She gestured with her hand; the gold ingot was huge, almost the size of her fist!
And there are dozens of these gold ingots inside!
The fifth box was finally not filled with gold; it contained raw jadeite.
Although there isn't much material, judging from its color and translucency, it should be a glassy imperial green.
The six or seven boxes were filled with money: one box of US dollars and the other of Hong Kong dollars.
This will lead to very strict foreign exchange controls in China. Apart from official channels, US dollars and Hong Kong dollars, which circulate only in underground banks or black markets in a few major cities, are priced at least two to three times higher than the official prices.
This place alone cost at least several hundred thousand yuan.
Jiang Si had absorbed all of the original owner's memories, and she knew that the Jiang family was large and wealthy and did not lack money.
But I never expected them to be so rich... This is hundreds of thousands of dollars in the 1960s!
It can only be said that the wealth and influence of the Lao Qian family is beyond the imagination of ordinary people.
The eighth box must belong to that scumbag dad.
Inside are two Rolex men's wristwatches, a solid gold and diamond-encrusted pocket watch, four jade thumb rings, and a pair of gold-threaded dragon-patterned jade pendants.
Five strings of agarwood prayer beads, several diamond tie clips and sapphire cufflinks, and a complete set of jade snuff bottles.
The next few boxes contained rare medicinal herbs.
Besides common ingredients like ginseng, deer antler, lingzhi, shark fin, bird's nest, saffron, ambergris, cordyceps, aged donkey-hide gelatin, and wild musk...
Jiang Si also saw many Chinese medicinal herbs that have been explicitly banned or nearly extinct in later generations.
For example, tiger bone, bear bile, dragon's blood, rhinoceros horn, snow leopard bone, natural bezoar, hawksbill turtle shell scales, saiga antelope horn...
If it weren't for the labels on each box indicating the name and effects of the corresponding Chinese medicine, she really wouldn't have been able to tell what was inside.
The last few boxes were filled with finished traditional Chinese medicine.
Like the previous boxes of medicinal herbs, the core ingredients, usage, and effects of these Chinese medicines are clearly listed on the inventory list.
Jiang Si glanced at it and found that there were many medicines that would be familiar to people in later generations.
Products like Angong Niuhuang Wan, Yunnan Baiyao, Pian Zai Huang, Niuhuang Qingxin Wan, Wuji Baifeng Wan, and Huoxiang Zhengqi Wan.
Of course, there were also some that she had never heard of, such as Shaolin Temple's secret medicine Qili San, Kang Gu Tong Wan, Su He Xiang Wan, Dian Kuang Long Hu Wan, Zi Xue Dan, and Ding Kun Dan.
After taking stock of everything, Jiang Si couldn't help but admire her father; it seemed he had made quite a few preparations for her trip to Hong Kong.
I wonder if he'll be so angry he'll go crazy when he comes back and sees all the things I've carefully prepared gone.
However, Jiang Si felt that he might not be able to see that scene.
Because she really had no interest in wasting time with that family; she wanted to get things over with quickly!
Continue read on readnovelmtl.com