Monday, September 20th, 2010 at
12:22 pm
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010 at
6:16 pm
what 2 coins do you online drugs without a prescription need to add up to 50 US cent?
Friday, July 23rd, 2010 at
5:10 pm
the coins add up to 55 (fifty five) cents
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Saturday, July 10th, 2010 at
4:50 pm
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get prescription drugs without prescription
Sunday, June 27th, 2010 at
4:38 pm
Remember -- one coin is not a nickle
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Monday, June 14th, 2010 at
4:12 pm
Okay I need to know the most amount of cents you can have, but while not online pharmacy no prescription having exact change for a dollar.
Please write the number of coins and the type of coin
(pennys, nickels, dimes, quarters)
its more than 99, but 5 dimes and 2 quarters is enought for a dollar
Monday, June 14th, 2010 at
4:12 pm
I bought something in the vending machine. I was supposed to get one dollar back as change. Instead I got two 55cents! One is not a nickel! Weird, huh? I don't even know how that's possible!
PS- This is a riddle! Figure it out!
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Tuesday, June 1st, 2010 at
3:58 pm
A little while ago I was reading about the intrinsic value of coinage and noticed that the 'melt value' of the US nickel was approaching the $.05 value where the metal would actually be worth more than the face value. Now it's about 2% more valuable than it's face value. How do you go about profiting from this? Say you have a couple buckets worth of nickels and decide to 'cash out' sometime in the future when the melt value of each coin is say, $.10 a piece. How do you actually get liquidity Buy Propecia out of your stash of metal? I can't believe you can sell a small amount to a factory/smelter at face metal value as they have costs as well. Barring a complete global disaster where we revert to a system of bartering where metal values don't really matter and we're all just looking for food and water, can you trade it or sell it to someone or some organization/company for it's exact face value without losing a huge commission? If not and a commission or fee is required to sell your coins for the 'melt value', what would it be and how big of a collection would you need to make it a worthwhile investment (if you are under the belief that the value of the metal will rise as compared to the loss of purchasing power due to inflation for the $.05 it's face value is worth)?
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Wednesday, May 19th, 2010 at
3:33 pm
I saw that a law was passed through the US mint that it is illegal to melt US coins, but specifically discussed pennies, nickels, and other coins in circulation. Does anyone know if it i also illegal to melt gold coins like twenty dollar coins from the 1890's to 1900's? If you could please include specific references for your answer.
I know that these coins are more valuable as coins and not gold melt, but i would still like to know the laws.
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Friday, April 23rd, 2010 at
3:03 pm
I have two US coins totaling 55 cents. One is not a nickel. What are the coins?
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