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“Say These 5 ‘Magic’ Words To Your Local Bank Teller— And You Could Walk Away With A Handful Of Silver”

What's Dr. David Eifrig's secret magic phrase for getting free silver coins? Also teased as "Retirement Silver"

We’re rerunning this piece because it continues to be one of the most asked-for explanations on the Stock Gumshoe website. What follows below was originally published in mid-2012, it has been updated for the change in silver values but otherwise remains unchanged.

Dr. David Eifrig over at Stansberry’s Retirement Millionaire newsletter has been teasing us with “five magic words” that he says you can use at your local bank to get free silver.

Huh? What’s he talking about?

Don’t worry, we’ll sniff through his clues and try to figure out what specific opportunity he’s talking about … and maybe we’ll even be able to guess exactly what his “Magic words” are. Here’s how he gets us interested:

“Say These 5 “Magic” Words To Your Local Bank Teller—

“And You Could Walk Away With A Handful Of Silver

“I never thought this would work. But it did! I tried it, and to my surprise, I got 34 silver coins from a single bank. Needless to say, I’m going back for more! Thanks for the great idea!” — Maury D., Tyler, TX”

Sounds great, right? Don’t worry, there’s more where that came from …

“I recently heard a wild rumor about a major loophole in the U.S. retail banking system…

“One that enables you to get real, ‘hold-in-your-hand’ silver from practically any FDIC-insured bank in the U.S. All you do is walk in, say 5 simple, but very specific words and – according to this rumor – you could walk out minutes later with a handful of silver, as part of a totally free transaction.

“You don’t even need an account with the bank where you want to collect your silver….

“Right now, a group of banks in the U.S. are finding themselves in possession of a certain type of government-created coin, which does not circulate widely in the general population…

“You see, these coins were originally produced during the early part of the 20th century, as part of a government mandate – called H.R. 2934 – to create money that was respected and easy to use. More than 750 million of these coins were minted, all containing varying amounts of silver.

“These coins – which contain as much as 90% pure silver – were designed by many of the best sculptors and engravers of the day – people like Augustus St. Gaudens, Charles E. Barber, and Gilroy Roberts. One of these coins is even listed by the Professional Coin Grading Service (PCGS) as one of the “20th Century’s most beautiful silver coins.”

“The coins were date-stamped and engraved with official U.S. government markings, to ensure authenticity.

“These unique ‘silvers’ were originally intended to be kept in circulation. But the Feds ceased production in 1971 because people were hoarding them and not circulating them like the government planned.

“But what 99% of the public doesn’t realize is that many banks today still hold large quantities of these coins.”

So what are these coins?

Well, from the general tone of the letter it appears likely to me that he’s talking about old US currency from the silver coinage days, not about specialty or collectible coins — and he has often teased so-called “junk silver” coins before. Junk silver refers to the pre-1965 circulating dimes, quarters, half dollars and dollars that were made of 90% silver and which are the easiest low-cost entree into silver accumulation for a lot of people — either because they buy bags of old “junk” silver or because they sift through their pocket change and set aside those occasional 1963 dimes that are actually worth a few dollars each.

But what about that 1971 date? That tells me we’re looking at something else — and my guess is that he’s talking about Kennedy half dollars.

The fifty cent piece is one of the most common coins in US history, and was very widely used up until about 50 years ago, but it has effectively disappeared from circulation. Part of the reason it disappeared is that the half dollar became the Kennedy half dollar in 1964 to honor the assassinated president, and it was extraordinarily popular as a memento of a much-loved public figure so people tended to hold on to it. Add that to the fact that this is also the time when silver was getting taken out of circulating coinage and folks started to hoard all coins that had real silver content, and the 50 cent coin was pretty much killed as a circulating piece of currency.

But the key is that 1965 isn’t the only key date for silver in JFK half dollars — 1970 is also important. Because although all the other common coins stopped containing silver starting in 1965, the JFK half dollar was struck in 40% silver for several more years, from 1965-1970. So you have an extremely common coin (hundreds of millions were minted) that’s almost never seen, and one that’s not pre-1965 and therefore not as widely known for its silver content, and people don’t use them in daily commerce, so there must be at least a few still out there waiting to be found.

The theory then, I suppose, is that a ton of these fifty cent pieces are just sitting in the dusty back portion of bank vaults — stores don’t want them to give change, but they occasionally get them in change, and every once in a while bank customers will bring in a roll or two of fifty cent pieces, and they probably sit in a box in the back of the vault until someone asks for them. So maybe if you go to the bank and ask for any half dollars they have, you’ll get some of these older ones.

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Of course, plenty of banks probably don’t have any half dollars at all or would have to order them for you (which might be worth it, I don’t know, the Federal Reserve banks are certainly loaded with them but I have no idea if the coins in storage have any potential for silver dates), so it won’t work every time.

So if you walk into a bank and ask them if they have any half dollars, maybe you’ll get a little trove that you can search through and see if it includes any treasures — and of course, you can’t really lose money, because this is circulating coinage so the bank won’t charge you anything, you just give them $20 (or whatever) for $20 worth of half-dollar coins.

The rub? Well, part of the rub is that they might not have these coins, since no one ever wants or asks for them and they’re rarely used in commerce. And the other part of the rub is that the next decade or so worth of JFK half dollars are also very, very common … so if you do get some half dollars, it’s likely that almost all of them will be from the early 1970s or the widely minted 1976 bicentennial half dollar, pretty much all of which are worth, well, fifty cents. And you can’t use them in most vending machines or parking meters.

But if you DO get lucky and find a few older half dollars that are from 1970 or before, they’re worth a lot more than 50 cents — so that’s how you can be compensated for the time you spent searching for these coins and sifting through them.

The silver half dollars from 1964 and earlier, including the 1964 JFK half dollar, the 1948-1963 Benjamin Franklin half dollar or, if you’re really lucky, the Walking Liberty half dollar that was minted from 1916-1947 are all 90% silver and that silver content is, at $23 silver, worth a little less than $8.20.

The more common and perhaps not as widely known 40% silver JFK half dollars, which are the ones that are theoretically more likely to still be found in rolls at the bank on occasion, are the ones that were minted from 1965-1970 — and they have about $3.35 worth of silver in them. Some of the years also may have collectible value, including some of the post-1970 non-silver years, but if you’re talking just about the silver content you want coins that were minted 1970 or earlier. An easy place to check for silver content and the (constantly updated) value thereof is the free calculator at the Coinflation.com website.

Eifrig does, to his credit, caution that this “free” silver isn’t completely free — it doesn’t work all the time, at every bank, so you have to put time in (and, of course, you have to be fortunate):

“How often does saying these 5 magic words actually get you free silver?

“Well, from my experience, after observing more than 250 people to try this technique in dozens of banks around the country, I estimate that if you go to the right banks (I’ll show you which ones), and say the right words (again, I’ll give you the specifics) it works about 25% of the time.

“So, you’re going to have to do a little legwork to get this secret to work for you. But remember, this is basically FREE silver we are talking about here. If you are too lazy or too busy to do a little work to get something as valuable as silver, essentially free of charge, well, I’m sorry, but you can stop reading right now….

“The reason this works is because most Americans (including the people who work at banks) have no idea how this “loophole” works.

“But eventually, word will get out and this opportunity will end.”

And the special magic words? I don’t know exactly, but I’ll wager the phrase goes something like, “May I please have half-dollars?” Or “Do you have half dollars?”

There are bajillions of web articles and discussion boards about how to get your mitts on collectible or silver-content coins by getting an “in” at the local bank or trying to find the customer-rolled coins — the guess being that if Grandma let her grandchildren roll up the old jar of coins they found in the attic and take them in to the bank to exchange for bills so they can buy video games, maybe you’ll get lucky and find that the roll of dimes had a bunch of pre-1965 coins and is worth more than ten times the face value.

That’s also the hope for half dollars, though I guess they’re probably not as widely requested or talked about, or rolled up for that matter, so you may want to either cruise around to any sleepy bank branches you know about to give it a whirl, or chat up your friendly neighborhood bank teller so you can get an “in” when a promising pile of coins gets turned in. Though why any teller wouldn’t sift through them on her own is beyond me.

Or heck, maybe your brother in law runs the local Coinstar operation (those are the automatic coin counters you’ll see at some grocery stores) and will let you sort through the coins every week.

The point is that this is not just something you can do at your local bank branch every day to get a guaranteed free $50 every time — it’s probably best thought of as a hobby that will occasionally provide a nice perk of some “free” money if you’re willing to drive around to a lot of bank branches and look at a lot of coins. Unless you live in a very small town, however, you’re probably not the only person trying to look for these kinds of old coins … so be nice.

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J. Jonz
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J. Jonz
September 29, 2012 3:48 pm

I was doing this back in the 70’s. Back then you would be lucky to find one silver coin in a roll.
Today you would probably spend more on gas lugging that junk coinage back and forth to the bank and any silver you may find would be worth.

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Vic
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Vic
October 4, 2012 10:40 am

Generally, as I was told, half dollars are a pain so they don’t bother. Four banks, zero half dollars. I did get dollar coins from one bank. Good for gifts to the kids just like 2 dollar bills. It’s surprising how many think it’s counterfeit or play money. One place called the store manager to verify it was valid two dollar bill. I have not tried cutting one from an uncut sheet from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Not worth the hassle and wasting an oddity.

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Eddie
Eddie
October 4, 2012 11:36 am

I went to my bank (wells fargo) order $200.00 of 1/2 dollars.Picked out the pre -1965 coins.It can’t get any easier than that.I also have a credit union that I’m going to hit up for pre-1965 coins.I’ll report back soon.

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sagenot
Member
sagenot
October 4, 2012 12:27 pm

Doesn’t anyone find Dr. Eifrig’s use of the word FREE in his ads strange? Paying for dollar or 1/2 dollar coins is certainly NOT FREE!
“What’s Dr. David Eifrig’s secret magic phrase for getting free silver coins?
Posted on August 20, 2012 by Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe”

I know Porter, met him before he married in Delray Beach, he was sweaty & I thought a bit nervous. He’s now a multi-millionaire, insists on these annoying unrelenting sales pitches, & if he finds one that works well, he’ll bury his subscribers for months afterwards.

The safest way to make money in silver is via an ETF that either holds silver bullion or if you want more leverage, an ETF that holds the best silver miners or even silver royalty stocks. There are always pullbacks so be patient, buy as low as possible.

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Lisle
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Lisle
October 26, 2012 11:36 am
Reply to  sagenot

“free” – only if you don’t value the time you spend sorting through the rolls.

Manchester, NH
Guest
Manchester, NH
January 25, 2013 9:58 pm
Reply to  sagenot

For most people who know what they are doing, the entire point of acquiring and holding precious metals is as a hedge for probable currency troubles ( inflation, deflation, collapse).
Everything paper has counterparty issues, someone else has to honor an obligation in order for the holder of the paper to be compensated or made whole upon redemption. An ETF is pure paper, regardless of whether it is honestly backed by the actual physical that they claim to hold. An ETF is just another counterparty risk, you must trust the other party to be both willing and able to exchange your certificate for the respective metal. If ever there is an run on metals and too many people want to redeem thier certificates for the actual metal that supposedly backs them, the ETF will simply default by claiming a “force majeure”, which will legally give the ETF the legal right to paper settle your claim – and you will recieve nothing more than paper currency upon redemption (assuming you get compensated at all, please take the time to learn what happened to MF Global and PFG Best customers). Thus, the only truly “safe” way to invest in silver is to take possesion of your holdings, thereby eliminating the counterparty risk.
ETF holders will soon regret having a financial institution hold thier silver when they finally realize they have gained nothing more than convience in return for thier misplaced trust in a corrupt and failing system. Stay far, far away from ETF’s, only buy physical that you can actually hold in your hand.

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Jay L.
Member
Jay L.
October 4, 2012 12:53 pm

Have you heard Dr D’s latest on the 79% trade, i just waisted the better part of 30 minutes listening right up to when he mentions the price, $3000, and thats a special.

akgal
akgal
October 7, 2012 4:50 pm
Reply to  Jay L.

that’s Millionare Trader …. mostly deals with options … selling options !!

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Jeff
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Jeff
November 11, 2012 12:17 am
Reply to  Jay L.

I’ve gone tired of watching these damn informercials on the Internet every time someone has investment advice to sell. Why can’t they just get to the point, explain it in a nutshell, and tell you what hoops you need to jump through to get their products/service? If it takes them longer than 15 min. to sell you, then they’re only selling themselves.

Will Stockdale
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Will Stockdale
October 5, 2012 3:55 pm

Hey Ben maybe you’ll get to like the Air Force. Zooming all over the sky and shouting ROGER and WILCO and everything. Maybe it won’t be so bad.

Jim
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Jim
October 6, 2012 10:28 am

The “Dark Market” Retirement Rescue By Palm Beach Letter

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Chanterelle
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Chanterelle
October 6, 2012 12:39 pm

I was at my bank getting a check cashed & thought it wouldn’t hurt to try asking for half dollars. I just got 2 rolls ($20 worth) though there was more. I was surprised to find a 40% coin in each roll. So I made about $10. Not bad…I think I’ll buy their other rolls on my next trip.

chumbly
Member
chumbly
October 11, 2012 5:47 pm

More nonsense…my local bank doesn’t even have half dollars, and of the thousands I’ve seen, only 5 of them were pre-1970. Waste of time.

Ed
Guest
Ed
October 12, 2012 3:08 pm

There’s one big catch to finding this “FREE SILVER” at the bank. Melting down US currency is ILLEGAL! Silver can go all the way to $100 per ounce…but as long as those Kennedy half-dollars remain legal tender then the only way you can make money with it is to sell it to a coin dealer or another coin collector. And guess what….you’re only going to get about 50% to 60% of what the coin is worth (kind of like in a pawnshop, because they have to sell it so someone else) and that is only if the coin is in very good condition (uncirculated or near-mint) or very old (such as the Walking Liberty 50 cent piece). Conclusion…unless you want to violate Federal law, this is a waste of time!

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Penny Pincher
Guest
January 22, 2013 11:24 am
Reply to  Ed

You don’t need to melt down the coins. My coin shop that I use buys 2% under spot and sells 2% over spot. You need to find a different coin shop dude.
Also, if you melt down the silver, who is to know? (you might even be able to purify it). Or you could make jewelry out of it and jewelry sells retail for about twice spot price.
You’re being dismissive when you need to get creative!

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Manchester, NH
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Manchester, NH
January 25, 2013 10:09 pm
Reply to  Ed

Only problem is that it is not illegal to melt the silver coin. It is at this time illegal to melt pennies and nickels for the copper but that too will change when those coins are no longer produced with the current metal composition, just as it did for the silver coins.

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Robert Newsom
October 12, 2012 8:51 pm

How do I get e-mails from Stock Gumshoes on interesting Stocks or ? E-mailed to me ?

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David
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Donald
Guest
Donald
October 14, 2012 7:11 am

Getting rolls of coins and checking for the silver ones is not a loophole.
Eifrig says he researched it for three months. Common high schooler knows to check coins at a bank, buy them by the box. Please find something more than a 5th grade analysis gumball.

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Chck
Guest
October 24, 2012 4:21 am

Money is a theoretical concept…one which is changing dramatically over the next 17 years.
The least likely scenario is that civilization collapses…the wider a civilization spreads, the more easily it handles disasters.
The entire basis of our society including finance, law and politics is going to completely change by 2030…and the old rules and techniques will no longer function as expected. Many already no longer work. Remember stagflation? It’s one of the first of a transitionary economic effects which didn’t exist prior to 1970.
For the most part, gold and silver are not particularily valuable in and of themselves…most of both is mined and then reburied in vaults, serving no useful purpose. The actual prices in currency increasingly reflect their value as jewelery, and increasingly the jewelry market in general is moving away from pure precious metals to industrial metals and plating.
Gemstones are worse, since the best gemestones are manufactured, not natural, and the values of most are inflated compared with the quantities available.
Once a civilization reaches orbit, energy problems have become artificial…we could have eliminated all fossil fuel energy use by now had we started harvesting solar energy in orbit in the 1970’s, when it was proven possible…it was uneconomical at the time only because nuclear and fossil fuel energy producers were permitted to avoid paying the actual environmental costs of their fuels. This was and is done primarily so that those in control of such resources (which are largely ‘purchased’ from governments at fractional values–since the government is run by people who basically exit to transfer publicly owned resources to private interests.
Having access to the entire Earth-Luna binary planet system provides us with access to millions of times more energy than our civilization uses, and energy is the limiting factor for all other resources.
We currently use far less than .01% of the Earth’s resources, and an insignificant portion of the Solar System’s resources. Our civilization races around, fighting over crumbs like ants in an industrial bakery, surrounded by effectively infinite resources which we are too blind too see, assuming that what we can see and have been told is ‘all there is,’ is actually the truth.
We have not needed ful employment to keep civilization running for many decades, most of our population works at ‘make-work’ jobs based upon the antiquated notion that ‘you must work to live.’ While it’s true that humans do need something, preferably interesting, to keep occupied with in order to live, it has not been true that even a majority of the healthy adults actually are required to be ‘working’ in order to keep civilization humming.
A huge problem with this is that in the USA in particular, our social system is largely based upon the concept that your ‘value’ as a person is dependent upon work. This is not, and has not been true for at least 2-3 generations.
Does ‘hard work’ make you wealthy? No. The wealthiest of our population do no useful work at all, they play financial games with little real risk (you’ve noticed that bankers and financiers and CEO’s collect BONUSES when they actually LOSE their investor’s money?)
Most of the cost of many of our products is the cost of convincing people to purchase them, this is particularly true of the beverage and food industries. Huge percentages of the cost of any beverage you can think of is advertising. The same is true of a great many durable goods too.
This situation is rapidly approaching the point, due to new technologies, that little or no human labor is needed to produce the vast majority of goods or services required for our civilization.
Finance (twidling numbers) and entertainment are our two most profitable ‘businesses,’ and neither of them involves things of necessary value to our population. Vast portions of our industrial capacity are devoted to making goods which exist only to be sold, a great many having no useful value at all! In fact, a large proportion of goods sold for under $30 in the USA don’t even perform their advertised function–many simply break and are discarded by consumers as being too much trouble to return.
Even in developing countries, much of the market consists of essentially ‘luxury’ goods–foods without food value, decorative or entertainment items. Our legal and illegal recreational drug industry is a tremendous portion of our economy, add that to other entertainment and government paper-shufflers, and we employ huge numbers of people who essentially accomplish nothing of value, many of whom actually work counter to ech other. Our other really huge expenditure is on military equipment and research…equipment designed to be expended (destroyed) in order to make way for the next generation, and research which often could greatly improve our lives, devoted to finding more creative ways to destroy people and property…to fight over the ‘scarce’ resources which are artificially hyped as scarce. Gold and Bismuth are equally abundant, Gold is ‘pretty’ though the color can be created more durably from other even cheaper materials, but most Gold sits in underground vaults. Bismuth is actually useful and sells for under $10 per pound (and it’s crystals and oxides are arguably prettier than Gold.)
The supply and demand for gem quality diamonds has been manipulated to maintain artificially high values for decades…industrial diamonds have become incredibly cheap–to the point that you can purchase industrial diamond abrasive tools at prices only slightly higher than tungsten carbide–which is itself only slightly higher in cost than go high speed steel. GE has been making diamond abrasives in industrial (multi-ton) quantities for over 60 years. Gem quality diamonds are manufactured and available in quantities far in excess of those which would justify current pricing…and they aren’t even the best ‘sparklies’ we have, there are several other materials with higher indexes of refraction, which thus sparkle more brilliantly, and they are all even cheaper than diamonds to manufacture.
New technology is rapidly making it possible for nearly anyone to possess nearly any manufactured item they desire at negligable effort or cost. The things with the highest value are things of novelty and entertainment value–often experiances rather than actual possessions.
What our ancestors would call ‘heaven’ is rapidly coming to pass on Earth–a world without want, disease, hunger, war perhaps even most death. But for it to arrive, the old habits and world must give way, and that, historically, only happens when the people whose lives were shaped by and ruled by those conditions of scarcity and habit, pass on, or learn to live under new conditions (usually it has taken their deaths in the past.)
We have enough fod production capacity to feed the world, enough medical knowledge to prevent most disease and repair most physical damage to people, but the world is still in the gri of minds which believe that life is a zero-sum game, that for some to win, many must lose…and this not only isn’t true, but hasn’t been true for at least 2 generations.
Will there be some hard times ahead? Almost certainly, but they will be primarily local, and in all cases created by those who’s behavior is governed by obsolete and invalid belief patterns–patterns no more functional today than the concept of having as many children as possible has been functional for the past century.
As the Klondike miners of the past century discovered, gold is inedible, friendship and good will and community are far more valuable.
Once again, as it does in every lifetime, the entire game of life is changing, from the playing field to the rules, and none of the old rules work as expected.
This change is one of the reasons that the current politicians are so confused–none of them have a clue about what changes are happenng, nor how to adjust to those changes. Thus, the plans they put forth, based upon obsolete conditions and rules, will not develop or have the results expected. At some lvel, the population understands that this is true–the heard can smell change on the wind as it were, and it grows restless because for life, change is often a negative experiance.
Life, by nature, is conservative, because change is, historically, more often than not, a bad thing. Only in the past few generations has change been at least as often a good thing as it is a danger, and only in the past couple has the balance shifted beyond even, and then only when changes are carefully evaluated for ill effects.
To survive, our species must expand not only off-planet, but beyond the galaxy, because no matter how big the basket may be, having all of your eggs in one basket presents major risks. Planets get devastated, stars explode or die, galaxies and galactic clusters may be destroyed and even the Universe will not last. To survive the long run (and so far our run has been very, very short,) we will need to expand perhaps outside of the Universe. There are hundreds of things which could destroy our civilization in the blink of an eye…most of which give no warning. We are overdue for a major life extinction event right now, having come into being as a species towards the end of a cycle rather than near the beginning.
Humans are puny and weak as individuals, our strength comes from community, our greatest deeds for good or ill come from group efforts. The myth of the ‘independent man’ is just that, a myth, an a dangerous thing to believe in, since an individual person cannot survive for long.

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robtcohen
Irregular
November 14, 2012 4:26 pm
Reply to  Chck

Magnificent essay: worthwhile, creative, insightful, true, organized ideas while not boring, semi-similar to concept of Stewart Brand, creator of THE WHOLE EARTH CATALOG, and I’m envious of such brilliance.

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Gloria Peron
Member
Gloria Peron
November 29, 2012 7:16 am
Reply to  robtcohen

ditto. I also am envious. Well done

William
Guest
William
February 3, 2013 9:10 pm
Reply to  Chck

Have you tried reading the Bible and believing in GOD ? You might view man and his purpose a little differently !!! In my opinion, anyone who doesn’t believe in God or doesn’t put all their trust in God is an Idiot. Man is not capable of sustaining himself, and the thought that we could search for other plants is absolutely stupid. Man has sent probes to every part of our galaxy and has not found even one life form. What would make you think that we could live anywhere other than earth. If you think logically, It’ s only common sense that tells us that something put us here and that we didn’t evolve. If we evolved, their would be proof of it in the fossils. There’s only one conclusion, and that ‘s that God put us here !!! Except the facts dude, and put all your eggs in God’s basket and trust in God to take care of you !!! enough said !!!

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Lance
Member
Lance
May 17, 2013 5:15 pm
Reply to  William

Man has not sent probes to any part of the galaxy except to a few of the planets in our solar system. We have already discovered thousands of planets in nearby stars. By the time we are able to find life on planets outside our solar system, maybe 500 years from now, the number of people who believe in god then will be less than the number of people who belive in Zeus now. No bank I have ever asked in this century ever had any half dollars.

Mary
Guest
Mary
May 18, 2013 1:13 pm
Reply to  William

What planet do you live on? Apparently not this one!

Good article though.

quarters
Guest
quarters
May 21, 2017 7:57 am
Reply to  William

WATCH YOUR GRAMMAR! “There”, not their.

William
Guest
William
July 21, 2013 9:53 pm
Reply to  Chck

WOW, THAT’S HEAVY

Vic
Guest
Vic
October 24, 2012 6:18 pm

To keep this thread going until the end of civilization:
$0.0234809 is the melt value for the 1909-1982 copper cent on October 24, 2012.
( 234.80% from Coinflation)
Better success with these five words:
Do you have any pennies?

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quarters
Guest
quarters
May 21, 2017 7:57 am
Reply to  Vic

lol

James
Guest
James
October 26, 2012 3:00 pm

Ebay is highly dangerous for precious metal, especially coins. Lots of fraud. You really need to know what you are doing before buying there. For example, China has been forging phony Morgan silver dollars for years, and the state of New York has been finding gold bars with a core of lead.

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John
Guest
John
January 14, 2013 9:30 pm
Reply to  James

They have also filled them with tungsten.

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Manchester, NH
Guest
Manchester, NH
January 25, 2013 11:12 pm
Reply to  James

No real danger buying junk silver on Ebay. The fraudulent coins that you are referring to are not typically Morgans, but rather Trade dollars. In any case, it is the numismatic value of the coin that is being pursued by the forgery, not the intrinsic. Have you ever heard of fake Roosevelt dimes or Washington quarters? Also, the few gold bars that have been found are very recent. And they were filled not with lead, but with tungsten, as lead does not match the weight properties of gold at all – while tungsten is nearly identical.

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Jerry Douglas
Guest
October 27, 2012 6:09 pm

What are the 5 magic words

advantedges
October 31, 2012 2:48 pm
Reply to  Jerry Douglas

Give me All Your Silver!

Read the response by Travis, and other responses here.
Get a Clue!

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Joseph Arsenault
Member
October 31, 2012 11:43 am

What the H— are the five words???????

advantedges
October 31, 2012 2:47 pm

Read the Gumshoe response,,,,,,,,,,First Paragraphs,,,,,,,,,
“Give me all your silver!”

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John Churchill
John Churchill
October 31, 2012 12:28 pm

“Do you have silver 50cents?”
I have an article about this somewhere and if I can find it, I’ll post it.
I can well imagine the answer from most banks would be “No” and you would be met with a blank stare! The article suggested that most US banks would have a supply of 50cent coins under the counter.

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Steve
Member
Steve
November 1, 2012 3:54 pm

My cousin was a teller, now a very well paid loan arranger. She and the other tellers used to scan the coins in the racks and look at the sides for silver coins and swap them. I guess you aspiring silver hunters could get jobs as bank tellers and make ten bucks an hour while looking. That was a long time ago, would probably have to scan a lot of coin racks.

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Silence
Guest
Silence
May 16, 2013 11:04 am
Reply to  Steve

Hi-Yo Silver! The Loan Arranger!

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quarters
Guest
quarters
May 21, 2017 7:59 am
Reply to  Steve

Give me all your half-dollars.

quarters
Guest
quarters
May 21, 2017 7:59 am
Reply to  Steve

I mean give me all your quarters.

quarters
Guest
quarters
May 21, 2017 8:00 am
Reply to  Steve

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