its a green card with a big peach on it
As many times as u like
Food stamps were pieces of paper that had an amount of 1, 5, 10, or 20 to be used just like money on food. Now most states use a card that can be used to purchase food.
A ration stamp is similar to that of a food stamp. A ration stamp (or card) was given to the people of a country by their government and could be exchanged for food. This was mainly used during wartimes when things like bread, sugar, and coffee are in short supply and must be evenly divided among a group of people.
No. The idea of food stamps was to keep people alive until they could work for themselves again, not pay for excessive activities like feeding pets.
i like dog food in my cereal
A ration stamp is similar to that of a food stamp. A ration stamp (or card) was given to the people of a country by their government and could be exchanged for food. This was mainly used during wartimes when things like bread, sugar, and coffee are in short supply and must be evenly divided among a group of people.
Its pretty easy to do, because it is not a member's only stamp. Ok, in a party, sometimes you see food booths, like a pizza booth, or an ice cream stall, or a Hot dog one, or anything that is like a food stall (The hot dog stand at the Stadium / Ice Rink does not work because it is not a party special). Go to one of those booths or stalls and to any food emote, like the pizza emote or ice cream emote.There's your stamp.
Specifically I'm looking for the 1) Sterling Silver Type 2 (which has the ".925" stamp on it), 2) the Brass Proof Type 2 (also with the .925 stamp) and 3) the 1979 Cherokee Nation Medal (looks like it may be a trial/pattern piece of the 1980 coins). Thx
Depends on your definition of "coin". Some states and local markets issued coin-like tokens to be issued as change. These were mostly made of plastic and often mimicked the sizes of the coins they represented, though some were larger, smaller or in unusual shapes like squares and hexagons. Private issues often served as a form of free advertisement and guaranteed that the recipient would return to the same store to spend the tokens.
It started in the 1930s, as blue and orange slips that you could trade in for food, like money. The problem was that you had to buy the food stamps, which, obviously, if you could buy food stamps then you could buy food yourself.
Anything they would like to: food, slaves, goods and weapons to name a few.