I live in Texas. Let me state for the record that if Rick Perry & Co try to secede from the Union, I intend to show the Yankees the back way in.
In the end it doesn't matter at what price you buy and at what price you sell. As long the latter exceeds the former by a reasonable amount then...
Am I the only one who thinks these things are garish and tacky? They look like "bling" a gangster who couldn't afford gold would have swinging...
Well, gambling that is entirely focused on exceeding the previous record win is pathological. It's akin to a druggie trying to get higher than...
The dealer is unable to demonstrate that the coin he calls a fake is in fact the one the seller sold him. The chain of custody is indeterminate,...
Hmmm. That's the Gambler's Lament. Fortunately for roll searchers, the worst they can do is break even. Congrats to the OP.
The government issued massive quantities of 1964 dated dimes and quarters until 1967. The point was to make them common enough that Gresham's Law...
Yes, I've seen this argument before, but there were large numbers of high-denomination notes in the banking network in 1969, more than enough to...
Do we know for sure that "VDB" doesn't stand for "Very Determined Bolshevik"? We should at least have Congressional hearings on the matter.
Subtle differences in paper and serial numbers differentiate pre and post war issues. It's a specialty collecting field, but the Krause catalogs...
Large denomination bills were withdrawn from active circulation in 1969 for one reason only - to make it more difficult to transport large amounts...
Me too.
In 1964 I was in a junior bowling league and got a 1916 D Walking Liberty half in change from the dollar my parents gave me to pay that month's...
Yeah, sounds great. This way the bank can liquidate your position if gold drops too much in value or if the stuff you bought does. Good way to...
"In real life" I am a dealer of collectibles, but not coins, stamps or paper money. I deal in items for which I have no love, so that I can buy...
Well, the date is the only part you highly magnified, but is sure doesn't look like machine doubling to me.
Looks like a repunched date to me.
Looks like a small die crack, or maybe planchet defect, on the lower reverse of the non-VDB cent. Also it looks like the ghost of the letters "V D...
Victorian equivalent of a modern casino chip.
About $3.25 for both.
Separate names with a comma.