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1: little-known trick clears blurry eyesight

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Restore Your Vision)
Wed Jun 25 13:33:17 2025

Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2025 11:30:25 -0500
From: "Restore Your Vision" <RestoreYourVisionTrick@spritualsaltest.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Restore Your Vision" <RestoreYourVision@spritualsaltest.ru.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

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1: little-known trick clears blurry eyesight

http://spritualsaltest.ru.com/aC3j2dP7uwQSYzTty8nOTSBZfDH9PojpdW-72_Z9Q39PFGkQuA

http://spritualsaltest.ru.com/yEuRAmN05M2togr78qYaoxfd_XYVyN5L7vAsa4K1udoaQ0cd

est from that mint is the 1861-D, with an estimated mintage of 1,000 and perhaps 45 to 60 known. Two pairs of dies were shipped from Philadelphia to Dahlonega on December 10, 1860; they arrived on January 7, 1861, two weeks before Georgia voted to secede from the Union, as the American Civil War began. Under orders from Governor Joseph E. Brown, state militia secured the mint, and at some point, small quantities of dollars and half eagles were produced. Records of how many coins were struck and when have not survived. Since dies crack in time, and all the mints were supplied with them from Philadelphia, coining could not last, and in May 1861, coins and supplies remaining at Dahlonega were turned over to the treasury of the Confederate States of America, which Georgia had by then joined. Gold coins with a total face value of $6 were put aside for assay. Normally, they would have been sent to Philadelphia to await the following year's meeting of the United States Assay Commission, when they would be available for testing. Instead, these were sent to the initial Confederate capital of Montgomery, Alabama, though what was done with them there, and their ultimate fate, are unknown. The rarity of the 1861-D dollar, and the association with the Confederacy, make it especially prized.

Dahlonega, like the other two branch mints in the South, closed its doors after the 1861 strikings. It and the Charlotte facility never reopened; the New Orleans Mint again struck coins from 1879 to 1909, but did not strike gold dollars again. After 1861, the only issuance of gold dollars outside Philade

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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">est from that mint is the 1861-D, with an estimated mintage of 1,000 and perhaps 45 to 60 known. Two pairs of dies were shipped from Philadelphia to Dahlonega on December 10, 1860; they arrived on January 7, 1861, two weeks before Georgia voted to secede from the Union, as the American Civil War began. Under orders from Governor Joseph E. Brown, state militia secured the mint, and at some point, small quantities of dollars and half eagles were produced. Records of how many coins were struck and when have not survived. Since dies crack in time, and all the mints were supplied with them from Philadelphia, coining could not last, and in May 1861, coins and supplies remaining at Dahlonega were turned over to the treasury of the Confederate States of America, which Georgia had by then joined. Gold coins with a total face value of $6 were put aside for assay. Normally, they would have been sent to Philadelphia to await the following year&#39;s meeting of the United States Assay Commission, when they would be available for testing. Instead, these were sent to the initial Confederate capital of Montgomery, Alabama, though what was done with them there, and their ultimate fate, are unknown. The rarity of the 1861-D dollar, and the association with the Confederacy, make it especially prized. Dahlonega, like the other two branch mints in the South, closed its doors after the 1861 strikings. It and the Charlotte facility never reopened; the New Orleans Mint again struck coins from 1879 to 1909, but did not strike gold dollars again. After 1861, the only issuance of gold dollars outside Philade</div>
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&nbsp;
<center><a href="http://spritualsaltest.ru.com/xvnhVwUX4XFRURWE6GjZL6mgnkq9XqxkPzAjZLvD5ynspiRumA" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://spritualsaltest.ru.com/963191420e7024cfc2.jpg" /></a></center>
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&nbsp;</div>
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</body>
</html>

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