As a volunteer, I helped sell tickets several times with our horrible, too-small cash boxes. They were the kind with only about 3 bill slots, so it never worked out right.
Once I became Prez we bought new money boxes - the large ones that resemble the drawer of a commercial cash register. They are wonderful!! A slot for each type of bill and coin and the lids lock. They were about $45 each but well worth it.
Your larger office supply stores (Office Max, Office Depot, Staples) carry a pretty good assortment of cash boxes and replacement trays - if not in the store, then in their catalog.
Wow Scottmom you have 2 Walmarts! We don't even have one.
For some booths I think the aprons are alot easier, especially if you use tickets. I realize that is not what you are looking for but I thought I'd share that places like Home Depot, Lowes, and local home improvement stores would usually donate them.
At the elementary I used to pres for we had a small wooden tray, but we never used it.
[ 05-18-2005, 03:51 PM: Message edited by: C. Brooks ]
We have 2 walmarts in our town. I couldn't find them at one but they were next to the caskboxes at the other. We also have a store that does work with cash registars (sells, rents, fixes) and they had some but were more expensive.
The irony of commitment is that it’s deeply liberating-in work, in play, in love. The act frees you from the tyranny of your internal critic, from the fear that likes to dress itself up and parade around as rational hesitation. To commit is to remove your head as the barrier to your life. --Anne Morris
ScottMom, were they in the office supplies section? (I looked at Wal-mart too and didn't see anything in a small size). I was thinking of trying the toy section (for play money trays).
Oddly, I don't see a manufacturer name anywhere on our cash boxes. They look like the MMR brand sold at Office Depot, though. I haven't found a small MMR replacement money tray online, only the larger ones. I'm just trying to do some "pre-shopping" before loading up the kids and embarking on a whirlwind tour of all the local office supply and discount stores (which, from what I've seen online, seems unlikely to be sucessful).