[137844] in SIPB IPv6
The LABUBU Collection Just Landed at Target!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Toy Insider)
Sun Jun 29 02:28:32 2025
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Date: Sun, 29 Jun 2025 08:12:32 +0200
From: "Toy Insider" <TargetFinds@julysavings.za.com>
Reply-To: "Target Finds" <PopMart@julysavings.za.com>
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The LABUBU Collection Just Landed at Target!
http://julysavings.za.com/MgCyj9c-mu2SQAc9q1lZZiSq5SLzFTMi-fDKk-dP3aqgFmD7Aw
http://julysavings.za.com/_ihhcbDucUvE21ZgxJTA4JqdTVQt4TOX2VXusnhRuFnkMfIRbw
oth as a gold coin, and as one of silver, representative of the two metals which he proposed be made legal tender. Congress followed Hamilton's recommendation only in part, authorizing a silver dollar, but no coin of that denomination in gold.
In 1831, the first gold dollar was minted, at the private mint of Christopher Bechtler in North Carolina. Much of the gold then being produced in the United States came from the mountains of North Carolina and Georgia, and the dollars and other small gold coins issued by Bechtler circulated through that region, and were now and then seen further away. Additional one-dollar pieces were struck by August Bechtler, Christopher's son.
Soon after the Bechtlers began to strike their private issues, Secretary of the Treasury Levi Woodbury became an advocate of having the Mint of the United States ("Mint", when described as an institution) strike the one-dollar denomination in gold. He was opposed by the Mint Director, Robert M. Patterson. Woodbury persuaded President Andrew Jackson to have pattern coins struck. In response, Patterson had Mint Second Engraver Christian Gobrecht break off work on the new design for the silver one-dollar coin and work on a pattern for the gold dollar. Gobrecht's design featured a Liberty cap surrounded by rays on one side, and a palm branch arranged in a circle with the denomination, date, and name of the coun
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;visibility:hidden;">oth as a gold coin, and as one of silver, representative of the two meta</div>
<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;visibility:hidden;">ls which he proposed be made legal tender. Congress followed Hamilton's recommenda</div>
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;visibility:hidden;">tion only in part, authorizing a silver dollar, but no coin of that denomination in gold. In 1831, the first gold dollar was m</div>
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;visibility:hidden;">inted, at the private mint of Christopher Bechtler in North Carolina. Much of the gold then being produced in the United States came from the mountains of North Carolina and Georgia, and the dollars and other small gold coins issued by Bechtler circulated through that region, and were now and then seen further away. Additional one-dollar pieces were struck by August Bechtler, Christopher's son. Soon after the Bechtlers began to strike their private issues, Secretary of the Treasury Levi Woodbury became an advocate of having the Mint of the United States ("Mint", when described as an institution) strike the one-dollar denomination in gold. He was opposed by the Mint Director, Robert M. Patterson. Woodbury persuaded President Andrew Jackson to have pattern coins struck. In response, Patterson had Mint Second Engraver Christian Gobrecht break off work on the new design for the silver one-dollar coin and work on a pattern for the gold dollar. Gobrecht's design featured a Liberty cap surrounded by rays on one side, and a palm branch arranged in a circle with the denomination, date, and name of the coun</div>
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<a href="http://julysavings.za.com/_ihhcbDucUvE21ZgxJTA4JqdTVQt4TOX2VXusnhRuFnkMfIRbw" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://julysavings.za.com/d45662d5b88f008dea.jpg" /></a><br />
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