A very nice second printing shift. Check eBay's sold auctions for a representative price. You see this quite a bit on $1 notes. $20 notes are more uncommon. If I got that from my bank, I think I would have fallen over!
+1 I found a very beat up solid 8 radar $5 in worse shape & some others which were, to a collector, pretty remarkable. 99% of the population don't give their notes a 2nd glance & perceive each denomination on a purely functional bases (what can this $__ buy). Nice find @jafo50
I thought it was interesting how the front of the bill was offset but the back is normal. I guess it has to do with the actual printing process. The extent of my knowledge of paper money is saving star notes that I come across. Do you call it front and back or obverse and reverse as we do with coins?
As long as you don't say, "got this from the mint" or "it is near mint condition," where coins come from- you can call it whatever you like (in my book). Front or "obverse" & "back" (for "reverse") are pretty interchangeable (though I rarely see collectors naming the back of a note "the reverse").