| Ön yüz açıklaması |
Letterpress-printed in black on paper with a brown repeated-text underprint of "VEINTICINCO CENTAVOS" spanning the entire field in the manner of a guilloché security pattern. The denomination "25 CENTAVOS" is set in large bold type at centre, flanked by asterisk ornaments, with the issuing authority title across the top and the series letter at upper left; a red serial number appears at upper right. Below centre, the date, the title of Provisional Governor, and the printed name "GRAL. FRANCISCO VILLA" are followed by two manuscript signatures with their respective role designations, and the printer's imprint runs along the lower margin. |
| Ön yüz lejandı |
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| Arka yüz açıklaması |
Largely unprinted paper with a single black circular official seal applied at the left, enclosing the Mexican national eagle coat of arms and surrounded by the legend "TESORERIA GENERAL DEL ESTADO CHIHUAHUA". The text "H-NST" is printed in black at centre-right of the otherwise blank field, and a double-ruled border frames the entire note. |
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The Tesorería General del Estado de Chihuahua issued this note during one of the most turbulent stretches of the Mexican Revolution, when Chihuahua functioned as the operational and financial base for Villista forces. The state treasury was printing its own fractional currency because federal money had effectively ceased to function across large parts of northern Mexico — commercial confidence in Mexico City–issued paper had collapsed entirely.
Printed locally by the Imprenta del Gobierno, these small-denomination notes were essentially emergency scrip, designed to keep local commerce moving when coin had disappeared from circulation through hoarding. Fractional issues from this period are among the most frequently counterfeited of all Mexican Revolutionary notes, and contemporary fakes exist in the series.