Dave Bowers has an interesting question for E-Sylum readers - what can you buy for a nickel today? I'm stumped. -Editor
For Whitman Publishing I am doing a study of the nickel five-cent piece from its inception in pattern form in 1865, down to its use
today. Here is a question for E-Sylum readers.
In the 1960s in Los Angeles I spent a couple of weeks trying to see what items on their own could be purchased for a “penny.” I came up
with three:
1. A one-cent stamp at the Post Office.
2. A gumball in some machines.
3. A view of flip cards in a hand-cranked Mutoscope flip card machine in the Crystal Arcade on Main Street in Disneyland.
Now, in 2016 I wonder how many single items can be bought for a nickel. Comments are welcome!
Also, I welcome high-resolution advertising images of sodas (other than Moxie and Coke) and of nickel products (well set on cigars) that
mention “nickel,” “five cents,” “5 cents,” or similar.
Reward: Credit in a Whitman book to be released early in 2018.
Send to:
Dave Bowers
qdbarchive@metrocast.net
Wayne Homren, Editor
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