If you refer to the pending marriage of Prince William and Kate Middleton, there may be some sort of a commemorative issued. The only recent Royal Wedding to have a commemorative coin minted was the marriage of Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer, and that possibly was only because Prince Charles was next in line for the Throne.
The US nickel was first issued in 1866. Please re-examine your coin.
if you go to the customer service section of Macy's they have a step by step of how to cancel your wedding registry. Macy's will NOT charge you a re-stocking fee for cancelling your wedding registry.
The Australian 2 cent coin was reproduced as Non-Circulating Legal Tender in 2006 as a part of three "40th Anniversary of Decimal Currency" sets. The coin was issued as part of a "Specimen" set, part of a "Proof" set and part of a "Gold Proof" set.
Call 1-800-829-1040. This is the number for the irs . Let them know that you need to have a check re-issued.
Please check your coin. The word "spade" referring to British coins is a reference to the "spade" shaped shield on the reverse of gold Guinea and Half-Guinea coins minted between 1787 and 1800. The Florin coin was not (re)introduced into the British currency until 1848.
I am not sure of present conditions, but I have a lifetime visa issued in the 1970's and can therefore re-enter any time I like - at least, I think so.
A coin described as "Premium Quality" is an above average example.
You would have to contact the school that issued it.
I found a few things that are close but not a match the wording on the back may help re-post please.
You generally send a wedding gift to the bride's home and the address where gifts are to be sent is the return address on the envelope re the wedding invitation.
It depends on HOW the dismissal was issued. If it was Dismissed WIHOUT Prejudice, yes, the charge could be re-instituted.
Please re-examine what you have and post a new question. The details you provided do not correspond to any known coin: > The first Sacagawea dollars were struck in 2000. > No U.S. coin minted in 1921 has a P mint mark. The P mint mark did not appear on any denomination until WWII, and was not used on $1 coins until 1979.