A medal featuring a cross with blue and white enamel and a swastika in the center, attached to a striped ribbon. The medal has German inscriptions.

Cross of Honor of the German Mother

(Mutterkreuz) Established by Adolf Hitler on December 16, 1938. Part of campaign to encourage "pure" German women to have more children and increase the population of the Third Reich. Bronze was awarded to women with 4-5 children. (Silver 6-7; Gold 8 or more). Mothers had to instill Nazi values in their children.
A military medal with a black and white striped ribbon and an embossed eagle holding a swastika, positioned over a cross-shaped background.

Social Welfare Medal

(Medaille für deutsche Volkspflege) Established by Adolf Hitler on May 1, 1939, to recognize services in welfare, Winter help programs, and the care of the sick and wounded during peacetime and wartime. 
Polish and American commemorative coin celebrating 25 years of Polish-American friendship, with the Polish eagle and a monument, inscribed with dates 1944 and 1969, and mentioning the Polish Fighting Czechs and Warsaw Uprising.

Warsaw Uprising

Medal for the 25th anniversary of the Powstanie Warszawskie (1944). It also honors "Polska Walcząca" (Fighting Poland), a.k.a the resistance. Issued by the Polish American Numismatic Association in Chicago (1969)
A gold-colored keychain with a Paris map medallion and a rectangular charm featuring the French flag.

Commemorative keychain in honor of the liberation of Paris

Features a map of France, French colors, and a crowing rooster at sunrise with the cross of Lorraine.