User:Palapala
Welcome
2024-10-10 Thursday 16:35
on my home page.
— 2004-01-28 —
I do not attend on a day-by-day basis, as my job does not allow this.
That doesn't imply that I will not stay with things I've started...
Pages started:
Lino Ventura | Marlène Jobert | Ingrid Thulin
Le Passager de la Pluie
Laura DiDio | Lester Hogan | Tom Duff | MEKO®
Preppie murder
Mon Chéri
Nia Künzer (Pictures)
Strange Units
(with redirects FFF | microfortnight | furlongs per fortnight
nanocentury | microcentury | nanoacre | Hubble-barn)
Editor/Contributor:
Karlsruhe | Reykjavík | Humbug Mountain | Heinrich-Hertz-Turm
Madog | Natasha
Operation Entebbe | Yoni Netanyahu
Albert Hofmann ( Pictures)
Vladimir Vissotzki
CeeCee Lyles | Sarah Marple-Cantrell | Jennifer Levin
Birgit Prinz (Pictures)
RAF Church Fenton
isbn.nu | Blind transmission | RealAudio
Sarah Gordon (VfD) | Fridrik Skulason
attoparsec | Gyrator | Kryptos | 12 (number) | Floppy disk | kilobyte
/Playground
- /Tools
- /TalkArchive
- /Coop
- /Bits'n'Pieces
Silver certificates are a type of representative money issued between 1878 and 1964 in the United States as part of its circulation of paper currency. They were produced in response to silver agitation by citizens who were angered by the Coinage Act of 1873, which had effectively placed the United States on a gold standard. Since 1968 they have been redeemable only in Federal Reserve Notes and are thus obsolete, but they remain legal tender at their face value and hence are still an accepted form of currency. These are three banknotes from the 1934 series of silver certificates, designed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing and comprising the denominations $1, $5 and $10. Each banknote bears a portrait of a different individual, identified above.Banknote design credit: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
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