I remember long ago and my home pool room,this old man had a pabst blue ribbon cue like yours and i also seen some budwiser ones too.
I have seen cues with the same make and design at walmart'
Same my friend (terrible player) has one EXACTLY the same. It broke a little while ago.
My mother bought me my first cue at the GEM store.
Government Employee Merchandise
That was about 50 years ago. Mine was made in Japan and loaded with mother of pearl dragon inlays. 5 piece, adjustable weight rings and all. It was pretty nice for an inexpensive cue.
Don
I dont believe its pink ivory, its the kingwood maybe or cocobolo wood and an ivory (i think) ring around each joint and every ring position..
Looks like an inexpensive 70s import to me, and most probably not king wood or cocobolo. The color of the pics looks like pink ivory, but it's probably not that either. Is there something engraved in one of the joint collars?
The cue is an import from the 1970's, I think they came from either Taiwan or Japan, these cues were the lowest end of all the imports from that time period I have ever seen.
If it were mine and it came from my Grandfather, I would keep it in the family and pass it along to your kids. I would make or have made a little case made to put the cue in with a picture of your Grandfather and hang it on the wall.
Sentimental value is about all the value these cues have but in my book that makes it priceless.
Oh and by the way, it is doubtful you will ever find out who made these records about cues like this just to my knowledge were not kept, so I would call it Grandpa's cues that way you can't go wrong!!
JIMO
I worked with a guy 30 years ago who had a cue that looked just like your grandfathers'. It was given to him for agreeing to let a salesman demonstrate a Kirby vacuum cleaner. He had a choice of the cue or a set of steak knives.
I just noticed your post and it reminded me of the time our company used these same cues as promotional items. We ran an ad that said every 10th person through the door would receive a free cue. On the day of the sale I noticed this young man, probaly in his late teens, standing in the parking lot counting the people going in. Obviously, he was there only for the free cue, so I decided to mess with him a bit. The first time he came and proclaimed himself number 10, I told him he must have miscounted because he was number 9 and I gave a cue to the next customer. The kid didn't give up, he went back outside and started counting again. This process repeated itself several times. Each time that I told him that he had miscounted, he got more pissed. Finally, the kid stood by the door and hollered at me each time someone went through the door, "Thats number one, thats number two, etc.". When he came in and said that he knew for a fact that he was number 10, I said, "Your right, but unfortunally, we just ran out of cues." The kid went beserk before I could tell him that I was kidding, and gave him a cue.
Funny thing is, the kid showed back up the very next day complaining that the first time he broke with the cue, the ferrel shattered. My response, "Sorry kid, the ad said the cues were free, not good."
Seeing that cue brought back some memories. I got one for christmas when I was 10 years old. My dad got me a real nice soft pleather case to go with it. I already loved cue sports because snooker was so big in the UK. We didn't have a table at home but I was sat there on Christmas day holding my fancy new cue, taking it apart changing the weights around etc. Eventually I wanted to use it so bad that I ended up on my hands and knees on the floor hitting a ping pong ball from one side of the room to the other. Thanks for sharing.
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT THIS HISTORY OF POOL CUES
AND MORE. YOU ARE NOW AN EXPERT.
http://users.skynet.be/billard.billiards/sum.htm