If they were actually Mazda/Belvu tubes, then they might actually sound BETTER than Telefunkens. E.g. with 12ax7 types, I easily prefer the Mazda chrome-plate over either Telefunken variant, and Mazda tubes in general tend to sound pretty damn good (they also made a really nice chrome-plate 12au7). The French performance in WW2 was less than stellar, but they certainly made some fantastic tubes for phoning in "we surrender!" loud and clear!
Relabeling/rebranding in the tube era was extremely common, and careful inspection of construction is your best bet for properly ID’ing the actual make/vintage of a tube. Use online pictures as a reference until you get more familiar with actual tube examples. The seller is not liable to provide tubes wearing any particular label (or ANY label at all), unless they specify labels prior to sale, or you specify that you’re picky about labels.
As far as your Teles go, the smooth plates are extremely distinctive. Any 9-pin with those plates has really got to be either a Telefunken or Ei (Yugoslavia) make (I suppose some Chinese tubes may also mimic the look, but there will certainly be some visual difference cues) -- and though the Ei Yugos can be considered inferior to genuine Teles, they were in fact produced with the original Telefunken tooling (purchased from Tele).
But if your particular tubes have smooth plates, I’d say there’s a 99.9% chance you’ve got genuine Telefunkens. Congrats! Who the hell would take an Ei/Chinese 12au7, slap a Mazda/BelVu label on it, and sell it as a Telefunken? They’d have crisp, pristine, way-to-good-to-be-true Tele labels on it if anything. Check for the "Diamond" hole in the tube bottom, as others have mentioned.
Relabeling/rebranding in the tube era was extremely common, and careful inspection of construction is your best bet for properly ID’ing the actual make/vintage of a tube. Use online pictures as a reference until you get more familiar with actual tube examples. The seller is not liable to provide tubes wearing any particular label (or ANY label at all), unless they specify labels prior to sale, or you specify that you’re picky about labels.
As far as your Teles go, the smooth plates are extremely distinctive. Any 9-pin with those plates has really got to be either a Telefunken or Ei (Yugoslavia) make (I suppose some Chinese tubes may also mimic the look, but there will certainly be some visual difference cues) -- and though the Ei Yugos can be considered inferior to genuine Teles, they were in fact produced with the original Telefunken tooling (purchased from Tele).
But if your particular tubes have smooth plates, I’d say there’s a 99.9% chance you’ve got genuine Telefunkens. Congrats! Who the hell would take an Ei/Chinese 12au7, slap a Mazda/BelVu label on it, and sell it as a Telefunken? They’d have crisp, pristine, way-to-good-to-be-true Tele labels on it if anything. Check for the "Diamond" hole in the tube bottom, as others have mentioned.