Do you have any scruples? I do!

These are very common individually, to the point of being junk-box fodder in most cases, but I thought the original tin was very neat. I don't know if it's truly a full set any more. I assume that at least one piece has gone missing in the last century-plus.
20 grains in 1 scruple
3 scruples in 1 drachm (now known as a dram)
8 drachms (drams) in 1 ounce
12 ounces in 1 troy pound
(and yes, I had to look that up.)
(edited to correct number of ounces in a troy pound)

20 grains in 1 scruple
3 scruples in 1 drachm (now known as a dram)
8 drachms (drams) in 1 ounce
12 ounces in 1 troy pound
(and yes, I had to look that up.)
(edited to correct number of ounces in a troy pound)


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They must have made millions of them. It's hard to understand how why most of one thing
might survive but few of another. I guess a lot people must have thrown them out.
They aren't scarce.
I gotta find me some of those little ones.
Stefanie
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<< <i>cladking, do you know how many pieces are supposed to be in the full set? >>
No. I've never even seen the smaller ones.
... from the On-Line Etymology Dictionary
Those are quite cool, and apparently the origin of the word in our current language, implying that those merchants who offer fair and honest weight have 'scruples'.
Thanks for sharing.
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
it's 480 grains to a troy ounce, 437.5 grains to an ounce avoirdupois.
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
3 scruples in 1 drachm (now known as a dram)
8 drachms (drams) in 1 ounce
16 ounces in 1 pound
(and yes, I had to look that up.)>>
Where did you look it up?
Apothecaries' ounces and pounds are the same as the troy system. It is only the smaller divisions that are different.
480 grains = 1 ounce
12 ounces = 1 pound
A pound of feathers is heavier than a pound of gold, but
an ounce of gold is heavier than an ounce of feathers.
<< <i>Never seen anything like that before. What are they? >>
Those are apothecary weights, used by pharmacists to measure powdered, granular, or tablet forms of prescription medicines. The premier collector of these is a pharmacist from Rochester, N.Y. His exhibit of apothecary weights at the Pittsburgh A.N.A. convention in 2004(?) earned a 1st place award.
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