Only about 6 to 12 cents, assuming you could find a buyer, which you probably couldn't. It's extremely common, but not as common as the 1958-D, which had a mintage of 168,249,120 pieces, while your 1958 (plain) had a mintage of 17,088,000 pieces. So your 1958 Philadelphia coin is approximately ten times scarcer than the Denver coin from the same year, but it's still common and not really worth a whole lot over face value.
I agree with lordmarcovan but you coin does have a slight MAD ( misaligned die) but it really doesn't add anymore value.IMO Dave
Low mintage but not a key or semi key date. Worth keeping in the highest grades (mint state). Yours is circulated and there's really no collector market for it. If you keep it, it's only costing you a nickel. In 5 years you can look for someone to give you a dime for it.