The value of this item is determined by what the buyer is willing to pay for it.
The value of the Ken the tin man doll from the Wizard of OZ is $13.99. The doll is in the original unopened box
Priceless. Only one pair exists. The other pair was stolen and never found.
One suggestion is contacting the International Wizard of Oz Club, which holds auctions at its yearly meetings, and keeps Oz memorabilia on consignment. Visit their website, at www.ozclub.org.
You can see if the capacitor charges and discharges with an ohmmeter. You can check the value of the capacitor if the multimeter has the facility. With an ESR meter you can establish the value of the capacitor while in circuit.
Please visit the International Wizard of Oz Club's website at www.ozclub.org. The Club has items on consignment, and holds auctions at its yearly conferences. On the home page, helpful links include 'Community and Online Discussion Boards' and 'IWOC Archives of Rare Oz Materials'.
Whether or not doing a Sprint rebate is "worth the hassle" is kinda subjective. It depends on the dollar value of the rebate, whether you are willing and able to put in the possible time and effort that might be required to get that rebate, and how much you value your actual and possible time spent versus the dollar value of that rebate. Whatever the case, if you decide to do the rebate, make copies of everything, in case you need to refer to it later or resubmit.
If the company are using cost basis to value their assets then the rebate will reduce the cost.
Manufacturers of some products offer to send you a check (or some other thing of value) if you mail them proof that you purchased their product. For example, a shampoo company mail offer to send you $1 if you mail them proof that you bought a certain type of shampoo. This is called a "mail-in rebate." If you spend $5 to buy the shampoo and the manufacturer offers to send you a $1 mail-in rebate, then your price after mail-in rebate is $4.
The value of the Ken the tin man doll from the Wizard of OZ is $13.99. The doll is in the original unopened box
The development rebate reserve is created out of development rebate. It is a special allowance, which the government extends in direct taxes to encourage investment, over and above depreciation on plant and machinery installed and commissioned. It is treated as the first charged on profits after depreciation. If, owing to inadequacy of profits it cannot be so charged, it can be carried forward to be charged against the profits of subsequent years. While depreciation reduces net value of the fixed asset and cannot exceed 100% of their original cost, development rebate leaves the net value of the assets untouched. The development rebate is applicable only to plant and machinery and not to all fixed assets. Both depreciation and development rebate augment the cash flow of a business.
2500
On the 5 dollar bill: Redeemable in gold on demand at the united states treasury or in gold or lawful money at any federal reserve bank. 1928 series A A.W. Mellon secretary of the treasury
If very worn, $250; if nearly new, $750.
when you find the value, you SOLVED the equation. you CHECK the equation when you substitute the value in the variables place and check that the equation is true.
Friedberg does not list any signers named Brooks. I searched all Mellon notes and the closest Treasurer's name is Woods (both forest-related -???!) Anyway, if that is what you have AND the date/letter is 1928-A, its value is in the 50 to 80 dollar range depending on the amount of wear. If it's 1928-B, the value is $70 to $175. If the bill doesn't match any of these, could you post a new question with its date, series letter, and seal color?
A cheque can be written for any value.
The rayon ones from 1939/1940 easily sell for $200 on ebay.