Tootsie Toy Cap Bomb 70274 New Old Stock Toy with Free Shipping

This listing features a Tootsie Toy Cap Bomb 70274 in New condition (new old stock). It is categorized under Toys & Hobbies and is offered with free shipping. If you are purchasing more than one, check the listing for details on any multi-quantity savings. The description section does not provide additional product information, so check the listing for details on included items, packaging condition, and any other specifics before ordering.

USD 12.00
Condition: see listing
LocationOelwein, Iowa US
ShippingFree shipping (check listing for details)
Seller riteprice
99.5% positive · 6643 feedback
ListingFixedPrice · Active
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Tootsie Toy Cap Bomb 70274 New Old Stock Toy with Free Shipping Specs
Return shipping will be paid byBuyer
All returns acceptedReturns Accepted
Item must be returned within30 Days
Refund will be given asMoney back or replacement (buyer's choice)
BrandTootsieToy
MaterialDiecast
Age Level17 Years & Up
Country/Region of ManufactureChina
Listing details

Strombecker Toys, Tootsie Toy Cap Bomb Grenade Toy. This uses the roll tape caps. Caps are not included. These are from a brand new case of old stock. I cannot locate a date. The toy is stamped with Tootsietoy. The case they are packed in shows Strombecker Toys, see photos. These came in bulk. We will ship the item carefully. FREE SHIPPING! Buy more than 1 and save! This information is from Encyclopedia.com. Strombecker Corporation is the leading maker of bubble blowing toys and cap guns in the world, controlling about half of each market, and also makes other basic toys like die-cast metal cars, wood blocks, and dish sets. The company's best-known brands are Tootsietoy, Mr. Bubbles, Hearts 'n Home, and Hard Body Die-Cast, and it also makes items using characters or designs licensed from Disney, Looney Tunes, Pfaltzgraff, General Motors, and Ford, among others. Strombecker is owned by the Shure family, which has run the company for four generations.Origins The roots of the present-day Strombecker date to 1876, when a trade paper called the National Laundry Journal was started on the West Side of Chicago. Its publishers, brothers Charles O. and Samuel Dowst, later began to make small laundry

accessories like die-cast collar buttons and cuff-links. In 1893 Samuel Dowst saw a Mergenthaler Linotype machine at the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition, which made metal type for printing by injecting hot lead into molds. Realizing it could also effectively produce metal buttons, he convinced the company to purchase one. Dowst soon began producing more metal items, including die-cast promotional trinkets for clients like the Flat Iron Laundry Company, which bought them to give away to its customers' children. These items, which included a flatiron, a top hat, a Scottie dog, and a candlestick, would much later be adopted for use as tokens in the board games Monopoly and Clue. In 1906 Dowst introduced the world's first die-cast toy car, and several years later began making one patterned after the Model T Ford, which went on to sell more than 50 million copies. The firm's toy vehicles were known as "Tootsietoys," after company founder Charles O. Dowst's granddaughter "Toots." Their popularity was such that automobile manufacturers paid for creation of the molds so they could be included in the company's line.