Think about it. What would Jesus do.
only if it is on the road
The thing is that, pawn brokers (shoppes), are not antique dealers. If you have antique jewlery, your best bet is an antique dealer. Most antique dealers buy and sell antique jewlery. Pawn shoppes are buying the gold and silver apecifically for the gold and silver content and not for it's value as an antique. Although pawn shoppes pay well for gold and silver, their not generally dealers in antique jewlery. You should check out both pawn shoppes and antique dealers before you sell any antique jewlery.
Go to Beverly Loan Company located at 9440 Santa Monica Boulevard in Beverly Hills. Its an expensive pawn shop that would be willing to pay for antique jewelry.
A livery horse were horses that you would pay money to ride to wherever you needed to go. Its kinda like how you pay money to Enterprise and borrow one of their cars.
"Antique" in the trade means "over 100 years old." A good place to start would be ebay. Expect to pay a considerable amount for a certified antique with a written provenance, since silver cruets are uncommon - most are glass.
It would pay 80 cents on the dollar. If you bet $5 you would win $4...$10 bet would win you $8 ect...
for 4 rides you would pay a dollar
It is accurate to think of it this way: A top-flight, prime quality horse: What you would pay today for a new car. A usable, "no big problems" horse: What you would pay today for a good used car. The monetary exchange, with what the dollar was worth then, and what the dollar is worth now is about equal.
say you wanted to buy a painting he would say it was genuine and a real antique but it isent its a fake and you would pay loads of money for some crappy thing that isent even real so you would lose loads of money.
you have to be carefull of horse traders. there could be a problem with the horse and you paid for a horse that you cannot use. also you have to pay for shots and things.plu s when a horse dies you have to pay alot of money to getoff your land or buried.
This will depend upon the agreement you work out with the horse's owner. In general, I believe most leasees pay for all veterinary care. As mentioned above, typically a leasee will pay the majority of the bills. however you can have it put into the lease agreement that the care costs are to be split evenly on routine health care. However if the horse was hurt while in your care, it would be your duty to pay for any emergency care that is required. You should also ask the owner if the horse has any Medical or surgical insurance.
Whatever the person buying the marbles is willing to pay.