Stories About Merchants Or Cunning Merchant - Chapter 60
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Chapter 60

You can break the jackpot and not only digging in the ground, said the historian .

Over the past 35 years, several countries and empires have disappeared from the political map of the world . New states appeared . And they all had coins . They deserve different things, different years of release, different mints of release . Some had a marriage, others in the carelessness of the mint workers were released on a different metal basis . For example, they had to use a copper-aluminum alloy to issue 1 cent coins and issued them on silver-nickel as for 10 cent coins .

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Somewhere a spikelet on a coin was shot down, sometimes instead of three spikelets there were four, instead of 15 ribbons 17 and all these mistakes . . . this is money for collectors .

A coin with a face value of 1 cent can be sold for 100 or even all 1000 dollars . Interestingly, all these coins are in common people's pantries, they can be found in parks, flea markets . They sell them for 10 cents and they can be sold to collectors for hundreds of dollars and some especially valuable copies for 10,000 - 20,000 dollars .

The same applies for example to old manhole covers, sometimes the price can reach $ 550 for a manhole of the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th centuries . Prices also have old rails, which can sometimes be seen sticking out of the ground in 19th century building sites .

Previously, rails served as strengthening the foundation of houses, rafters, fasteners for telegraph poles . The houses were already demolished, but the rails remained . Sometimes you can read them - the Belgian Railway in 1867, sometimes the French Republic of 1888, the Imperial Railway of 1898, the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1878 . . . and these rails also cost money, they are bought at auction for $ 400-800 .

There are those who understand the old days, in china, German or Austrian . . . sometimes in flea markets you can see them . Where are they from? These are trophies from the second world war . Previously, one could meet old German cars, motorcycles and bicycles . But in the 90s, almost all of them were exported abroad and there they were sold for tens of thousands of dollars .

Less often, breaking old houses in them find trophies from the Second World War, sometimes from the First World War - pistols, machine guns, cartridges, bayonet-knives, works of art, ancient books in German dating from the 14th to 16th centuries . . . Someone brought them from Geramania after war . . . and then could not attach . And the veterans of the war did not hand over the weapons to the police, for some reason they left to themselves . . . but then their descendants still surrendered these weapons to the police, as the media write .

Sometimes at the flea market you can find an icon, a mug, a pen, a watch . . . it costs a cent and sell them for hundreds of dollars .

It would be nice if these finds were in the museum, we would learn more about our history . . . but . . . now all finds are on the market . . .

Also, regarding old stamps . . . but I'm not very good at this topic, but for example, in our mountains in the World, sometimes rare stamps can be found on envelopes of the 40-60s . The Germans came to us, scientists, having seen such an envelope, this scientist in exchange gave it to my neighbors - a new digital SLR camera and laptop .

Probably those brands were worth it . . .