Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Martin Gardner included this fold, described as both a bug catcher and fortune-teller, in a column in Hugard's Magic Monthly, titled "Encyclopedia of Impromptu Magic", in the 1950s. [22] Although the phrase "cootie catcher" has been used with other meanings in the U.S. for much longer, [ 23 ] the use of the phrase for paper cootie catchers in ...
A hand-held game, the Cootie Game, was made by the Irvin-Smith Company of Chicago in 1915; it involved tilting capsules (the cooties) into a trap over a background illustration depicting a battlefield. [6] Other cootie games followed, all involving some form of "bug" or "cootie", [6] until The Game of Cootie was launched in 1948 by Schaper Toys ...
The game was invented in 1948 by William H. Schaper, a manufacturer of small commercial popcorn machines in Robbinsdale, Minnesota.It was likely inspired by an earlier pencil-and-paper game where players drew cootie parts according to a dice roll and/or a 1939 game version of that using cardboard parts with a cootie board. [2]
The term cootie catcher seems to be a local term. I grew up in the Northeastern USA as well as the Midwest and I know I never heard it this toy referred to as a cootie catcher(I all ways heard fortune teller). I propose that the name of the article be changed to something that more people have heard of.
Original Cootie box cover, 1949. Schaper Toys, or W.H. Schaper Mfg. Co., Inc. as it was originally known, was a game and toy company founded in 1949 by William Herbert Schaper in Robbinsdale, Minnesota. "Herb" Schaper published a variety of games but was best known for having created the children's game, Cootie. [1]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
2000 - Marc Brown's Arthur Chapter Books: Volume 5 - (King Arthur, Francine, Believe It or Not, and Arthur and the Cootie-Catcher) 2007 - Arthur's Audio Favorites Volume 1 - (Arthur's Tooth, Arthur's Birthday, Arthur's Pet Business, Arthur's New Puppy, and Arthur Writes a Story)
For her half-birthday, Prunella's older sister, Rubella Deegan, gives her a cootie catcher. Rubella claims that it can tell the future and that its answers will come true. Arthur and his friends begin following the advice of the cootie catcher. When the catcher is wrecked, they realize they should not let it maintain their lives.