Correct, reason: The contents do NOT belong to the bank, and they cannot be liquidated to pay the bank's debtors.
Nice finds! Good luck
Nah, it'll break $300K
FYI: It is Capped Bust
could be.
Note: the famous 1955 DoubleD Die is on the Philadelphia [no mintmark] cent. Yes, the 1936 has several DDO's, but that isn't one of them
Look at the reverse, you can see the damage at the ER of AMRICA. That resulted when someone 'punched' the obverse . And caused the metal flow to...
1919 Lincoln cent: Taken out of a 'Lucky coin' holder. 1991 and 198? greased dies.
But, in this instance [considering the date/time period] it refers to Seated Liberty Quarter.
Far nicer than mine, it is only a F-12, but I graded it in Jan 2000, so with grade flation, it may be better now
Thank you
fun find
I got a 1948 S Lincoln this weekend at 7-11
Nice find
Oh, to quote Gilda Ratner: "Never mind".
Good luck
This is exactly why I am opposed to donations to museums. Any donation will go into a drawer and never be seen again. I figure 99.9% of items...
nice results Much better
Well, silver is at $19.67, and they want $23.60 or a premium of $4 per ounce. That is a premium of 20.33% over melt. So, nope too high a premium...
sounds good
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