1928 Kweichow Auto Dollar with Two Blades on obverse and vertical line between the doors (WS1109); the Kweichow Auto Dollar has a great history: In 1928, the warlord of Kweichow province, Zhou Xicheng, minted a coin to commemorate the completion of the Kweichow Provincial Highway, the first road in the province, but he lived the high life while other people suffered. He owned a luxury automobile imported from the United States; it had been shipped to China, disassembled and carried on foot over the mountains to Kweichow, and reassembled. Now that he had had a car (the only one in the province), he could drive it around at will, and he wanted a coin with his portrait on it to commemorate the event. But his advisors told him that if he put himself on the coin, he would die. Zhou took their advice and decided not to put his image on the coin, but before the coins were minted, Zhou decided he wanted to be on the coin after all, but instead of his image, he hid his name in the grass under the car. If you tilt the coin to the right so the car looks like ita€?s taking off like a rocket, the patterns in the grass suddenly resemble Chinese characters. Inevitably, Zhou is ambushed by rebel troops loyal to another warlord, and left to die by the side of the road he helped build. So this is probably the most famous commemorative coin in Chinese history; silver, a rare and important coin, graded XF 40 by NGC