There are currnetly four US mints in operation. The Philadelphia, Denver, San Fransisco and West point mints. One other mint in operation is located in the Philippines, but does not produce American currnecy.
That means it is a novelty coin. These are not made by the US mint. They are made by private mints for shops as a token or toy.
India is so big and has so many people that the huge amount of coins needed to be made can not be minted in just one place. So there are several mints around India, and the little marks show which of the mints the coin was made in.
The US has minted 1¢ coins since 1793, and at 3 different mints so there are many hundreds of different possibilities. Please post a new, separate question with the coin's date. Alternately, look for questions phrased "What is the value of a <date> US cent?", e.g. "What is the value of a 1927 US cent?" Nearly every date has been asked about and answered.
Depending on condition:$20 to $90 if from the Philadelphia or San Francisco mints$25 to $200 if from Carson City.
If you mean 5 to 3 then there are 45 chocolates and 27 mints
The Treasury and US Mints.
Currently, there are 4 operating mints in the US.
That means it is a novelty coin. These are not made by the US mint. They are made by private mints for shops as a token or toy.
In the history of the US there have been 8 mints. Today there are 4 in use.
The US mints were not in operation at this time so no 1729 pennies were made. Your coin would be called a token. There are many different types of tokens.
They don't have a state coin. No state mints money. The US government did put out a series of quarters representing each state.
The coins are recycled in the main mints of the country.
This coin would be the US barber dime. Philidelphia, Denver & Sanfrancisco mints made these coins in 1906. The mint mark can be found on the back of the coin just under the leaves in the wreath at the base of he coin.
The United States Mint prints our US dollars. The Federal Reserve bank supposedly backs all of the dollars that the US Mint Prints. Their are two mints in the US and each bill and coin has marked on it the mint it originated from. The mints are located in Denver, Colorado and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania A coin minted in Philadelphia will have a "P" on it and one minted in Denver will have a "D".
That does not define a coin. Post a new question and include they date. The motto "E Pluribus Unum" is on almost every single coin minted by US mints.
In 1885 the US made silver dimes, quarters, halves, and dollars at various mints so that's too broad a question to provide a specific answer. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination.
The US Mint did not produce this coin and it is probably the product of one of the private mints. Its actual value would be limited to the worth of the metals it contains.