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Time Machine TV Video Game Management Timer $12.98 Don’t let the kids be “vidiots!” Take charge with The Time Machine TV / Video Game Timer, BIG BUCKS OFF! The ultimate solution for teaching kids that gaming and TV are privileges, not their 7-hours-a-day right! This easily hooks up and uses a token system to activate electronics, so kids learn quickly how to earn entertainment time, and use it wisely. Use with any coaxial connection (cable, satell… |
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PlayLimit TV & Video Game Timer $39.95 The PlayLimit is a simple token-based solution for setting limits on the amount of time your kids spend playing video games and watching TV. No More “Turn OFF That TV!” Arguments How can PlayLimit help? Simple. By giving kids tokens for a specific time period, parents set a definite limit on how much TV their kids can watch. What’s more, the tokens empower kids to manage their own time, so paren… |
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QTech X-Res 12 Counting Scale (12lb capacity) $179.00 Features Specific to Paper Counting – * Perfect for labels, envelopes, business cards, etc. Features Specific to Parts Counting – * Ideal for counting assembly components as well as finished goods. |
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TOKENS AND COINS [LP VINYL] $5.00 … |
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Neil Sedaka & The Tokens & Coins Includes Don’t take me for granted, Lay some Kisses on me, The Taste of a Tear, Born to be a Loser, Run Don’t walk, Never till Now, Come Back Joe, I Love my Baby, While I dream, Mary G… |
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Neil Sedaka, The Tokens & Coins $7.99 … |
Tokens Coins!
metal detecting for old coins,tokens ,rings and silver
Tokens Coins Questions

Can anyone tell me what kind of token or coin of James A. Garfield I have?
This is a bronze token/coin about the size of a penny. On one side it has a picture of James A. Garfield and on the other I think is a picture of Abraham Lincoln. It does not have any writting on it, nor does it have a date? Can anyone help tell me what kind of coin I have or give me a good website that might can help?
I found a death medal with James A. Garfield and Abraham Lincoln on it made of both silver and gold.
Lincoln & Garfield Death Medal, 1881. Bust r of Lincoln; bust l of Garfield. Made after the unexpected death of Garfield. The Mint charged $9 for the gold medal, a significant sum in 1881. GOLD, 25mm, proof-like AU/UNC, minor hairlines, Estimated value: $1100.00-1250.00+
PR-40&41 in the catalog Medals of the United States Mint: The First Century 1792-1892 by R.W. Julian
Chinese Coins – silver panda coin obverse side country of china
Traditionally, Chinese money coins were cast in copper, brass or iron. In the mid 1800s, the coins were made from three parts copper and two parts lead. Cast silver coins were periodically produced but are significantly rarer. Cast gold coins are also known to exist but are very rare.
Chinese money coins originated from the barter of farming tools and agricultural surpluses. Around 1200 BC, smaller token spades, hoes, and knives began to be used to conduct smaller exchanges with the tokens later melted down to supply real farm implements. These tokens came to be used as media of exchange themselves and were known as spade cash and knife money.
The earlier coins were cast to weight standards in a direct relationship with the denominations, so if you weighted a coin at twelve grams it was almost certain a 1 Liang (or 1 Jin) denomination. During the Chin Dynasty, around about 250 BC, this modified and be begin to see coins issued with denomination marks that bare no relationship to the particular weight of the coin. This is best seen on the Ban liang (1/2 Liang) coins of the State of Jaw which can vary in weight significantly but the earliest enormous diameter issues weigh at least six grams (and often significantly more), but the size and weight steadily fell and when they were last issued in the Han Dynasty are typically seen at three grams or maybe less, but still with the Ban Liang denomination on them.
The Koreans, Japanese, and Vietnamese all cast their own copper cash in the second part of the second millennium similar to those employed by China.
The last money coins were struck, not cast, in the reign of the Qing Xuantong Emperor just before the fall of the Empire in 1911. The coin continued to be used unofficially in China till the mid twentieth century.
Visit our website for chinese coins
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