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Paper - Good for five cents in trade

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Year
Type Fantasy banknote
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Obverse lettering V
GOOD FOR FIVE CENTS
IN TRADE
5
V
Reverse description Plain unprinted reverse on aged, heavily worn paper stock showing significant staining, foxing, and loss across the surface consistent with extended circulation or improper storage.
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Comments

Trade tokens on paper — sometimes called "due bills" or scrip — were issued by individual merchants, lumber camps, mining operations, and company stores throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, typically to retain customer spending within a closed economy. A five-cent denomination suggests petty retail use, the kind of scrip handed back as change when coin was short or when a proprietor wanted to ensure repeat business.

Without issuer identification, precise dating is impossible. The near-square format is unusual and may indicate a cut-down or trimmed example.

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