 
29 May 1979
title · 
The world’s best winker is making a career out of child’s play
citation · 
volume 3 • issue 3 • page 22 to 23
summary

Includes 1 photograph.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
tw-ref-ID · 
2738
Vanity Fair (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
742

Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for Vanity Fair.
published in · 
Vanity Fair
date · 
October 2000
title · 
The Presidency
subtitle · 
The Accidental Candidate
by · 
Gail Sheehy
citation · 
edition online
summary

About Presidents Bush and family playing tiddlywinks competitively.

content

Big George, her son and the future president, was also an unbridled competitor; he even had to beat his own children at the family tiddlywinks championships. But given Big George’s scorecard—model Andover student, captain of the Yale baseball team, combat veteran who flew torpedo bombers over the Pacific, successful oilman, congressman, U.N. ambassador, C.I.A. director, envoy to China—there was no way for Little George to beat the old man at his own games.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2739
published in · 
Vanity Fair
date · 
9 December 2010
title · 
Somethin Wiki This Way Comes
by · 
James Wolscott
citation · 
edition online
summary

Mention in article about WikiLeaks.

content

We’re sympathetic to WikiLeaks. We oppose those attacking it. We will defend it from spurious prosecution (our attorneys, who essentially wrote the law that protects WikiLeaks, are also on standby). We hope it can withstand the firestorm. But we’re reality-based and have seen radical celebrity stories turn quickly to flashes in the pan before. This game ain’t tiddlywinks. There are real consequences at play. And it’s tough for metal to go through fire if it wasn’t forged in fire, first.

links · 
Playboy (tw-ref-link-id 1760)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2740
published in · 
Vanity Fair
date · 
4 December 2013
title · 
Prince William Plays Volleyball, Does Not Bare Midriff
by · 
Josh Duboff
citation · 
edition online
content

Today, it was William’s turn to take the court, and . . . things were decidedly less glam. Wearing the sweater-and-slacks uniform he seems to love so, William did not appear as, let’s say, graceful. The Daily Mail said the prince “started off shakily” and “looked a little lost” on the court, with “one 13-year-old saying that he ‘felt sorry’ for [William] for being unable to return his balls.” To his credit, William seems to have been aware of his shortcomings, telling People “I think the only sport [George] will be good at is playing tiddlywinks,” though, if we had to guess, Kate’s glimmering, athletic genes of perfection will no doubt override any challengers.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2742
published in · 
Vanity Fair
date · 
15 May 2018
column title · 
In Conversation
title · 
Spike Lee on Scorching BlacKkKlansman and “This Motherf--ker,” Donald Trump
by · 
Rebecca Keegan
citation · 
edition online
content

Since you were nominated for Do The Right Thing in 1990, the makeup of the Academy has undergone a change. What do you make of it?

The Academy—they really have moved forward as far as diversifying the members. Back then in ’89, and now, is night and day. My thing is this . . . it’s not about who gets nominated, who wins what. That doesn’t, to me, have a big effect. The only way, to me, that things have really meaningful change is when people of color get in those gatekeeping positions. By gatekeeping, I mean when people who have a green light vote—[people] who decide what we’re making and what we’re not making. Until we get those numbers, we’re just playing Tiddlywinks.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2741
published in · 
Vanity Fair
date · 
2 January 2020
column title · 
Best Bets
title · 
Bitesize: The Grill at the Dorchester
subtitle · 
Booton's Reboot: a new chapter for The Grill at The Dorchester
citation · 
edition online
content

THE DRINKS

But first, a drink. Before you head to your table, order a cocktail at the six-seater polished bar—if only for the excellent people-watching opportunities. Cocktails come with all the trimmings and flourishes one would expect and V.F. recommends trying something new rather than sticking to your usual. Senior Bartender Lucia Montanelli’s “Tiddly Wink”, a champagne cocktail made with English sparkling wine (a nod to the hotel’s British heritage) sloe gin, rhubarb and rosemary syrup, has become a firm favourite since the relaunch.

collection · 
digital web page copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2743
Verbatim (journal)
The Language Quarterly
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
743

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Verbatim.
published in · 
Verbatim
date · 
December 1977
title · 
Winking Words
by · 
Philip M. Cohen
citation · 
volume 4 • issue 3 • page 4 • column 1 to 2
notes · 
Reprinted from Games and Puzzles magazine, number 24. Reprinted in the book, Verbatim: From the bawdy to the sublime, the best writing on language for word lovers, grammar mavens, and armchair linguists, by Erin McKean, ©2001, A Harvest Original, Harcourt Inc.; San Diego, New York, London.
collection · 
photocopy (NATwA); original (NATwA/Drix); digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2744
published in · 
Verbatim
date · 
Summer 1984
column title · 
Bibliographia
title · 
A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English
citation · 
page 21 • column 1
content

A Dictionary of Sland and Unconventional English, by Eric Partridge, Eigth Edition, edited and revised by Paul Beale, 1400 pp., Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984. £ 45.00.

The other major change of presentation has been to group in a large appendix at the back self-contained bodies of slang that were too long to fit comfortably into the main body of the text: for example, slang of prisoners of war in the last war; the rich jargon of Tiddlywinks; and the profusion of undergrowth that has grown around the word kibosh.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2745
Walden's Stationer and Printer (journal)
location · 
(also Chicago), New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
744

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Walden's Stationer and Printer.
published in · 
Walden's Stationer and Printer
date · 
10 November 1911
title · 
Game and Novelty Catalogue
citation · 
volume 34 • issue 20 • page 16
content

Stationers dealing in games will be interested in this year’s catalogue of Parker Brothers, Inc., one of the largest manufacturers in the country. […]

It would simply be impossible merely to enumerate the titles, but a glance reveals such old favorites as “Ping-Pong,”, “Pillow-Dex,” “Tiddledy Winks,” “Lotto,” etc. while among the new things may be mentioned “Salem Witch Fortune Telling Game,” ” Electrical Wonder Book,” “Toy Town Games,” ” Battle Games,” in many new styles “Whack-a-Back,” “Jumping Frog,” “Crazy Willie,” “Twirly Gig,” ” Pocket Ball,” etc.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2746
Washingtonian (magazine)
location · 
Washington, District of Columbia, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
746

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Washingtonian.
published in · 
Washingtonian
date · 
November 1983
title · 
Getting Together
citation · 
page 119
summary

NATwA is included in a listing of clubs.

collection · 
original (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2754
published in · 
Washingtonian
date · 
January 1985
title · 
Information Please
citation · 
page 21
summary

Query re the drinking game “Quarters”

content

Q: I've heard there is a drinking game that's the rage at every local university. It's called “Quarters.” How do you play?

A: Using coins for tiddlywinks, you try to land a quarter in a glass of beer. If you succeed, you can make anyone else at your table drink the beer; if you miss, you can either go again or drink the beer yourself. A midwestern version involves the more complicated, and messier, variation of spinning the quarter, grabbing it between your thumbs, and slam-dunking it into the nearest mug.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2755
Wired (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
747

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Wired.
published in · 
Wired
date · 
May 1933
title · 
Street Cred Terminal Scholarship
content

Scott Bukatman’s whirlwind study investigates an Information Age that’s all too willing to play tiddlywinks with personal identities as they drift in and out of digital realities

collection · 
digital copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
minor but interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2756
Wisconsin Library Bulletin (magazine)
location · 
Wisconsin, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
745

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Wisconsin Library Bulletin.
published in · 
Wisconsin Library Bulletin
date · 
January 1909 to February 1909
title · 
Games for Use in Libraries
by · 
Mildred Dean
citation · 
volume 5 • issue 1 • page 16 • column 2
content

Games for the younger children.

5. Tiddledy winks. Parker .35

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2753
Woman's Own (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
748

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Woman's Own.
published in · 
Woman's Own
date · 
November 1964
summary

Query by Guy Consterdine

tw-ref-ID · 
2757
Woman's Work (magazine)
A Foreign Missions Magazine
associated with · 
Woman's Boards of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, U. S. A.
location · 
156 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
749

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Woman's Work.
published in · 
Woman's Work
date · 
March 1918
title · 
How One Missionary Rests
citation · 
volume 33 • issue 3 • page 57 • column 2
content

That vision faded and a brighter one came when I saw the folks waiting for me when I got home. An elderly lady and her three grandchildren and two other boys were sitting in the sunshine on the south veranda, and two lonesome, half-sick, middle-aged women were huddled near the stove in the sitting room. I got a blanket and pillow for one of them and had her lie down, got out the “tiddledy winks” for the little boys, wiped the baby’s nose, and talked with the grandmother a while.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2758
Women's Sports and Fitness (magazine)
tw-pub-ID · 
750

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Women's Sports and Fitness.
published in · 
Women's Sports and Fitness
date · 
October 1990
title · 
Tour de Tater
subtitle · 
Spuds and cyclists reign supreme at the Ore-Ida women’s challenge bicycle race
citation · 
page 28 and later
tw-ref-ID · 
2759
Work With Boys (magazine)
A Magazine of Methods
publisher · 
William McCormick (editor, publisher)
associated with · 
Boys’ Clubs of America
location · 
Reading, Pennsylvania, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
752

Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Work With Boys.
published in · 
Work With Boys
date · 
October 1903
title · 
Practical Methods
citation · 
volume 3 • issue 4 • page 274 • column 1
content

The following nine games were used, which from experience we consider well adapted for the purpose: Conette (a small catapult throwing a projectile into a net marked off with numbers), ring-a-peg (a modified tiddledy-winks), magic wells (a harmless hammering game, mostly luck and particularly popular), niloe (a first-letter game, which we regard as one of our old “standbys”), cube anagrams (a word-guessing game, with dice throwing), fishpond (old as the poles, but unique), dominoes (still older, but with modern methods of play), foxy grandpa (an adding game with cards), and snap (after the manner of slap-jack).

We would add to the list, for their suggestive value, the following, which we have used with success on one or all of our three previous entertainments of this kind: Magnetic jackstraws, go-bang, miniature pool, crokinole, shunette, target game toy, tiddledy-winks, fascination, table football, ports and commerce, and loto (the last four being games of luck).

notability rating · 
minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2761
published in · 
Work With Boys
date · 
November 1915
title · 
Work That's Being Done
citation · 
volume 15 • issue 9 • page 347
content

But here is what Thomas Chew suggests as a proper list of boys’ games, suitable, he says, for boys under 14: Checkers, dominoes, lotto, ring-toss, blocks, tiddley-winks, Nellie Bly, parchesi, caroms, fish pond, chuck-a-luck, bean bag, bagatelle, pop-in-taw, mechanical toys, egg and spoon race, scenic railway, bull in china shop, base ball, board game; yankee doodle, alphabet, board game; numbers, board game; authors, box ball, old maid, down on the farm, puzzle; fire department, puzzle; locomotive, puzzle; zig zag, puzzle; boat, puzzle.

notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2762
Working Woman (magazine)
location · 
New York, New York, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
751

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Working Woman.
published in · 
Working Woman
date · 
August 1995
title · 
The gospel according to Mary
citation · 
volume 20 • issue 8 • page 46(8)
summary

Mention in an article about businesswoman Mary Cunningham Agee

tw-ref-ID · 
2760
World Today (magazine)
location · 
UK
tw-pub-ID · 
753

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for World Today.
published in · 
World Today
date · 
December 1908
title · 
Christmas-tide in Cornwall
by · 
Edna Bourne Holman
citation · 
volume 15 • issue 6 • page 1225 • column 2
content

The ordinary people know only that it is a good day to go away and have a pleasant time, and possibly get “tiddley”; a “tiddley-wink” or ” tiddledy-wink” in Cornwall is no celluloid discused in an innocent table-game, but a beer-shop.

collection · 
digitized image copy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2763
The Writer (magazine)
A Monthly Magazine To Interest and Help All Literary Workers
publisher · 
The Writer Publishing Company; William H. Hills (copyright)
location · 
282 Washington Street, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
tw-pub-ID · 
754

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Writer.
published in · 
The Writer
date · 
January 1894
title · 
A Hundred and Fifty Recent English Words
by · 
H. A. Schuler
citation · 
volume 7 • issue 2 • page 22 • column 2
content

Of new terms relating to sports and games I have admitted only eight: Base-ballist, caroussel, craps, mamooz, pigs-in-clover, pool-selling, tiddledy-winks, tricycler. This field is very productive of new words, but many of these are too slangy and short-lived for the lexicographer's notic.

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
interesting
tw-ref-ID · 
2764
Yankee (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
755

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Yankee.
published in · 
Yankee
date · 
February 1978
title · 
Games people played
by · 
Lee Dennis
citation · 
page 169
content

Before the copyright laws tightened, every game company published the most popular games of the day in one version or another. This accounts for a collector's frequently coming across games of Authors, Jackstraws, Tiddledy Winks, Peter Coddles, Fish Pond, Lotto, and Anagrams. Though these may belong in a collection, none of these games is by any means rare.

collection · 
transcript (NATwA)
notability rating · 
very minor
tw-ref-ID · 
2765
Youth Magazine (magazine)
location · 
USA
tw-pub-ID · 
756

Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Youth Magazine.
published in · 
Youth Magazine
date · 
March 1977
title · 
Winks
by · 
Dan Dern (text and photographs)
citation · 
page 44 to 51
summary

Describes the history, rules, and culture of tiddlywinks. Includes 2 illustrations and 2 photographs

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2766
by · 
Dan Dern (text and photographs)
title · 
Winks
date · 
March 1977
citation · 
page 44 to 51
summary

Describes the history, rules, and culture of tiddlywinks. Includes 2 illustrations and 2 photographs

collection · 
photocopy (NATwA)
notability rating · 
important
tw-ref-ID · 
2766