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In circulation in 1921 US currency.
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??
In the 40 years up to 1921, over a million of them were minted. Surely the conductor could have accumulated 165 of them. I will recalculate with whatever was available starting in 1921, if that is what you're getting at. |
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Did you notice that back then postage rates were going down, not up ? Maybe it was before businesses got the $ reduced junk mail rates. :eyebrow: |
Was any currency in postage stamp form?
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Thomas Edison and Henry Ford proposed some kind of 'electric currency' in 1921. Supposedly.
Don't ask me, I don't understand the article: http://eddiesblogonenergyandphysics....ty-backed.html |
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:) |
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The solution is a practical one, not relying on conductors carrying vast numbers of discontinued coinage. |
Does it have something to do with the value of silver?
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Just an aside (I am completely stumped by this) I remember using shilling and two shilling pieces as a child. They were accepted in lieu of 5p and 10p coins. But the country decimalised before I was born.
So I understand that the question has a more elegant answer than V suggested, but the words "in circulation" still include discontinued coinage in my head. |
I know what you mean and what V means, and I have mosquitoes in my basement still but that doesn't make it summer.
Big V was very close with his wikipedia search, and apart from the coins being discontinued and British, Sundae is also close. |
Out of the mouth of babes and fools....
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showing my work, if not an answer...
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Some assumptions I make: This transaction is being conducted (ha) in US money. I am disregarding the idea that the "change being made" would be in some weird scrip from the trolley line, counting out a book of tickets equal to $4.95 for example. I don't count this as "money he had". I'm assuming the passenger is only paying 5 cents for his ride. And that he does ride and he does pay and he does get change. Hm, that's a lot of assumptions. Maybe the passenger says, "Ok, here's a nickel." But that doesn't answer the question "what money had he?". It makes the problem silly. a passenger on a trolley (he has to pay). offers a $1, expecting 95c. change. conductor can't make 95c change. I hope this isn't part of the "trick". this sounds really plain. The conductor says he can make $4.95 change.... does he? he says he can make change for a $5 bill tendered for a 5c fare. Am I making an unfair assumption? I am not being literal in the recounting of the parameters, but that's where the cleverness of the puzzles hides... It's a good puzzle. |
to my mind, discontinued in the wiki article means no longer minted. not out of circulation.
Now I sound snippy. I'm not, I'm just wrestling with this one. |
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