Mines doing it to.
There is an 11 cent stamp in the presidential series which was current from 1939 to 1954. First class postage was never 11 cents-it jumped from 10 cent directly to 13 cents.
Well, honey, you've got yourself a math problem. To make 85 cents using those coins, you can have combinations like 1 fifty cent coin, 1 twenty-five cent coin, 1 five cent coin, and 1 five cent coin. That's just one way to do it, but there are multiple combinations you can come up with to make a total of 85 cents using those coins.
One cent to many tens of thousands of dollars. Cents have been struck since 1793 at 3 different mints so you're going to have to be A LOT more specific. As a general rule, cents dated 1940-55 that come from circulation are worth 2 or 3 cents. After that, one cent only.
The answer will depend on what cents: US cents, Euro cents or other countries' cents. Different countries use different coinage: the US has a 25 cents coin but but not 20 cents whereas the Euro has a 20 cent coin and not 25.
Argentina currency is known as 'Peso' which is further subdivided into 100 cents. The peso coins come in the denominations of 1 cent, 5 cents, 10 cents, 25 cents, 50 cents and 1 peso coins. There are two versions of 5, 10, 25 and 50 cent coins available; they can be silver or golden plated m.s.m Germany
1985 was the year that first class stamps went to 22 cents .
No you cant only in telstra
Check that coin again. Indian head cents didn't come out until 1859.
The unit or dollars and cents did not come allong intil 1792, but the money itself is worth roughly $2.
There have been 25 cent stamps available since the late 1800's. The first class rate went to 25 cents in April of 1988.
Center cent century
I assume that you're referring to U.S. coins because of the category where you linked this post. The U.S. issued large-size 1 cent coins from 1793 to 1857. Small cents (the current size) were introduced with a trial series in 1856 and went to full production in 1857, overlapping with large cents during that year. The 2-cent piece was struck from 1864 to 1873. Interestingly, proposals to resurrect the denomination as a way to reduce the need for pennies have come up every few years since the 1940s, but nothing has ever gone beyond the talking stage.