Cent looks intentionally hollowed out. AKA a "Magicians coin". I assume you put a dime in the hollowed out portion.
Walked into a Kinkos one day because I needed one copy of something. Cost around 7 cents at that time. They refused to accept my cash, which says...
^^^ That was my thought. Considering all the glowing posts in a row.
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I looked at this site to perhaps buy coins. So I did a little research and I was persuaded not to buy from them.
The internet has very negative reviews about this site.
Overly circulated quarter, worth 0.24 cents.
Found this, it may be of interest. Link included. "If you see a coin for sale and the adv., says ONE POUND SILVER COIN and shows a picture of the...
They did make $2 silver certs. ( I remember seeing one in the currency forum recently), this one is from 1899. But I don't think they can be found...
I don't think the 2's had any modern silver certificates. Any red note would be a good find. Maybe a 1976 in crisp condition.
This guide puts that coin at $20-$24 and they lean toward retail. $30 in VF. F-12 might be accurately graded, if it hasn't been cleaned....
It's subtle, but the 0 in the LD is much more like a circle, and the 6 is more closed in the SD and the date overall looks a little smaller and...
When did they first start rolling silver dollars in paper rolls? I think it was after the early 1900's.
The only one worth anything is the 1960 small date. The 60-D small date, the 1960 large date and 1960-D large date are all worth 1 cent.
Here is an article on the 1959-D wheat back: (interesting read) http://www.pcgs.com/news/the-mystery-of-the-1959-d-mule-lincoln-cent
Too bad about the cleaning. It turned a $150 coin into a $25 coin.
Those photos make it look more proof-y.
The rims are thick. I am not seeing the mirroring in the fields on the reverse, except on the bottom edge through the lettering.
Separate names with a comma.