August 19, 2014 - Amazon Web Services
Transcription
August 19, 2014 - Amazon Web Services
THE NO. 1 INFORMATION SOURCE FOR COIN COLLECTORS August 19, 2014 • $2.99 4 7 NEWMAN TREASURES Not all treasure comes from the bottom of the sea. Numismatic Guaranty Corporation grades coins from famed collector. TOO MUCH FUSS? Viewpoint writer says the Kennedy coin hoopla is just too much. ADVERTISEMENT INDEX ANACS LLC............................................. 21 APD Currency......................................... 41 Archives International............................ 39 Battlefield Coin Show ............................ 51 Brooklyn Gallery Coins & Stamps Inc. .....53 CAC ........................................................ 37 Civitas Galleries ....................................... 7 CK Shows .............................................. 47 Coast to Coast Coins ........................... 2, 3 Coinweek ............................................... 55 Distinctive Coins .............................. 22, 23 Fred Weinberg ....................................... 43 FUN Show .............................................. 49 Goldberg Coins & Collectibles ............... 15 I Kleinman.............................................. 42 Illinois Numismatic Association ............. 50 Jack Beymer.......................................... 11 Julian Leidman ...................................... 45 L & C Coins ............................................ 31 Michigan State Numismatic Society ..... 50 M & R Coins ........................................... 42 National Coin and Currency Convention...... 46 NGC ........................................................ 33 Numismatic News Index Page............... 54 Shenandoah Valley Coin Club ................ 51 ShopNumismaster ..................... 13, 14, 44 SilverTowne ........................................... 35 Skyline Coins ....................................... 8, 9 Stack’s Bowers Galleries ......................... 5 Steinberg’s............................................. 19 Kennedy limit drops to one The U.S. Mint reduced from two coins to one the number of proof gold Kennedy half dollars that buyers could purchase at its booth at the American Numismatic Association’s World’s Fair of Money Aug. 5-9. This limit reduction also applies to the Mint’s other over-the-counter sales points at the Denver and Philadelphia Mints and at its headquarters. Online buyers are unaffected. The limit of five coins per household was retained. Sales were to begin at noon Eastern Daylight Time Aug. 5. The Mint is to sell 500 coins per day for Collectors can buy just one over the counter. each of the ANA convention days, or 2,500 coins in all. Some 40,000 gold Kennedy coins were on hand as sales began online and around Limit/Page 18 Five America the Beautiful designs will be used on the reverse of quarters issued in 2015. Mint releases approved designs Final designs were released July 29 by the U.S. Mint for the reverses of the 2015 America the Beautiful quarters. This will be the sixth year of the 12-year ATB cycle featuring a total of 56 designs. Five designs are issued each year with a single design slated for the final year of the program in 2021. Design descriptions were provided by the U.S. Mint. First up will be the Homestead National Monument of America in Nebraska. This design represents the three fundamentals of survival common to all homeDesigns/Page 18 Clad Kennedy set demand surges, fades Initial demand for the two-coin 50th anniversary Kennedy clad half dollar set was high, but buyers quickly began to run out of gas. In less than 24 hours from commencement of sales at noon Eastern Daylight Time July 24 on the U.S. Mint website buyers had snapped up 68,974 sets. But in the three subsequent days ending July 27, buyers took just 15,619 more to reach an aggregate total of 84,619. Part of the reason for buyers’ haste is Demand/Page 18 Barber Dimes –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– Newps! New Purchases for the Last Week Log on to www.coastcoin.com to see full descriptions and photos of these coins plus our complete inventory of U.S. coins & currency! 1894. PCGS. VF-25.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213155 $199.00 1902. PCGS. PR-63. CAC. . . . . . . . . . #212950 $750.00 1904-S. NGC. AU-55. CAC. . . . . . . . #212995 $650.00 Mercury Dimes ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1918. PCGS. MS-66. FB. . . . . . . . . . #213052 $2295.00 1936-S. PCGS. MS-67. FB.. . . . . . . . . #200830 $850.00 1937. PCGS. MS-67. FB. CAC. . . . . . #203185 $235.00 1938. PCGS. PR-66. CAC. . . . . . . . . . #210452 $450.00 Roosevelt Dime –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1946. PCGS. MS-67. FB. . . . . . . . . . . #213163 $435.00 Twenty Cent Pieces –––––––––––––––––––––––––––– Colonial Coinage –––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1875. PCGS. PR-64. CAM. . . . . . . . #207852 $6195.00 1875. PCGS. VF-25.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213112 $425.00 1787. Fugio Cent. PCGS. F-12. UNITED STATES, 4 Cinquefoils. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212935 $899.00 1787. Fugio Cent. PCGS. F-15. CAC. UNITED STATES, 4 Cinquefoils. . . . . . . . . . #212936 $1250.00 Half Cents ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1795. NGC. G-6. Plain Edge. . . . . . . #210924 $795.00 1804. PCGS. XF-45. CAC. Plain 4, No Stems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212957 $625.00 1806. PCGS. XF-40. C-1. Small 6, No Stems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #211080 $495.00 1809. NGC. AU-58. CAC. . . . . . . . . . #212958 $650.00 1828. PCGS. AU-50. 12 Stars. . . . . . . #213151 $425.00 1854. PCGS. MS-65. BN. CAC. . . . . #213125 $1495.00 1855. NGC. PR-64. RB. . . . . . . . . . . #212969 $7250.00 1857. PCGS. MS-64. BN. . . . . . . . . . #212959 $975.00 Large Cents –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– Bust Quarters ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1916. NGC. PR-64. RB. Beautiful lavender-red matte proof surfaces. Just 1,050 minted with a fairly low survival rate. . . . . . . #213175 $3250.00 1917. PCGS. MS-66. RD. CAC. . . . . #212988 $1650.00 1917-D. PCGS. MS-65. RB. . . . . . . . . #205643 $875.00 1917-D. PCGS. MS-65. RD.. . . . . . . #133965 $2995.00 1930. PCGS. MS-67. RD.. . . . . . . . . . #207885 $995.00 1939-S. PCGS. MS-67+. RD. CAC. . #213179 $1995.00 1983 Doubled Die. PCGS. MS-66. RD. #205631 $695.00 1986-S. PCGS. PR-70. RD. DCAM. . . #212561 $589.00 Silver Three-Cent Pieces ––––––––––––––––––––– 1858. PCGS. AU-55. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213032 $295.00 1860. PCGS. MS-64. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #211859 $725.00 Nickel Three-Cent Pieces –––––––––––––––––––– 1800. PCGS. VF-30. 1800/79. . . . . . #208256 $1650.00 1802. PCGS. VF-35.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213113 $965.00 1803. PCGS. VF-30. S-255 Small Date, Small Fraction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212937 $799.00 1805. PCGS. VF-35. S-269. . . . . . . . #212960 $1175.00 1838. PCGS. MS-63. BN. CAC. . . . . . #212938 $995.00 Indian Head Cent ––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1864-C/N. PCGS. AU-55. . . . . . . . . . #213206 $209.00 1868. PCGS. MS-62. RB. . . . . . . . . . . #213207 $475.00 1868. PCGS. MS-64. RB. CAC. . . . . . #213097 $769.00 1869. PCGS. MS-64. BN. . . . . . . . . #212971 $1065.00 1870. NGC. MS-65. RB. . . . . . . . . . #212962 $1495.00 1873. PCGS. MS-65. RB. CAC. Open 3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213159 $1750.00 1874. PCGS. PR-63. RB. . . . . . . . . . . #136848 $350.00 1877. PCGS. F-12. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #127987 $1095.00 1877. PCGS. F-15. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #210746 $1299.00 1877. PCGS. G-04. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #125558 $699.00 1877. PCGS. VG-08. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #132352 $825.00 1878. NGC. MS-64. RD. CAC. . . . . #206329 $1250.00 1883. NGC. PF-64. BN.. . . . . . . . . . . #122241 $299.00 1885. PCGS. PR-66. BN. CAC. . . . . #211018 $1850.00 1890. PCGS. MS-65. RB. CAC. . . . . . #201893 $895.00 1891. NGC. MS-65. RB. . . . . . . . . . . #213157 $525.00 1895. NGC. PR-64. RB. . . . . . . . . . . . #213090 $475.00 1900. PCGS. PR-64. RB. . . . . . . . . . . #136851 $450.00 1909. NGC. PR-64. BN. CAC. . . . . . . #212928 $329.00 1909. PCGS. MS-65. RD.. . . . . . . . . . #140847 $775.00 1909-S. PCGS. F-12. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #130887 $535.00 1909-S. PCGS. VF-25. . . . . . . . . . . . . #203824 $665.00 Lincoln Cents –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1909-S VDB. PCGS. VF-25. CAC. . . #130192 $1095.00 1909-S/S. PCGS. MS-64. RB. S/Horizontal S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #131314 $599.00 1909-VDB. PCGS. MS-66. RB. . . . . . #129743 $195.00 1913-S. PCGS. MS-64. RD. CAC. . . #201385 $1195.00 1914-D. PCGS. MS-62. BN. . . . . . . #212939 $3595.00 1914-D. PCGS. VG-8. . . . . . . . . . . . . #213162 $215.00 1915-D. PCGS. MS-64. BN. CAC. . . . #128447 $229.00 Seated Liberty Quarter ––––––––––––––––––––––– 1880. PCGS. PR-64. CAC. . . . . . . . . #212952 $1595.00 Barber Quarter –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1907-O. PCGS. MS-63. . . . . . . . . . . . #213108 $565.00 Standing Liberty Quarters –––––––––––––––––––– Two-Cent Pieces –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1864. PCGS. MS-64. RB. CAC. Large Motto. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212238 $495.00 1864. PCGS. MS-65. RD. Large Motto. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #129870 $1895.00 1796. PCGS. VF-25. Liberty Cap. Well detailed and exceptionally nice for the grade. ‘96 ‘Caps’ are truly scarced and usually plagued with surface issues as the planchet quality was very poor. This is a great coin for a Large Cent enthusiast! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213126 $4295.00 1804. PCGS. G-6. CAC.. . . . . . . . . . #212951 $5595.00 1807. PCGS. VG-10. CAC.. . . . . . . . . #200839 $895.00 1880. NGC. PF-66. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #133606 $749.00 1883. PCGS. PR-64.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #118411 $499.00 Shield Nickel ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1882. NGC. PF-66. CAC.. . . . . . . . . . #128657 $935.00 Liberty Nickels ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1885. PCGS. AG-3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #137736 $279.00 1885. PCGS. PR-65. CAC. . . . . . . . . #140050 $1650.00 1886. NGC. PF-65. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #138953 $965.00 1887. PCGS. PR-65.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #118007 $595.00 1888. PCGS. PR-64.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213107 $395.00 1889. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212921 $750.00 1890. NGC. PF-63. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213148 $279.00 1895. PCGS. PR-66.. . . . . . . . . . . . . #212933 $1195.00 Buffalo Nickels ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1913 T-1. PCGS. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . #124657 $299.00 1914-S. PCGS. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . #205945 $2550.00 1919-D. PCGS. AU-55. . . . . . . . . . . . #213058 $479.00 1920. NGC. MS-65+. CAC. . . . . . . . #212940 $1095.00 1926. PCGS. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #200461 $469.00 1926. PCGS. MS-66. CAC. . . . . . . . . #212934 $595.00 1928-D. NGC. MS-64.. . . . . . . . . . . . #123389 $195.00 1934. NGC. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213017 $275.00 1937-D. PCGS. MS-67. . . . . . . . . . . . #139078 $750.00 Bust Half Dime ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1829. PCGS. VF-30. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213190 $179.00 Seated Liberty Half Dimes ––––––––––––––––––– 1838-O. PCGS. XF-40. No Stars. Popular New Orleans mint ‘No Stars’ type. Only 70,000 minted with a low survival rate. Well detailed and problem-free with nice olive-green and gray surfaces.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213031 $2095.00 1845. PCGS. AU-55. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213023 $179.00 1871. PCGS. PR-64. CAM. . . . . . . . . #213059 $995.00 Bust Dimes –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1827. PCGS. VF-35.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213027 $350.00 1835. PCGS. MS-62. CAC. . . . . . . . #212992 $2095.00 Seated Liberty Dimes –––––––––––––––––––––––– 1845-O. PCGS. VF-30. CAC. . . . . . . . #213019 $650.00 1848. NGC. MS-63.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212949 $975.00 1849-O. PCGS. VF-25. . . . . . . . . . . . #213189 $225.00 1857. PCGS. AU-58. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213056 $275.00 1916. PCGS. VG-10. CAC. All four digits of the date are readable with light wear at the top of each. The even silver-gray color and outstanding surface quality give this coin excellent eye appeal.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212953 $6950.00 1917 T-2. NGC. MS-65. FH. . . . . . . . #212999 $895.00 1917-D T-2. NGC. MS-65. FH. . . . . #212954 $3195.00 1918-S. NGC. MS-63. FH. CAC. . . . #213018 $2250.00 1926-D. PCGS. MS-63. . . . . . . . . . . . #126957 $259.00 1927. PCGS. MS-64. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213152 $335.00 Washington Quarters –––––––––––––––––––––––– 1936. PCGS. PR-63.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213154 $850.00 1939-S. PCGS. MS-67.. . . . . . . . . . . #213144 $1095.00 1942-S. NGC. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . . . #213054 $295.00 Bust Half Dollars ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1806. PCGS. F-15. O-115a. Pointed 6, Stem. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213153 $550.00 1808. PCGS. XF-40.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212964 $595.00 Seated Liberty Half Dollar –––––––––––––––––––– 1882. NGC. PR-63+. CAM.. . . . . . . #213087 $1750.00 Barber Half Dollars –––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1899-S. PCGS. VF-35. . . . . . . . . . . . . #213156 $275.00 1904. PCGS. AU-55. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213104 $535.00 1908-D. PCGS. AU-58. . . . . . . . . . . . #213060 $750.00 1914. PCGS. AU-58. CAC. . . . . . . . #213158 $2950.00 Walking Liberty Half Dollars –––––––––––––––––– 1920-S. PCGS. MS-62.. . . . . . . . . . . #212955 $2650.00 1935-D. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . #140252 $2195.00 1935-S. PCGS. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . #133540 $2695.00 1935-S. NGC. MS-66. Well struck with nearly mark-free surfaces and crisp mint luster. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213088 $3595.00 1938-D. NGC. MS-64. CAC. . . . . . . . #136131 $895.00 1938-D. PCGS. MS-65. CAC. . . . . . #138957 $1695.00 1941. NGC. PF-66. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #118131 $625.00 1941-S. PCGS. MS-64.. . . . . . . . . . . . #200629 $235.00 1942-S. PCGS. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . . #138555 $595.00 1942-S. PCGS. MS-66. CAC. . . . . . . #207944 $1295.00 1945-D. PCGS. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . . #124701 $199.00 1946-D. PCGS. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . . #124708 $209.00 *Item Code # is located next to price. Order Toll Free 1-800-638-8869 • www.coastcoin.com – Thousands of Great Collector Coins! – Log on to our website at www.coastcoin.com Franklin Half Dollars ––––––––––––––––––––––––– Peace Dollar –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1948-D. PCGS. MS-66+. FBL. . . . . . #211128 $2995.00 1949-S. NGC. MS-66. FBL. . . . . . . . . #213185 $695.00 1950. PCGS. PR-63.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #116837 $399.00 1951. PCGS. MS-66. FBL. . . . . . . . . . #213143 $599.00 1960. PCGS. MS-66. FBL. . . . . . . . . #213119 $1595.00 1921. NGC. MS-64.. . . . . . . . . . . . . #212965 $1095.00 1926-D. PCGS. MS-64. . . . . . . . . . . . #124491 $495.00 1927. PCGS. MS-63. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #123424 $219.00 1927-S. NGC. MS-64+. CAC. . . . . . #213195 $2495.00 1928-S. PCGS. MS-62.. . . . . . . . . . . . #200814 $335.00 1935-S. PCGS. MS-64. CAC. . . . . . . . #213109 $895.00 1935-S. PCGS. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . #135064 $1850.00 Bust Dollars ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1798. PCGS. VG-10. Large Eagle. 10 Arrows. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213181 $1450.00 1799. PCGS. G-6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #212956 $1199.00 Seated Liberty Dollars –––––––––––––––––––––––– 1846. PCGS. VF-35.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213200 $550.00 1860-O. PCGS. F-15.. . . . . . . . . . . . . #213199 $395.00 Morgan Dollars ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 1878-7TF. NGC. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . #139017 $1095.00 1879. PCGS. MS-66. Stunning obverse toning with bright shades of gold, blue, and lavender. The reverse is mostly blast white with a sliver of gold at the rim. Very well struck and void of significant marks. . . . . . . . . . . #204139 $3395.00 1879-CC. PCGS. MS-62. CAC. Capped Die. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213055 $6995.00 1880. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #124125 $850.00 1881-CC. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . #203869 $975.00 1881-S. NGC. MS-66. CAC. . . . . . . . #211785 $425.00 1882-CC. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . #200136 $575.00 1882-S. NGC. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . . . #200137 $349.00 1883-CC. NGC. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . #200759 $525.00 1883-CC. PCGS. MS-64. DMPL. . . . . #124499 $625.00 1883-CC. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . #200138 $525.00 1884-CC. NGC. MS-64.. . . . . . . . . . . #200392 $289.00 1884-CC. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . #123579 $569.00 1884-CC. PCGS. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . #202584 $895.00 1885-CC. PCGS. MS-62. . . . . . . . . . #119272 $795.00 1885-CC. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . #200729 $1295.00 1890-CC. NGC. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . #213123 $4950.00 1891-O. NGC. MS-62.. . . . . . . . . . . . #121129 $295.00 1891-S. PCGS. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . #136674 $1850.00 1892. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . . . #135807 $4500.00 1892-CC. NGC. AU-58.. . . . . . . . . . #213118 $1099.00 1892-CC. PCGS. AU-55. CAC. . . . . #127427 $1095.00 1892-CC. PCGS. MS-63. . . . . . . . . . #127013 $2695.00 1892-CC. PCGS. MS-64. . . . . . . . . . #129473 $3795.00 1892-O. NGC. MS-63.. . . . . . . . . . . . #128165 $499.00 1896. PCGS. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #138458 $499.00 1897. PCGS. MS-65. . . . . . . . . . . . . . #130144 $395.00 1898-S. PCGS. MS-64.. . . . . . . . . . . . #125784 $735.00 1900-O/CC. PCGS. MS-65. CAC. . . #123586 $2795.00 1901-S. PCGS. MS-64.. . . . . . . . . . . #130493 $1350.00 1901-S. PCGS. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . #211289 $3595.00 1903-O. PCGS. MS-63. . . . . . . . . . . . #203843 $475.00 1903-O. PCGS. MS-66. . . . . . . . . . . . #207202 $995.00 1921-D. NGC. MS-65.. . . . . . . . . . . . #200760 $395.00 *Item Code # is located next to price. Early Silver Commemorative –––––––––––––––––– 1920. PCGS. MS-65. Maine. . . . . . . . #133318 $450.00 1921. PCGS. MS-63. Alabama. With 2x2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #130119 $550.00 1925. PCGS. MS-62. Norse-American. Thin Planchet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213022 $350.00 1925. PCGS. MS-63+. Ft. Vancouver. . #213196 $450.00 1925. PCGS. MS-64. Norse-American. Thick Planchet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #123113 $369.00 1933-D. PCGS. MS-67+. Oregon Trail. CAC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213141 $2650.00 1935. PCGS. MS-65. Connecticut. . . #135236 $475.00 1935. PCGS. MS-65+. Connecticut. . #213197 $550.00 1935. PCGS. MS-67. Spanish Trail. CAC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #208662 $3750.00 1935-D. PCGS. MS-65+. Texas. . . . . . #213211 $265.00 1936. PCGS. MS-65. Delaware. . . . . #131893 $345.00 1936. PCGS. MS-65+. Texas. . . . . . . . #213212 $265.00 1936. PCGS. MS-66. Norfolk. . . . . . . #133346 $525.00 1936. PCGS. MS-66. Oregon Trail. . . #133362 $450.00 1936. PCGS. MS-66. Wisconsin. . . . . #135429 $325.00 1936. PCGS. MS-67. Albany.. . . . . . #213142 $1095.00 1936. PCGS. MS-67. Delaware. . . . #213146 $1095.00 1936. PCGS. MS-67. Long Island. . . #213165 $4325.00 1936-D. PCGS. MS-66. Texas. . . . . . . #213213 $395.00 1936-S. PCGS. MS-65. Oregon Trail.. #206528 $375.00 1936-S. PCGS. MS-66. Texas. . . . . . . #200299 $395.00 1937. PCGS. MS-66. Antietam. . . . . . #140907 $999.00 1937-D. PCGS. MS-66. Oregon Trail. #130122 $395.00 1937-D. PCGS. MS-66. Texas. . . . . . . #133326 $375.00 1937-D. PCGS. MS-68. Oregon Trail. CAC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #213180 $2999.00 1938. PCGS. MS-66. New Rochelle. . #134114 $595.00 1938-D. PCGS. MS-65. Arkansas. . . . #206912 $459.00 1938-D. PCGS. MS-66+. Oregon Trail.. #213191 $495.00 1938-S. PCGS. MS-62. Boone. . . . . . #213192 $375.00 1938-S. PCGS. MS-65. Texas. . . . . . . #213026 $499.00 1938-S. PCGS. MS-66. Oregon Trail.. #137331 $359.00 1939-D. PCGS. MS-64. Arkansas. . . . #136422 $375.00 United States Gold Coins ––––––––––––––––––––– 1885 $1. PCGS. PR-61. . . . . . . . . . . #213110 $2750.00 1872-S $2.5. PCGS. AU-58. . . . . . . #213105 $2250.00 Arches National Park America the Beautiful 5 Oz. Silver ‘Quarter’ – Choice Brilliant Uncirculated – The 3rd in this 2014 series has just been released. Only $130.45 Each #212402 2014 Shenandoah still available...$130.45 #212047 2014 Smokey Mt. still available...$130.45 #211423 1908 to 1928 $20 St. Gaudens Gold Coins PCGS – MS-65 High quality coins, dates of our choice, at an excellent price! Only $2,195.00 Each #124952 2014 American Silver & Gold Eagles ––––––––––––––––– ‘Raw’ One Oz. Silver Eagles Only $26.30 Each #210277 ––––––––––––––––– ‘Raw’ One Oz. Gold Eagles Only $1,475.20 Each #210363 1912 $2.5. NGC. MS-64. Flashy orange-gold luster and a sharp strike. . . . . . . . . . . #125467 $3125.00 1863 $3. NGC. AU-58. . . . . . . . . . . #213127 $5995.00 1886 $3. PCGS. AU-53. . . . . . . . . . #213128 $3295.00 1857-S $5. PCGS. XF-45.. . . . . . . . . . #213129 $995.00 1892-O $10. NGC. MS-61. Liberty. CAC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #203358 $1595.00 *Prices in Red fluctuate with price of gold or silver. COMPANY POLICY • Add $5.00 postage & handling to all orders under $500. Free shipping on orders of $500 or more. • All items unconditionally guaranteed genuine. • Full 14 day return privilege from day you receive your items except for bullion orders which may not be returned for a refund. • Maryland Residents add 6% sales tax on orders under $1000. • All prices subject to change. • Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, checks & money orders accepted. New 2014 COAST to COAST COINS and Currency A Division of Rare Coin Services, Inc. 9365 Gerwig Lane, Dept NN • Columbia, MD 21046 Toll Free 1-800-638-8869 • Local 410-309-1622 Office Hours Mon. - Fri. 9 am - 5 pm • Sat. 10 am - 4 pm EST We Pay More! ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– If you have coins or currency for sale, it will pay you to offer them to Coast to Coast. As one of the country’s largest coin dealers we have to maintain a robust inventory. A lot of dealers claim to pay top dollar and then ‘flip’ their purchases to a company like ours. Bypass the middleman and deal directly with Coast to Coast! Order Toll Free 1-800-638-8869 • www.coastcoin.com NGC grades more Newman rarities Numismatic Guaranty Corporation has graded nearly 1,000 coins from the Eric P. Newman Collection that will go on the auction block in November in a Heritage Auctions Signature Sale. This will be the fifth auction in a series that is disposing a collection assembled by the 103-year-old hobbyist over a period of 90 years. “Newman Part V ranges from Colonial and Territorial pieces to large cents and early gold. The remarkable diversity of these selections reveals Newman’s absolute passion for collecting and research,” said Mark Salzberg, chairman of NGC. Where Newman Part IV offered the 1776 Silver “EG FECIT” Continental dollar graded NGC MS-63 that realized just over $1.4 million, Newman Part V features six more 1776 Continental dollars. Five are in Mint State grades. There are two varieties of brass A working collection of large cents, pre-federal coins and gold coins will highlight the fifth Newman auction. The coins were all graded by NGC. “CURENCY” Continental dollars, graded NGC AU-50 and NGC MS-62, and four varieties of pewter Continental dollars. Leading the pewter pieces is a 1776 “EG FECIT” piece in NGC MS-66. The three other pewter pieces are: the “CURENCY” variety in NGC MS-62, the “CURRENCEY” variety in NGC MS-63, and the “CURRENCY” variety in NGC MS-64. NGC/Page 18 Mint begins sales of Young Collectors baseball set The one-coin National Baseball Hall of Fame Young Collectors Set went on sale at the U.S. Mint website July 28. Containing an uncirculated commemorative half dollar with a cupped shape, it is priced at $24.95. The Mint said the coin is housed in a tri-fold presentation folder. The coin itself is inside in a special rotating capsule. The colorful folder depicts the United States Mint Kids characters (a boy, a girl, and a dog) in various scenes as they learn about the history of baseball while visiting the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. The Mint will sell up to a limit of 50,000 of these sets. Overall production limit for the half dollar is 750,000. Buyers have taken 332,874 so far. All orders will be assessed a $4.95 shipping and handling charge. ONLINE POLL METALS July 31, 2014 LAST WEEK’S RESULTS: 4 Is issuing more Ultra High Relief gold coins in 2015 a good idea? Gold ......................................$1,281.30 Silver ........................................$20.373 Platinum ...............................$1,465.20 Palladium .................................$873.70 YES NO Nickel.......................................$8.5517 Copper ....................................$3.2250 Zinc..........................................$1.0739 9% 91% Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 $POTJHO:PVS64$PJOT5PLFOT .FEBMTBOE1BQFS.POFZUP 4UBDLT#PXFST(BMMFSJFT 'PSEFDBEFT4UBDLT#PXFST(BMMFSJFTIBTCFFOSFDPHOJ[FE GPSCSJOHJOHUIFHSFBUFTU"NFSJDBODPJOTUPLFOTNFEBMT BOEQBQFSNPOFZUPBVDUJPOć JTGBMMXFDPOUJOVFUIJTMPOH TUBOEJOHUSBEJUJPOBOEJOWJUFZPVUPDPOTJHOZPVSSBSJUJFTUP PVS0ď DJBM"VDUJPOPGUIF1SPGFTTJPOBM/VNJTNBUJTUT(VJME /FX:PSL*OWJUBUJPOBM0DUPCFS PSUPUIF0ď DJBM"VDUJPO PGUIF8IJUNBO$PJO$PMMFDUJCMFT#BMUJNPSF&YQP0DUPCFS /PWFNCFS :PVSOVNJTNBUJDUSFBTVSFTDBOCFOFĕUGSPNUIFQSFTUJHFPGB 4UBDLT#PXFST(BMMFSJFT4IPXDBTF"VDUJPOPS3BSJUJFT/JHIU FWFOUBOEDBOCFDBUBMPHFECZUIFTBNFUFBNUIBUIBTBDIJFWFE UIFIJHIFTUQSJDFTSFBMJ[FEBUBVDUJPOGPSPWFSZFBST $POUBDUB4UBDLT#PXFST(BMMFSJFTDPOTJHONFOUTQFDJBMJTU BUPSWJTJUPVSXFCTJUFBU4UBDLT#PXFSTDPN $POTJHOUPPVS0ď DJBM"VDUJPOPGUIF 1/(/FX:PSL*OWJUBUJPOBM "VDUJPOBOE-PU7JFXJOH0DUPCFS $POTJHONFOU%FBEMJOF"VHVTU $POTJHOUPUIF0ď DJBM"VDUJPOPGUIF 8IJUNBO$PJOBOE$PMMFDUJCMFT8JOUFS&YQP "VDUJPOBOE-PU7JFXJOH0DUPCFS/PWFNCFS $POTJHONFOU%FBEMJOF4FQUFNCFS West Coast: 800.458.4646 | East Coast: 800.566.2580 | [email protected] 4IPXDBTF"VDUJPOT 8FTU$PBTU0ď DFt&BTU$PBTU0ď DF .D(BX"WFOVF4UF*SWJOF$"t *OGP!4UBDLT#PXFSTDPNt4UBDLT#PXFSTDPN /FX:PSLt)POH,POHt*SWJOFt1BSJTt8PMGFCPSP 4#(//"VD4PM/PW0DU America’s Oldest and Most Accomplished Rare Coin Auctioneer Collectors keep things under control Call me naive, but after 50 years in the hobby I still think coin collectors are a cut above the average population. That doesn’t mean we have absolutely no problems and we can lord it over everybody else, it simply means that the average collector is a little bit better equipped to deal with life’s challenges. Unfortunately, I cannot prove this. I doubt social scientists would find my assertion one of sufficient general interest to test. But I will persist in my belief. A news story caught my attention on the day I write my column. It said 35 percent of Americans are so far behind on their debt repayments that they have been referred to debt collection agencies. In Nevada, the figure is 47 percent. Some of those people behind in their repayments in Nevada could be coin collectors, but then I think of Lavere Redfield. When he died there in 1974 he had more than 400,000 silver dollars in his basement. Even though that is extreme behavior, that’s closer to how I think the aver- Class of ’63 David C. Harper age collector behaves. To collect coins, you have to value them more highly than what they will buy at the moment. That puts collectors in the paradox of deferring immediate gratification while at the same time indulging it in the form of possessing coins. Collecting coins is a means of accumulating assets. That might not be the intent, but it is the result. Finding the spending money to obtain coins is an ongoing process that aids us in under-spending our incomes on immediate consumables. Sure, we can spend too much by credit card, or take out a mortgage that is too large. However, if as collectors we are asking ourselves where the money will come from to fund our collecting, we are more likely to rein in our other spending to achieve it. That’s all it takes. Ill health and/or a job loss can hit collectors as much as anybody, but hobbyists have something of a cushion to fall back on – at least to start with. Even as a child I knew a collector of the same age as me who would raid his Jefferson nickel collection from time to time to fund a weekly trip to the movie theater. In his case he had to save it before he could take it to spend. That is a good habit to have. It is one that seems to be a part of the mindset of every collector – at least among those I have come to know over the years. There are many ways to learn life’s important lessons. I do not expect numismatics to be held up as a new aid in financial planning, but the inventor of the Whitman coin album, R.S. Yeoman, said one of the original appealing qualities of albums and the predecessor coin boards was that they were a way to save money. That was important in the Depression. LETTERS Why wasn’t Kennedy silver set offered July 24? First, I would like to compliment the Mint on the way orders were placed July 24. I signed on just after noon EST and was put in a holding pattern, being advised minute by minute how long my wait would be to place an order for the new Kennedy halves. I waited and watched the countdown for 24 minutes, then I was able to place my order. Bad news: Around 9 a.m. I called the Mint to see if the four half silver set was Address letters to Editor, Numismatic News, 700 E. State St., Iola, WI 54990. All letters must be signed and include a return address. Numismatic News reserves the right to edit all letters. E-mail should be sent to david. [email protected]. Include your city and state in your email. 6 being offered July 24 – set K13. The Mint spokesman said, yes, at noon. So, there I was expecting to be able to order the silver set and then after 24 minutes finding out only the two halves set of uncirculated was being offered. Of course I was very disappointed, but the Mint should have given out information as to when we could expect the set to become available. On the 24th when you entered “K13” into the search engine, all you received was a note saying that the two uncirculated coins are not duplicated in the K13 set. Today there is a statement, when you use the search engine, that K13 will be available “fall of 2014.” Why didn’t they advise everyone before today, say two days ago? I even got a postcard in the mail from the Mint that lists K13, but no offer date. Dan Sowards Austin, Texas Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 Expected to see silver Kennedy set offered too What happened at the Mint July 24? The day was going OK. I was ready to order the Kennedy half silver set. The site was opened early about 11:35 a.m. EST. I went to the waiting room; waiting time 13 minutes. I was connected to the Mint site in 12 minutes. I am sure you already know about all this. There never was anything on the site. This morning still no mention of when the sets would be available. They did put the two-coin set on this morning. Bill Carlisle Address withheld Editor’s note: The silver set will not be available until the fall. Letters/Page 10 VIEWPOINT Kennedy coin fuss goes overboard By Bob Olekson I am amazed at all the fuss this year about the Kennedy half dollar. I am surprised that they have not decided to issue a five-ounce silver one like the National Parks quarters. I find it totally disgusting they are giving so much attention to this considering the fact that the 100th anniversary of the Indian head Buffalo nickel was ignored with only an expensive reverse proof gold coin for this 100th anniversary. We didn’t even have fractional gold. Also, why didn’t we have a fourcoin Buffalo nickel set with four different finishes? All the attention to the Kennedy half dollar yet there was none for the Buffalo. What about 2016? Are they going to make 100th anniversary Barber commemoratives in gold and silver as well as Mercury dimes, Standing Liberty quarters and Walking Liberty halves? Let this be the last year for the Kennedy half dollar. It no longer circulates and needs a rest after 50 years. Will they ignore this like the Buffalo nickel, or make too much fuss like for the Kennedy half dollar? I also want to know why the 1964 Kennedy portrait, which Jackie Kennedy approved, was gradually changed until it became unrecognizable and now was revived in all its original glory? Why wasn’t the original portrait kept the way it was? After 50 years it was gradually altered, not for the better. It is nice to see it restored again to its original form. The same thing happened to the Seated Liberty coin design from the lovely 1836 Gobrecht dollar to something later that was ugly and unrecognizable. Why not do a Kennedy like the Lincoln cent set and have four different reverses of Kennedy’s life, PT 109 and so forth? Let this be the last year for the Kennedy half dollar. It no longer circulates and needs a rest after 50 years. It is sad, but after 50 years it still has never circulated. The dollar coins will circulate once the dollar bill is eliminated. I was in Canada and the coins are great, with no cent and $1 and $2 coins. Why don’t people see this here? They can’t because of all the paper bills. This “Viewpoint” was written by Bob Olekson, a hobbyist from Parma, Ohio. To have your opinion considered for Viewpoint, write to David C. Harper, Editor, Numismatic News, 700 E. State St., Iola, WI 54990. Send email to david. [email protected]. www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 7 CCA ALL TO OD DA D AY A Y FFO OR FREE 32 P PA AG A GE CCA ATTALLO A OG O G!! G 1--8 80 8 00 0 0--5 599-0278 SHOP ONLINE @ WWW.SKKY YLIIN NEECCCO OINS.CCO OM 1963 $1 FR Star Note 1969-A $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1900-H* St. Louis each Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1904-G* Chicago each 3-Consecutive............. $28.50 3-Consecutive............. $28.50 $9.95 1963-A $1 FR Star Note $9.95 1969-B $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1901-F* each Atlanta Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1905-H* each St. Louis 3-Consecutive............. $28.50 3-Consecutive............. $28.50 $9.95 1963-B $1 FR Star Note $9.95 1969-C $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1902-G* each Chicago Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1906-F* each Atlanta 3-Consecutive............. $48.00 3-Consecutive............. $39.50 $16.95 1969 $1 FR Star Note $13.95 1969-D $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1903-D* each Cleveland Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1907-H* each St. Louis 3-Consecutive............. $28.50 3-Consecutive............. $35.00 $9.95 $11.95 PO Box 189-NN Manakin Sabot VA 23103 ★ Shipping available within the US only Please add $7.00 shipping & handling to all orders VA Residents Add 5.3% Sales Tax Prices are subject to change without notice 8 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 CCA ALL TO OD DA D AY A Y FFO OR FREE 32 P PA AG A GE CCA ATTALLO A OG O G!! G 1--8 80 8 00 0 0--5 599-0278 SHOP ONLINE @ WWW.SKKY YLIIN NEECCCO OINS.CCO OM 1974 $1 FR Star Note 1985 $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1908-B* New York each Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1913-L* San Francisco each 3-Consecutive............. $23.00 3-Consecutive............. $35.00 $7.95 1977 $1 FR Star Note $11.95 1988-A $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1909-E* each Richmond Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1916-K* each (FW) Dallas 3-Consecutive............. $23.00 3-Consecutive............. $28.50 $7.95 1977-A $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1910-H* each St. Louis $7.95 3-Consecutive............. $23.00 1981-A $1 FR Star Note $9.95 1993 $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1918-B* each (DC) New York $11.95 3-Consecutive............. $35.00 2009 $1 FR Star Note Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Premium Quality Gem Crisp Uncirculated Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1912-B* each New York Selected from an original BEP pack. FR 1934-F* each (FW) Atlanta 3-Consecutive............. $49.00 5-Consecutive............. $27.50 $16.95 $5.95 PO Box 189-NN Manakin Sabot VA 23103 ★ Shipping available within the US only Please add $7.00 shipping & handling to all orders VA Residents Add 5.3% Sales Tax Prices are subject to change without notice www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 9 Letters/from Page 6 Not much of a wait to order Kennedy set So much for the big rush. I got my five Kennedy half sets by phone at 12:16 p.m. eastern and as of 1:45 p.m. there was no longer even a wait to get on the site. You could go to USMint. com and get right onto the site and place your order. Even as one of the first buyers, my order for shipping (expedited two to three days) is back ordered to Monday July 28. So much for the first day of issue hoop jumping contest with NGC. Somehow though, I think the big dealers will have plenty of First Day issues. It’s a miracle! Bill Rodgers Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas Attending ANA show to get Kennedy halves I’m going to Chicago for one reason, to get the Kennedys and have them graded on site to get the ANA releases label. People are willing to pay $5,000 (approximately) for the label, like the reverse Buffaloes and Baseball Hall of Fame coins from ANA conventions. I’ll be glad to sell to them. It’s a shame the U.S. Mint does this at shows because only a few individuals will be able to get them because the big dealers are sending bus loads of employees and their friends to the convention to buy as many as they can. Cry foul! Too much greed involved! I’ll try to get as many as possible over a four-day period, and I’ll be offering people with tickets hundreds of dollars over cost for their coins. The Mint will not be tracking buyers, so you can get in line every day for tickets, regardless if you have already gotten some. After speaking with the ANA convention coordinator, the tickets will not be given out during the show. They will be given out prior to the start of the show, outside of the bourse floor. Check your facts Mr. Harper; call the ANA and ask Rhonda. She is in charge, not the Mint. The fire marshall will not allow an announcement during the show. The ANA is concerned it will 10 affect the dealers on the bourse floor. The dealers are the priority, not the Mint. The Mint has to play by the ANA rules for this show. Tickets will be given out before the doors open in a waiting area outside the bourse entrance. No camping out either. The Chicago police have confirmed that. Also, all sky bridges from the hotels to the convention center will be closed off for this show. Good luck to all. I’m flying in from Florida. Call the ANA for the real way the tickets will be given out. See you there. Michael Monsour Florida It took 4 months for Mint to say coin is sold out I write to advise of an unfortunate experience with the U.S. Mint, and I hope you can let me know – directly or in the pages of Numismatic News – whether this is a common occurrence. I purchased the uncirculated gold commemorative Baseball Hall of Fame issue when it went on sale on March 27, and I have received that issue. On March 29, I decided to buy the proof as well, and placed the order. On that same day I received an email from the Mint confirming the successful placement of my order, and advising that the coin was back ordered and would be shipped on April 13. I checked the order status on the Mint website periodically, and it always said that the order was in process, although the shipping date kept getting pushed back. On July 17, I received another email from the Mint, advising that the back ordered coin would ship on Aug. 1. Then, on July 24, I received an email from the Mint advising that the coin I ordered was “sold out.” Now, with a small (50,000) mintage maximum, the Mint certainly should have been able to advise at the time of ordering that my order had come in after the ordering limit was reached. What stretches belief is that a computerized ordering system took four months, after two confirmations of ordering status and statements of shipping date, to suddenly discover that the Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 coin was sold out. As you know, Mint issuances are frequently overpriced and overproduced, prices decline after issuance, and sometimes remain under issue price for decades. Here, however, the combination of low supply and high demand meant that these coins, with an issue price of $424.75, now sell in the secondary market for $750-800 ungraded with OGP. So, unfortunately, this raises my suspicions as to what really happened to the coin I ordered. Is the Mint so utterly incompetent that they could not determine for almost four months that the coin I bought actually exceeded the mintage limit? Hard to believe. This is not the outcome one expects when dealing with an arm of the U.S. government. As a coin collector, it is extremely disappointing to find that the rare occurrence of a Mint coin going up in value after purchase – and after waiting nearly four months for receipt – results in being told that the item is sold out. I am curious as to whether you have heard of this occurrence before (either with the gold HOF coin or others, and if so how common is this). Name withheld Westport, Conn. Collector can’t find Presidential dollars at banks I have a comment about Mr. Ray’s letter in your July 22 Numismatic News issue. Mr. Ray said that Presidential dollars are sitting unused in bank vaults. I collect Presidential dollars and I’m having a hard time finding them. In recent days I’ve gone to two branches of my local bank in search of those coins. One branch was totally out. The other had them in bags of 100 that you could buy for $100. You take the bag home, search for the ones you need, then return what’s left to the bank and they put them in your bank account. The teller I talked to said that “when we get $500 in gold Presidential coins” we return them to the government. William Kent Winchester, Va. QUALITY COINS FROM JACK H. BEYMER JACK H. BEYMER Rare Coins 2490 W. 3rd St. SANTA ROSA, CA 95401 PHONE: 800-635-6040 • PHONE: 707-544-1621 FAX: 800-575-5304 ANSWERING MACHINE: 707-544-1683 Since 1971 beymerzcoins.com OUR POLICY GRADING: Strict Photograde, ANA grading. LAYAWAY: 1/3 with your order, and the remaining 2/3 within two months. APPROVAL SERVICE: Three references from coin dealers who now offer you approval service must be furnished for us to check. Money orders, bank drafts no delay, personal checks must clear our bank. POSTAGE & HANDLING: Orders under $100.00 add $4.00. RETURN PRIVILEGE: Coins may be returned within 30 days for any reason. California residents add 8.75% sales tax. PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE. PLEASE GIVE US SECOND CHOICES. VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER & AMERICAN EXPRESS ARE ACCEPTED. STORE HOURS: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon.-Sat. PHONE: 707-544-1621. FAX MESSAGES: 707-575-5304. Our 57 page list of coins are at beymerzcoins.com Our 46th Year JACK H. BEYMER 2490 W. 3rd St. Santa Rosa, CA 95401 Phone: 707-544-1621 • Fax: 707-575-5304 www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 11 best of buzz David C. Harper To read more from Dave Harper’s blog go to numismaticnews.net/buzz Bullion gets a promotion Bullion in bar form has long been viewed as a convenient way of trading in precious metals. But is it collectible? That might seem like a foolish question from anyone who lived through the one-ounce silver bar collecting boom of the early 1970s, or who regularly buys one-ounce theme pieces sold by many companies to celebrate births and anniversaries and special events. Also, bars of gold or silver bullion from sunken shipwrecks like the S.S. Central America are collected as historical artifacts. They change hands in numismatic auctions and in private treaty sales. So bars certainly have a place as collectible items. The question is how big a place. I had a recent email from someone who wanted to know about how to properly store 10-ounce bars for the long term. The writer was clearly a collector and was concerned about preserving what he has acquired. Perhaps I am out of touch, but I have long thought of multiple-ounce bars as something one throws in a safe, safe deposit box or some sort of bonded warehouse as a convenient means of storing wealth in the form of precious metals. e-letters Condition? I had a 100-ounce silver bar that I purchased in 1969 that I sold in 1978 to help keep my finances on an even keel. While I did not store it in a bucket of slop, other than putting it in a safe deposit box, I did not give the idea of preservation any further thought. When I sold it, was bought as so much bullion. A lot of time has passed since then. Here we are in the year 2014. Not long after the email from the collector arrived in my inbox, there came an announcement from the Royal Canadian Mint that it is introducing a new 10-ounce silver bar. This new bar is .9999 fine, has a reeded edge and is serially numbered. It is struck like a coin rather than cast in a mold. The design of the bar is generic, but it looks great. There are numerous Maple Leaf symbols of the mint on the reverse and a seal-like design on the obverse. As is the purpose of all bars, it is to be traded as a convenient means of holding bullion, but it has a special finish that the RCM calls its “signature bullion finish.” How should it be stored? Does a bar like this need a special holder? Will value in the future be higher for bars preserved in holders versus those that were simply stored somewhere as I stored my bar so long ago? If large bars become widely collected as one-ounce bars did, will we see proof surfaces, matte surfaces, regular uncirculated surfaces used to differentiate pricing? Will bars be graded by how well struck they are and by points of wear? All of this could happen or none of it depending on how widespread such differentiation becomes. Obviously, if you set my old cast bar next to a more modern bar you will appreciate how much improved production methods have become in the last half century. In the bullion booms that followed the early 1970s, most of the one-ounce bars simply were valued by the quantity of silver they represented and thrown into the melting pot, though some scarce pieces have come down through the years with premium values. It will be interesting to see how a potential collector angle will develop. By the way, I did Google bar holders to see that there are hard plastic holders for certain bars. That is certainly a step down the road of collectibility. from the July 25 Numismatic News E-Newsletter Here are some answers sent from our e-newsletter readers to Editor Dave Harper. Read more responses at www.numismaticnews.com. Is issuing more Ultra High Relief gold coins in 2015 a good idea? I like the looks of the high relief coins. I recently purchased the American Eagle and American Buffalo dollars from Tuvalu in PCGS PR-70DCAM and both are fantastic. To some collectors obtaining gold coins is well beyond our budgets. High relief silver is affordable to most and a very nice addition to anyone ones collection. I rarely purchase raw (uncertified) coins and only purchase those from PCGS. This prevents the coins from being damaged when showing them and also lets me know what the current value 12 is as related to condition. The holders also make storing those coins easy. I would really like to see the mint go to all high relief coins for their commemoratives. That way we could end the current commemorative series and start on a completely new series. I believe that creating a new series of commemoratives could also bring in new collectors who don’t want to invest thousands putting together the past issues. I came back to coin collecting in 1999 with the start of the state quarter series. That turned into several other coin col- Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 lections as my interest grew. I have a nice collection now thanks to that new series. I believe that the introduction of high relief will be a shot in the arm for the collecting of coins. Without new collectors coming into our world the collection of coins could become something from the past. We should do everything we can to grow our ranks. Jayne Shelby Hollywood, Md. It may not matter much if “high relief ” in gold coins will make a difference. From my perspective, gold coins are for sure a cut above “business strikes.” They may not have the appeal of proof coins, but for sure a cut above on sight alone for detail. Gary Kess Berkel en Rodenrijs Netherlands The 2009 Saint-Gaudens Ultra High Relief was a special case. I had seen the original at the Smithsonian Institution and was blown away by it. When the new one was announced, I told my wife I was getting one and didn’t much care what it cost. A new one would have to be very special as well. The new, modern eagle looks like a strong and interesting image. I hope they don’t use the 2009 design on the obverse. This should be an entirely new piece, and that would make it more special. If they want to reuse an old design, perhaps an updating of the high-relief head from the wreath cent would make be sufficiently historically important. Bill Eckberg West Palm Beach, Fla. Most collectors cannot afford gold coins. I know I can’t. Why not involve a lot more collectors by producing an ultra high relief silver coin? Klaus Schwalfenberg Torrance, Calif. I would love to see a new UHR coin, provided the design complements the UHR format. I would definitely buy one. Bill Rodgers Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas Absolutely not! Once a limit has been reached it should be kept that way or the price will only decline and less people will order in the future knowing the market could be flooded at any time. Phil Iversen Sherman Oaks, Calif. Rather than allowing the Mint to make a big profit off of the markup of high relief coins, I would like to see the Mint conceal all of the new regular and high relief coins so they cannot be identified by anyone including Mint employees. Anyone buying the 2015 gold coin could have a chance to obtain a high relief if they were randomly inserted in the coin orders. Nobody would know who was getting a high relief until the package was opened at the buyers destination. People obtaining a high relief would be reluctant to sell in the after market because the value could only increase. They will be true collectibles. Charles Scott Perry Ada, Okla. I think it would be a great idea. The Ultra High Relief gold coin from 2009 is a beautiful coin and a superb rendition of the Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle. And since the high relief hasn’t been done since then, doing it again would definitely put something out there that I personally would be interested in. Especially if they do it with the newlook eagle in flight on the reverse that I first saw in NN awhile back. I was really impressed with what they actually chose for a reverse design. Now if they get they can get the proper image of Liberty on the obverse correct, then they will have a winner. I would really like to see what their interpretation of a “modern rendition” of Liberty for the obverse actually looks like before I make my final verdict on the total package. And, like all of us out here, keep up the good work. Mike Buchala Hillsborough, N.J. Numismatic News EXPRESS Numismatic news happens fast, and in today’s digital publishing marketplace, you shouldn’t have to wait to get it. That’s why Krause Publications has introduced Numismatic News Express, a new digital publication that will provide up-to-the-minute news updates, price guides, and buy/sell information from leading dealers— delivered straight to collectors’ inboxes. Make sure you are on the Express distribution list—register online at www.NumismaticNews.net/ Numismatic-News-Express LOOK FOR THE EXPRESS ON SEPTEMBER 10TH! www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 13 tTHE BEST BOOKS t tTHE BEST INFORMATION t tTHE BEST TIPS t for coin and paper money collectors start exploring now at: SHOPNUMISMASTER.com 14 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 Mint launches first of Kennedy sets By Connor Falk Signals of a Kennedy coin buying frenzy are here. On July 24, the Mint released the 50th Anniversary Kennedy half dollar uncirculated set. Collectors bought 84,593 sets over four days. Consumers also show interest in the 2014 Kennedy half dollar two-roll sets hav- ing bought 25,014 sets, up from the 23,312 at last report. This surpasses sales of the 2013 Kennedy half dollar two-roll sets, which stand at 24,393. Sales have been strong for the Great Smoky Mountains quarter three-coin set. Buyers purchased 15,413 so far, more than the three America the Beautiful (ATB) three-coin sets that came before it. First Day Coin Covers W.H. Harrison: John Tyler: James K. Polk: Zachary Taylor: Millard Fillmore: Franklin Pierce: James Buchanan: Andrew Johnson: Ulysses Grant: Rutherford Hayes: James Garfield: Chester Arthur: Grover Cleveland 1st Term: Benjamin Harrison Grover Cleveland 2nd Term: William McKinley: Theodore Roosevelt: William Howard Taft: Woodrow Wilson: Warren G. Harding: Calvin Coolidge: Herbert Hoover: 2014 Commemorative Coins (amount sold/mintage) 30,812/40,000 27,440/40,000 25,682/40,000 24,647/40,000 23,410/32,000 21,851/32,000 20,613/32,000 19,077/22,000 19,582/22,000 17,280/22,000 16,584/22,000 16,584/22,000 15,193/22,000 14,578/22,000 13,818/22,000 13,980/20,000 15,378/20,000 12,758/20,000 12,113/20,000 11,290/20,000 10,767/20,000 9,635/20,000 America the Beautiful 2010 ATB circulating coin set 2010 ATB uncirculated coin set 2011 ATB circulating coin set 2011 ATB uncirculated coin set 2013 ATB circulating coin set 2013 ATB uncirculated coin set 2014 ATB uncirculated coin set Hot Springs 3-coin set: Yellowstone 3-coin set: Yosemite 3-coin set: Grand Canyon 3-coin set: Mount Hood 3-coin set: Gettysburg 3-coin set: Glacier 3-coin set: Olympic 3-coin set: Vicksburg 3-coin set Chickasaw 3-coin set Chaco 3-coin set Acadia 3-coin set Hawaii 3-coin set Denali 3-coin set White Mountain 3-coin set Perry 3-coin set Great Basin 3-coin set McHenry 3-coin set Mt. Rushmore 3-coin set Smoky Mountain 3-coin set Shenandoah 3-coin set Arches 3-coin set 16 Ida McKinley Uncirculated Ida McKinley Proof Edith Roosevelt Uncirculated Edith Roosevelt Proof Helen Taft Uncirculated Helen Taft Proof Ellen Wilson Uncirculated Ellen Wilson Proof Edith Wilson Uncirculated Edith Wilson Proof Florence Harding Uncirculated Florence Harding Proof Grace Coolidge Uncirculated Grace Coolidge Proof Proof Uncirculated Max. mintage 54,368 22,293 350,000 Civil Rights (P): Baseball Hall of Fame $1: *262,091 (P)*137,909 (P) Hall of Fame $5: *32,026 (W) *17,974 (W) Hall of Fame clad half: 202,647 (S) 130,227 (D) Young Collectors set: – July 28 1,840 2,552 1,818 2,590 1,682 2,330 1,620 2,235 1,601 2,141 973 1,470 754 1,130 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 400,000 50,000 750,000 50,000 Gold Buffaloes as of 7/29/14 2014 one-ounce Buffalo bullion coin July Sales 2014 one-ounce Buffalo proof July Bullion Eagle Sales 35,167 39,353 31,854 38,164 22,958 39,559 13,866 22,027 23,025 20,401 20,202 17,249 20,746 17,550 16,458 16,811 15,098 17,989 18,339 19,371 15,869 17,531 16,218 14,218 14,429 14,684 15,143 13,246 10,816 First Spouse 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2014 2014 2014 2014 Sales of bullion coins remained slow as July wound down. Only 1,500 1-ounce gold and 285,000 1-ounce silver Eagles were sold in the latest week. The Mint sold an additional 1,000 gold Buffaloes during that time. No platinum Eagles, fractional gold Eagles or America the Beautiful 5-ounce bullion coins were sold since last report. One ounce: 1/2 ounce: 1/4 ounce: 1/10 ounce: TOTAL: 5,500 16,065 as of 7/29/14 (in coins/ounces) Platinum Gold Silver 0/0 N/A N/A N/A 0/0 26,000/26,000 0/0 6,000/1,500 25,000/2,500 57,000/30,000 1,925,000/same N/A N/A N/A 1,925,000/same America the Beautiful 5-ounce coins 2013 Collector (P) White Mountain Perry’s Victory Great Basin Fort McHenry Mount Rushmore *20,530/25,000 *17,707/25,000 *17,792/25,000 *19,802/25,000 *23,547/25,000 2014 Great Smoky Mountains Shenandoah Arches Great Sand Dunes Everglades Bullion *35,000 *30,000 *30,000 *30,000 *35,000 Collector (P) Bullion *24,705/25,000 24,775/30,000 24,668/30,000 N/A N/A 29,500 20,000 20,000 N/A N/A Collector Eagle Sales as of 7/27/14 (in coins/maximum possible) 2014 Proof Gold One ounce: 15,834/20,000 1/2 ounce: 2,673/10,000 1/4 ounce: 3,369/10,000 1/10 ounce: 8,153/20,000 Four-coin set 6,440/15,000 2013 proof 1 oz. platinum Eagle 2014-W uncirculated gold Eagle 2014-W proof silver Eagle 2014-W uncirculated silver Eagle 2013-W uncirculated silver Eagle 2013 Limited Edition Silver Proof Set *5,745 3,705 623,621 174,399 *178,941 *47,981 Bag and Roll Sales Bag and Roll Sales 2012 Benjamin Harrison Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll *53,843 *48,852 102,695 100-coin bag *1,089 *997 2,086 $250 box *9,995 *4,986 14,981 $500 box *894 *855 1,749 2013 William McKinley Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll *49,869 *44,805 94,674 100-coin bag *1,320 *1,283 2,603 $250 box *9,688 *4,836 14,524 $500 box *754 *753 1,507 2013 Theodore Roosevelt Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll *54,607 *48,526 103,133 100-coin bag *1,538 *1,486 3,024 $250 box *10,238 *4,979 15,217 $500 box *817 *775 1,592 2013 William Howard Taft Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll *49,842 *44,390 94,232 100-coin bag *989 *861 1,850 $250 box *8,946 *4,216 13,162 $500 box *558 *571 1,129 2013 Woodrow Wilson Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll *47,555 *41,769 89,324 100-coin bag *1,250 *1,072 2,322 $250 box *9,119 *4,387 13,506 $500 box *507 *503 1,010 2014 Warren G. Harding Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll 42,113 39,175 81,288 $100 bag *1,282 *1,170 2,452 $250 box 6,979 4,771 11,750 2014 Calvin Coolidge Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll 39,876 36,129 76,005 $100 bag *1,981 *1,990 3,971 $250 box 6,390 3,946 10,336 2014 Herbert Hoover Presidential dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll 33,214 30,643 63,857 $100 bag 1,934 1,913 3,847 $250 box 4,109 3,160 7,269 2013 Native American dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll 24,703 23,666 48,369 $100 bag *1,481 *1,478 2,959 $250 box *2,487 *2,496 4,983 $500 box *498 *494 992 2014 Native American dollar Option Philadelphia Denver Total 25-count roll 15,163 14,789 29,952 $100 bag 1,012 996 2,008 $250 box 1,704 1,691 3,395 2013 Great Basin National Park quarter Option Philadelphia Denver San Francisco Total 100-coin bag *2,886 *2,832 *6,517 12,235 Two-roll (P&D) set *11,662 San Francisco roll *7,148 P,D,S rolls set *9,474 2013 Fort McHenry National Monument quarter Option Philadelphia Denver San Francisco Total 100-coin bag 2,883 2,787 6,332 12,002 Two-roll (P&D) set 11,039 San Francisco roll 6,818 P,D,S rolls set 9,903 2013 Mount Rushmore National Memorial quarter San Francisco Total Option Philadelphia Denver 100-coin bag 2,997 2,941 6,451 12,389 Two-roll (P&D) set 10,585 San Francisco roll 6,976 P,D,S rolls set 10,305 2014 Great Smoky Mountains National Forest quarter Option Philadelphia Denver San Francisco Total 100-coin bag 2,736 2,703 5,571 11,010 Two-roll (P&D) set 9,661 San Francisco roll 5,668 P,D,S rolls set 10,684 2014 Shenandoah National Park quarter Option Philadelphia Denver San Francisco Total 100-coin bag 2,473 2,399 5,414 10,286 Two-roll (P&D) set 8,810 San Francisco roll 4,821 P,D,S rolls set 9,560 2014 Arches National Park quarter Option Philadelphia Denver San Francisco Total 100-coin bag 2,144 2,110 3,625 7,879 Two-roll (P&D) set 7,982 San Francisco roll 3,951 P,D,S rolls set 8,187 Sets and Singles Dollar sets 2011 Pres. $1 unc. set (P&D) 80,943 2012 Pres. $1 unc. set (P&D) 88,703 2013 Pres. $1 circ. set (P) 15,213 2013 Pres. $1 circ. set (D) 11,454 2013 Unc. $1 set (6 coins, 1 silver) 42,922 2014 Pres. $1 unc. set (P&D) 30,963 Pres. $1 Coin & First Spouse Medal Sets Abigail Fillmore 10,574 Jane Pierce 8,365 Buchanan Liberty 8,196 Eliza Johnson 6,673 Julia Grant 7,097 Lucy Hayes 5,701 Lucretia Garfield 5,365 Chester A. Arthur 5,100 Benjamin Harrison 4,351 Grover Cleveland (1st term) 4,548 Grover Cleveland (2nd term) 4,146 Ida McKinley 3,516 Edith Roosevelt 4,270 Helen Taft 3,441 Ellen Wilson 3,373 Edith Wilson 3,076 2012 proof coin sets Birth set 49,457 2013 proof coin sets Five-quarter ATB proof set 125,593 Five-quarter silver ATB proof set 134,119 Four-coin Presidential 262,633 2013 uncirculated coin set 28-coin set 367,506 2014 proof coin sets Five-quarter ATB proof set 83,850 Five-quarter silver ATB proof set 91,768 Four-coin Presidential 177,638 14-coin clad proof set 422,056 14-coin silver proof set 277,297 2014 uncirculated coin set 28-coin set 222,571 Miscellaneous Offers 2013 Birth set 37,951 2013 Happy Birthday Set 10,535 Unless otherwise stated, all boxed figures are compiled July 27. Numbers provided by the U.S. Mint. Totals are cumulative from the beginning of sales unless marked otherwise. To order most U.S. Mint products, write U.S. Mint, P.O. Box 71191, Philadelphia, PA 19176; call (800) USA-MINT; or visit the Web site at www.usmint.gov. Hearing- or speech-impaired individuals may call (888) 321-MINT. For information, write U.S. Mint, Attention: Customer Care Center, 801 Ninth St., N.W., Washington, DC 20220. Shipping is $4.95 per order. * denotes option no longer available 2013 Congratulations Set 17,348 2014 Birth set 16,535 2014 Happy Birthday Set 8,006 2014 Congratulations Set 5,652 Roosevelt Coin & Chronicles Set 14,887 Roosevelt Youth Set 5,884 2014 Bullion Eagle sales Total coins as of 7/29/14 Gold Am. Eagle ounce 224,500 Gold Am. Eagle 1/2 ounce 27,000 Gold Am. Eagle 1/4 ounce 78,000 Gold Am. Eagle 1/10 ounce 385,000 Silver Am. Eagle 26,053,500 Gold Buffalo 117,000 Platinum Am. Eagle ounce 12,900 Kennedy halves 2012 Two-roll set 33,447 2013 Two-roll set 24,393 2014 Two-roll set 25,014 2014 200-coin bag 8,750 2014 50th Anniversary clad unc. set 84,593 2014 50th Anniversary gold proof N/A Mint Statistics is updated each Thursday at numismaticnews.com www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 17 Designs/from Page 1 steaders: food, shelter and water. Inscriptions are HOMESTEAD, NEBRASKA, 2015, and E PLURIBUS UNUM. The reverse was designed by United States Mint Artistic Infusion Program (AIP) artist Ronald D. Sanders and will be sculpted by U.S. Mint SculptorEngraver Jim Licaretz. Louisiana’s Kisatchie National Forest will be honored by the second design of 2015. This design features a wild turkey in flight over blue stem grass with long leaf pine in the background. Inscriptions are KISATCHIE, LOUISIANA, 2015, and E PLURIBUS UNUM. The reverse was designed by AIP artist Susan Gamble and will be sculpt- ed by U.S. Mint Sculptor-Engraver Joseph Menna. Third design will be North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Parkway. This design depicts the grace and curvature of the road hugging the side of a mountain, with the North Carolina state flower in the foreground. Inscriptions are BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY, NORTH CAROLINA, 2015, and E PLURIBUS UNUM. The reverse was designed by AIP artist Frank Morris and will be sculpted by United States Mint Sculptor-Engraver Joseph Menna. Fourth design for the year will be the Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge in Delaware. This design features a great blue heron in the foreground and a great egret in the background. Inscriptions are BOMBAY HOOK, DELAWARE, 2015, and E PLURIBUS UNUM. The reverse was designed by AIP artist Joel Iskowitz and will be sculpted by U.S. Mint Sculptor-Engraver Phebe Hemphill. The final design honors Saratoga National Historical Park in New York. This design is a close-up of the moment Gen. John Burgoyne surrendered his sword to Gen. Horatio Gates, a pivotal moment many believe marked the ‘beginning of the end of the American Revolutionary War.’ Inscriptions are BRITISH SURRENDER 1777, SARATOGA, NEW YORK, 2015, and E PLURIBUS UNUM. The reverse was designed by AIP artist Barbara Fox and will be sculpted by United States Mint Sculptor-Engraver Renata Gordon. Demand/from Page 1 NGC/from Page 4 to earn an early release label from major grading services. One grading firm had a very tight window for buyers to act. Sets purchased now have a projected September delivery date. Each anniversary set contains both a Philadelphia and a Denver coppernickel clad half dollar with an uncirculated finish. On each coin is the 1964 portrait done by Gilroy Roberts. This distinguishes these coins from regular 2014 Kennedy half dollars sold in bags and rolls and other sets. Price of the set is $9.95. There is a five-set-per-household order limit in effect. A shipping and handling charge of $4.95 is assessed on all orders. Also bearing the 1776 date of American Independence is Newman’s New Hampshire copper. Graded NGC VG-8 BN, it is believed to be one of only two examples in private hands. There are five 1792 Washington pieces: A Getz Small Eagle, Plain Edge “G. Washington President. I.” cent in NGC MS-64 BN; a Roman Head cent in NGC PF-65 RB, a unique Eagle and Stars cent in NGC XF-40 BN, a “General of the American Armies” reverse in NGC XF- 45 BN and a “Washington Born Virginia” cent in NGC MS-65 BN. Additional descriptions of the varied Newman coins were provided by NGC. The Colonial selections feature a group of 1787 Fugio coppers. Newman is the author of the standard reference for them and all of these pieces have been attributed by NGC with Newman catalog numbers. Among the most notable Fugio coppers are the 1787 Raised Rims Fugio copper, Newman 1-Z, NGC MS-64 BN and the “FUCIO” Newman 2-C variety in NGC XF-40 BN. The California Gold Rush and the earlier Georgia/North Carolina Gold Rush contribute two dozen Territorial Gold coins. There are two Wass, Molitor & Co. pieces: the 1855 $50 gold slug in NGC MS-61 and the 1862 Wide Date, Large Head $10 graded NGC MS-63. Also included are several Bechtler pieces, a Mormon $5 in NGC MS-61, and two U.S. Assay Office pieces. Federal U.S. coins begin with a 1794 dollar, which is one of just 1,758 pieces struck in the first year of this denomination. It is graded AU-50 by NGC. A top-grade gold highlight is an 1867 double eagle. Graded NGC MS-66, it is a full three grades higher than the second-finest known example. NGC said there is a sizeable working collecting of large cents, including a number of varieties attributed by Sheldon and Newcomb catalog numbers, are listed in Newman Part V. The 1793 Sheldon-13 Liberty Cap Cent graded NGC AU 53 BN is significant as a high grade example of a rare early large cent variety. The first four sales realized over $45 million, with the proceeds going to the Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society. Limit/from Page 1 the country. More can be produced if demand warrants. Initial price for the proof gold Kennedy coin is $1,240. This is subject to change as the price of gold bullion fluctuates, according to the Mint’s weekly grid pricing system. 18 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 STEINBERG’S, INC. Numismatic Gold Specialists Since 1950 WANTED TO BUY Choice Quality & Scarce Gold Coins of the World We are especially interested in GOLD COINS from Russia • Poland • Czechoslovakia • China • British India • Great Britain • Mexico • Finland • Norway • Shipwreck & “Land” Cobs Contact us by phone 919-363-5544 by fax 919-363-0555 or by e-mail [email protected] Looking for World Gold? Go to www.steinbergs.com for our complete inventory listing. STEINBERG’S, INC. Robert L Steinberg Life Member #1958 Michael D. Sottini Life Member #5909 P.O. Box 5665, Dept. NNE Cary, NC 27512-5665 Canadian bar new collectible frontier? By Connor Falk With Canada’s newest 10-ounce silver bullion bar design about to go on sale, collectors wonder if the bars themselves might have a value to them beyond their bullion content. “We are one of the largest sellers of Royal Canadian Mint (RCM) bullion bars. We’ve had pretty good success selling them,” said Michael Haynes, President of American Precious Metals Exchange (APMEX) headquartered in Oklahoma City, Okla. Haynes’ company was taking preorders on the new silver bar before its Aug. 5 release date. He said a big selling point for the new bar was the customers knew about them and trust them. “The RCM is a familiar bar producer,” he said. When asked about the latest anticounterfeiting measures the RCM took with the new bars, he pointed out the reeded edge, the finish and the packaging as being attractive to both collectors and investors worried about security. “The best thing to do is to make the bar different and the packaging different to run up the counterfeiting costs,” he said. He then pointed out that the new design does exactly that. “The Canadians are doing a good job. We will probably sell a lot,” he said. He pointed out that the bars have a high degree of desirability by being from a widely respected official mint from which collectors can expect quality, new security devices and the opportunity to collect a new product. Lee Crane, owner of L & C Coins, a rare coin business in Los Alamitos, Calif., evaluated the new bar from the collectible aspect. “If you go back to the ’70s, there was an art bar collecting craze but that was for private minted bars,” he said. Government minted bars, on the other hand, could be a different story, he said. “A lot of collectors are buying modern coins, grading them right away and 20 With a reeded edge like a coin and a special bullion finish, will the new 10-ounce silver bar from the Royal Canadian Mint become collectible as coins are collectible rather than just being a convenient way to own silver? going after the best ones,” he said. He said that it wouldn’t be a stretch to expand collector grading to bullion bars, though he questioned whether grading com- Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 panies would create a new slab for them. “I don’t see them grading them, but they could. Could it catch on? It could,” he said. Serving the Numismatic Community for 40 Years America’s Oldest Coin Grading Service. Established 1972. TO DO LIST Mow Lawn Organize Garage Clean Out Gutters Take Out Garbage Do Laundry Get Groceries Sign Up For The “ANACS Insider” ANACS 1-800-888-1861 • www.anacs.com P.O. Box 6000 • Englewood, CO 80155 • [email protected] www.facebook.com/anacscoingrading @ANACSCoin www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 21 DISTINCTIVE COINS Strong buyers of world coins and paper money Over 40 Years of Experience Buying and Selling Coins and Currency See our monthly ad in World Coin News and on our website at www.DistinctiveCoins.com DISTINCTIVE COINS 422 WEST 75 TH STREET • DOWNERS GROVE, IL 60516 FAX: 630.968.7780 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: WWW.DISTINCTIVECOINS.COM 630.968.7700 22 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 DISTINCTIVE COINS 422 W. 75th St., Downers Grove, IL 60516 Phone: 630-968-7700 • Fax: 630-968-7780 Hours: Monday - Friday 9:30-5:00 CST; Saturday 9:30-3:00 e-mail: [email protected] Visit our Web site: distinctivecoins.com We suggest fax or e-mail orders. TERMS OF SALE 1. No discounts or approvals. 2. Postage: a. U.S. insured mail $5.00. b. Overseas registered $20.00. ALL INTERNATIONAL SHIPMENTS ARE AT BUYER’S RISK! OTHER INSURED SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE. c. Others such as U.P.S. or FedEx need street address. 3. WE ACCEPT VISA, MASTERCARD & PAYPAL! Please call and reserve the coins, and then mail or fax us the written confirmation. We need your signature of approval on all charge sales. 4. Returns – for any reason – within 21 days. 5. Minors need written parental consent. 6. Lay Aways – can be easily arranged. Give us the terms. 7. Overseas – Pro Forma invoice will be mailed or faxed. 8. Most items are one-of-a-kind and are subject to prior sale. Distinctive Coins is not liable for cataloging errors. GOLD BUYERS: NO PAYPAL & NO CREDIT CARDS FOR GOLD COINS. PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE (UP/DOWN) BASED ON CURRENT GOLD PRICES. THIS LIST SUPERSEDES ALL PRIOR LISTS! TO ORDER PLEASE CALL 630-968-7700. THANK YOU. ******GOLD COINS OF THE WORLD****** AUSTRALIA 1887S SOVEREIGN K-6 VF ....................................335 2000 $100 K-528 UNC DRAGON 1 OZ..............1,650 AUSTRIA 1881 8 FLORIN/20FR K-2269 AU ..........................265 1894 20 CORONA K-2806 AU ...............................360 BELIZE 1979 $100 K-58 PROOF ANGELFISH ...................160 1980 $100 K-62 PROOF REEF FISH .....................170 CANADA 2010 50 CENT K-? MOUNTED POLICEMAN WITH BOX AND COA 1/25 OZ ................................90 2012 50 CENT K-? CARIBOU RIVER GOLD RUSH WITH CERT AND BOX 1/25 OZ .....................80 1912 $5 K-26 NGC-MS62 .....................................500 CHILE 1860 2 PESOS K-132 SL ROUGH F/VF .................125 CHINA 1932 DOLLAR Y-344 L&M-108 NGC-AU58 BIRDS OVER JUNK .............................................2,800 1994 5 YUAN K-674 PROOF UNICORN ..................225 1995 5 YUAN K-794 NGC-PF69 ULTRA CAMEO UNICORN ....................................225 1990 10 YUAN K-317 NGC-PF68 ULTRA CAMEO DRAGON & PHOENIX..................240 1992 25 YUAN K-393 P/L UNC WIPED .................400 COSTA RICA 1850JB ESCUDO K-98 VF- WIPED ......................250 FRANCE 1856A 5 FRANCS K-787.1 AU...............................140 1899 10 FRANCS K-846 BU ..................................138 1820W 20 FRANCS K-712.9 AU............................425 1851A 20 FRANCS K-762 AU CERES ..................290 GIBRALTAR 1998 1/10TH ROYAL K-750 PROOF KISSING ........165 GREAT BRITAIN 2005 1/2 SOVEREIGN K-1064 PROOF .................175 2000 1/2 SOVEREIGN K-1001 PCGS-MS68 MILLENIUM FIRST STRIKE....................................200 1869 SOVEREIGN K-736.2 VF SHIELD ...............340 1908 SOVEREIGN K-805 UNC ...............................340 1925 SOVEREIGN K-820 BU..................................345 2003 1/10TH OZ K-1040 BU BRITANNIA...............146 GUATEMALA 1860R PESO K-179 XF HL'S BENT ......................175 HAITI 1977 250 GOURDES K-138 PRF HUMAN RIGHTS RARE .........................................500 HUNGARY 1912 10 KORONA K-485 XF TINY RN ..................140 1893 20 KORONA K-485 XF- ................................275 1898 20 KORONA K-485 AU .................................280 INDIA 1918I SOVEREIGN K-525A UNC............................380 IRAN AH1342/32 1/5 TOMAN K-1070 UNC ...................140 AH1294-5 TOMAN K-932 XF ONCE MOUNTED....175 AH1370(1991) 1/4 AZADI K-1265 CH BU .............200 ISLE OF MAN 1993 1/4 ANGEL K-195 ANACS-PF67 HEAVY AMEO MINTAGE? .................................................400 1988 CROWN K-237 MISHANDLED PROOF .........288 ISREAL 2008 NEW SHEQEL K-440 PRF WOLF LAMB .......120 2009 NEW SHEQEL K-462 PRF LION ....................120 ITALY 1885 20 LIRE K-21 UNC BETTER DATE ...............265 1890 20 LIRE K-21 NGC-AU55 .............................400 ITALY - VENICE 1789-97 ZECCHINI K-755 AU ...............................450 NETHERLANDS 1897 10 GULDEN K-118 AU LTLY WIPED ............118 PERU 1951 20 SOLES K-229 XF .....................................380 POLAND 1995 50 ZLOTYCH Y-292 BU EAGLE ....................300 2006 100 ZLOTYCH K-? PRF JAN LASKI ..............390 2007 100 ZLOTYCH K-? PRF ENIGMA CODE .......390 2008 100 ZLOTYCH K-640 PRF ............................390 2009 100 ZLOTYCH K-699 PRF ............................390 RUSSIA 1887 5 ROUBLE Y-42 AU.......................................750 1898 5 ROUBLE Y-62 XF/AU .................................235 1897 15 ROUBLE Y-65.1 XF HL'S .........................850 SAN MARINO 1985R 2 SCUDI K-185 BU.....................................170 SINGAPORE 1969 $150 K-7 BU ..............................................1,040 SOUTH AFRICA 1897 1/2 POND K-9.2 NGC-XF40 .........................250 1931 SOVEREIGN K-21 UNC SMALL HEAD..........340 1952 POUND K-43 CH BU 1 YR TYPE .................500 1952 POUND K-43 PROOF 1 YR TYPE ................550 1952 POUND K-43 NGC-PF65 1 YR TYPE...........600 SWITZERLAND 1922 10 FRANCS K-36 BU ....................................145 1883 20 FRANCS K-31.3 AU/UNC ......................290 1914 OR 15 20 FRANCS K-35.1 BU .......................290 2008 G500F NGC-PF69 ULTRA CAMEO GENEVA FESTIVAL W/ FEMALE ARCHER SCARCE ONLY 150 MINTED ..................................2,400 TURKEY 1995 25 KURUSH K-870 BU ...................................80 1923 YR54 100 KURUSH K-855 BU .....................320 TURKS AND CAICOS 1975 25 CROWNS K-9.1 CH BU 1,272 MINTED .05 OZ ..............................................110 * CERTIFIED CROWNS AND MINORS OF THE WORLD * AUSTRALIA 1955(M) PENNY K-56 NGC-PF63RD ....................450 1958(M) PENNY K-56 NGC-PF63RD ....................450 1959 3 PENCE K-57 NGC-PF66 ............................160 1959 6 PENCE K-58 NGC-PF65 ............................160 1958 2 SHILLINGS K-60 NGC-PF66 ......................225 BELGIUM 1886 50 CENTIMES K-64 NGC-MS64....................140 1849 2 1/2 FRANCS K-11 NGC-AU DETAILS SURFACE HARILINES SMALL HEAD ....................475 1954 20 FRANCS K-140.1 UNC ............................110 CANADA 1859 CENT K-1 NGC-MS63BN BRONZE (NOT IDENTIFIED BY NGC, BUT IS A REPUNCH 8 VARIETY-SCARCE) .................................................2,000 1893 CENT K-7 NGC-MS65RB HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC POP 2/0 SCARCE IN HIGH GRADE . ..............................................................................1,750 1896 CENT K-7 NGC-MS62RB................................80 1897 CENT K-7 NGC-MS65RB HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC POP 4/0 SCARCE IN HIGH GRADE . ..............................................................................1,200 1900H CENT K-7 NGC-MS63RB .............................90 1900H CENT K-7 NGC-MS65BN FULL BROWN ...340 1900H CENT K-7 NGC-MS65BN HINT OF RED .....380 1901 CENT K-7 NGC-MS62BN .............................60 1901 CENT K-7 NGC-MS65RB..............................500 1902 CNET K-8 NGC-MS63RB................................65 1902 CENT K-8 NGC-MS65RB HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC POP 19/0 ...................................300 1903 CENT K-8 NGC-MS65RD .............................380 1904 CENT K-8 NGC-MS64RB MOSTLY RED .......150 1907 CENT K-8 NGC-MS65RB HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC POP 6/0 SCARCE IN HIGH GRADE . ..............................................................................1,000 1909 CNET K-8 NGC-MS65RB ............................750 1911 CENT K-21 NGC-MS66RB............................600 1915 CENT K-21 NGC-MS65RB............................325 1916 CENT K-21 NGC-MS65RB............................360 1918 CENT K-21 NGC-MS66RB HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC POP 4/0 ..................................................600 1920 CENT K-28 NGC-MS65BN (HINTS OF RED) HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC POP 7/0 SCARCE IN HIGH GRADE ......................................................................500 1909 5 CENT K-13 NGC-AU50 HOLLY POINTED LEAVES BETTER TYPE .............................300 1949 DOLLAR K-47 SEGS-MS63 ............................45 1949 DOLLAR K-47 NGC-MS64..............................65 NEWFOUNDLAND 1873 50 CENTS K-6 GREEN PCGS-VF35 TRENDS VF=$300 AND XF=$1,250 .........................................500 1874 50 CENTS K-6 PCGS-XF45 CANADIAN TRENDS FOR XF40=800, AU50=3,000 ..................1,200 CHINA 1919 20 CENT Y-308 NGC-MS64BN.....................350 CHEKIANG 1903-06 10 CENT Y-49.1 NGC-AU55BN ...............100 KIANGSU-KIANGSOO 1902 10 CENTS CCC-232 NGC-AU53BN .............250 HONAN 1928 200 CASH Y-396 NGC-AU53BN ................1,200 MANCHUKUO 1935 FEN Y-6 NGC-MS63BN ................................150 REPUBLIC 1914 50 CENTS Y-328 L&M-64 NGC-XF40..........600 1934 DOLLAR Y-345 L&M-110 NGC-MS63 .........300 DENMARK 1846VS 1 SPECIEDALER K-720.1 NGC-XF45 ........390 DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 1952 PESO K-22 NGC-MS64 ................................125 FRANCE 1920 10 CENTIMES K-843 NGC-MS66RB BRONZE,SEMI-KEY,NGC HIGHEST GRADE ...........400 1839A 1/4 FRANC K-740.1 NGC-MS65 2ND HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC POP 1/1 ..............250 FRENCH INDO-CHINA 1895 10 CENTS K-2 NGC-AU58 ...........................150 GERMANY, BAVARIA 1874D 5 MARK K-896 NGC-MS63 .......................800 1902D 5 MARK K-915 PCGS-AU58 ......................130 GERMANY, CONSTANCE 1626 3 KREUZER K-118 NGC-AU58 .....................300 GERMANY, HANNOVER 1827 16 GUTE GROSCHEN K-138 NGC-MS61 .....180 GERMANY, HESSE-DARMSTADT 1898A 2 MARK K-368 NGC-AU DETAILS SURFACE HAIRLINES ............................................950 GERMANY, MUHLHAUSEN 1767 1/24 THALER K-72 PCGS-AU55 ..................110 GERMANY, NORDLINGEN 1532 BATZEN SCH-2423 NGC-XF40.....................175 GERMANY, OETTINGEN 1515 BATZEN NGC-AU55 .......................................225 GERMANY, SAXE-COBURG-GOTHA 1836 20K K-66 NGC-UNC DETAILS SURFACE HAIRLINES ................................................................200 GERMANY, SAXONY 1812SGH 2/3 TALER K-1052 NGC-AU55 ..............280 GERMANY, SCHWARZBURG RUDOLSTADT 1898A 2 MARK K-186 NGC-XF45 .........................480 GERMANY, WURTTEMBERG 1736 5 KREUZER K-333 NGC-AU55 HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC ........................................380 GERMANY 1888D 20 PFENNIG K-9.1 NGC-MS64....................80 1918A 1/2 MARK K-17 NGC-MS65 NICELY TONED ....................................................................................40 1926J R'SMARK K-44 ANACS-EF40 KEY ............140 1927J R'SMARK K-44 ANACS-AU58 KEY............100 1927F 3 R'SMARK K-54 PCGS-MS64 TUBINGEN UNIVERSITY ..............................................................600 GREAT BRITAIN 1771 FARTHING K-602 NGC-MS63BN..................650 1721 HALF PENNY K-557 NGC-XF45BN ..............475 1887 HALF PENNY K-754 NGC-MS63RB .............260 1826 PENNY K-693 NGC-MS62BN .......................475 1886 PENNY K-749.2 NGC-MS62RB ....................450 1891 PENNY K-755 NGC-AU58 ............................120 1891 PENNY K-755 NGC-MS64BN .......................220 1904 PENNY K-794.2 NGC-MS64RB ....................150 1912H PENNY K-810 NGC-MS63BN ....................240 1912H PENNY K-810 NGC-MS65RB.....................380 1919H PENNY K-810 NGC-AU55 ..........................400 1693 6 PENCE K-481 NGC-VF DETAILS DAMAGED (FLAN FLAW & DIG ON PORTRAIT) ...375 1866 6 PENCE K-733.2 NGC-MS64 W/DIE#.........400 1899 6 PENCE K-779 NGC-MS62 BLUE, ROSE, GOLD TONING ON OBV ...................150 1554 SHILLING S-2500 NGC-VF20 PHILIP AND MARY SPINK CATALOGUES 1,800 GBP ...............................................................................1,480 1839 SHILLING K-679 NGC-AU58 .........................600 GUATEMALA 1859 PESO K-178 NGC-VF30 SCARCE ...............750 HUNGARY 1670KB 6 KREUZER K-62 FLASHY NGC-MS62 .....140 INDIA, JAIPUR 1911//32 NAZ RUPEE K-147 NGC-MS62..............300 INDIA, BRITISH 1889(C) 1/4 ANNA K-486 NGC-MS65RD HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC .....................................200 1926(B) 2 ANNA K-516 NGC-MS64......................300 1891(B) RUPEE K-473.2 NGC-AU58 ATTRACTIVE BLUE GREY TONING ........................100 1906(C) RUPEE K-508 NGC-MS-61......................100 IRELAND 1930 SHILLING K-6 ICG-AU53..............................175 1930 FLORIN K-7 ICG-AU55 (THIS COIN IS MISLABELED AS HALF CROWN)..............................190 JAPAN M28(1895) YEN Y-A25.3 NGC-MS61....................350 1914 YEN Y-38 NGC-MS64 ..................................450 1914 YEN Y-38 NGC-MS65 SCARCE GRADE .....1,600 MEXICO 1783MO 1/2 REAL K-69.2 PRIME SELECT .............75 1875GO 8 REALES K-377.8 NGC-MS63 ...............180 1876MO 8 REALES K-377.10 NGC-MS62 ............175 1888PI MR 8 REALES K-377.12 NGC-MS63 ........180 1891ZS FZ 8 REALES K-377.13 NGC-MS62 .........130 1892ZS FZ 8 REALES K-377.13 NGC-MS62 .........140 1896MO AB 8 REALES K-377.10 NGC-MS63 .......180 1897GO RS 8 REALES K-377.8 NGC-MS62 140 1954MO 5 CENTAVOS K-426 NGC-MS64 NO DOT ..................................................................................180 1893AS L 10 CENTAVOS K-403 NGC-XF40 ............50 1902CNQ 20 CENTAVOS K-405 NGC-AU58 ...........48 1902ZS FZ PESO K-409.3 NGC-MS62..................120 1903ZS FZ PESO K-409.3 NGC-MS65 HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC, POP 1/0 .........................700 PANAMA 1930 1/10 BALBOA K-10.1 NGC-AU58 ...................20 1934 1/10 BALBOA K-10.1 NGC-AU55 ...................90 1934 1/2 BALBOA K-12.1 NGC-UNC DETAILS OBV SCRATCHED (PIN SCR'S ON HELMET) ..........90 PERU 1846 LIMA 8 REALES K-142.1 NGC-AU50 ...........320 PHILIPPINES 1910S PESO K-172 NGC-UNC DEATILS SURFACE HAIRLINES ................................................................250 RUSSIA 1912CNB 1/2 KOPEK Y-48.1 NGC-MS64RB ...........80 1882CNB HO 5 KOPEKS Y-19A.1 NGC-MS67 HIGHEST GRADE BY NCG, POP 9/0 .........................300 1914CNB 15 KOPEK Y-21A.2 NGC-MS67 HIGHEST GRADE BY NGC, POP 20/0 .......................300 SOUTH AFRICA 1894 6 PENCE K-4 NGC-AU DETAILS SURFACE HAIRLINES ............................................175 1895 6 PENCE K-4 NGC-XF40 ............................180 1897 6 PENCE K-4 NGX-MS61 .............................110 1896 2 1/2 SHILLINGS K-7 NGC-AU55 ................100 1897 2 1/2 SHILLINGS K-7 NGC-AU53 ..................90 SPAIN 1896(96)PGV PESETA K-706 NGC-AU58 ................60 SWITZERLAND 7246 t ..... 1939B 5 FRANCS K-42 NGC-MS64 BATTLE OF LAUPEN 30,000 MINTED ...................................350 1999 S50 FRANCS K-S57 NGC-PF69 ULTRA CAMEO SION FESTIVAL ..............................175 SWITZERLAND - VAUD 1828 BATZ K-20 ANACS-AU58 ...............................40 ***** CROWNS AND MINORS OF THE WORLD ***** ALGERIA 1972 5 DINARS K-105 UNC+ ..................................15 ANGOLA 1853 MACUTA K-56 VF ...........................................48 1814 MACUTA K-46 XF SOME VERTIGRIS ............60 ANTIGUA 1970 $4 K-1 PROOF ................................................45 1970 $4 K-1 BU .......................................................45 ARGENTINA 1883 50 CENTAVOS K-28 AU RN & SCR BEHIND PORTRAIT......................................................42 ARGENTINA-BUENOS AIRES 1828 5/10 REAL K-3 VF FAINT HL'S REV ..............10 AUSTRALIA 1931 PENNY K-23 XF FALLEN “1” .........................60 1911 6 PENCE K-25 XF WIPED ...............................60 1937 CROWN K-34 UNC HL'S REV.........................40 1997 $5 K-356 BU 2000 OLYMPIC RUNNER ...........7 AUSTRIA 1765 PFENNIG K-1979 VF........................................14 1789B 10 KREUZER K-2066 VF...............................20 1763KB 2O KREUZER K-2028 VF ............................15 1780AHGS THALER K-1866.3 DARK F/VF ..............75 1780SF THALER K-T-1 P/L GEM RESTRIKE............28 1959 10 GROSCHEN K-2878 PROOF ......................30 1929 2 SCHILLING K-2844 TONED AU ..................12 1932 2 SCHILLING K-2848 UNC ..........................90 1963 50 SCHILLING K-2894 PROOF TIROL ...........45 1964 50 SCHILLING K-2896 UNC...........................16 AZORES 1795 20 REIS K-3 F+ OVERSTRIKE ........................18 BARBADOS 1970 $4 K-A9 BU FAO ............................................16 BELGIUM 1833 5 CENTIME K-5.1 VF ......................................18 1847 5 CENTIME K-5.1 VF ......................................25 1851 5 CENTIME K-5.1 XF+ ....................................40 1857 5 CENTIME K-5.1 VF ......................................18 1862/1 5 CENTIME K-21 VF/XF ..............................15 1901 5 CENTIME K-44 XF DES BELGES ................20 1832 10 CENTIMES K-2.1 VF- ................................65 1866 50 CENTIMES K-26 XF...................................85 1868 2 FRANCS K-30.1 VF.......................................70 1944 5 FRANC K-129.1 AU .....................................25 1954 20 FRANCS K-140.1 BELGIQUE .....................65 1949 100 FRANCS K-138.1 BU BELGIQUE KEY........90 (ND)1980 500 FRANCS K-162A UNC MAP ...........16 BIAFRA 1969 2 1/2 SHILLINGS K-4 AU ...............................38 BOHEMIA 1583 MALEY GROSCHEN VF/XF RUDOLPH II ........60 BOLIVIA ND(1613-17) PQ 8 REAL K-10 GRADE 1 25.6g PHILIP III ORIG 1985 ATOCHA SHIPWRECK TAG BUT W/O CERT ...........................900 1814/13PTSPJ 8 REALES K-84 VF HOLED ...........30 1823PTSPJ 8 REAL K-84 XF FEW MIN FL FL .......125 1853PTSFP 4 SOLES K-123.1 VF ...........................38 1865FP MELGAREJO K-146 XF+ 1 YR TY ............300 BRITISH HONDURAS 1919 25 CENTS K-17 F ...........................................12 BRITISH NORTH BORNEO 1891H CENT K-1 CH BRN UNC RN ......................180 1888H CENT K-2 VF+ ..............................................15 1894H CENT K-2 XF ................................................90 1903H 2 1/2 CENTS K-4 XF ....................................60 1903H 5 CENTS K-5 DIRTY VF .................................9 ALWAYS BUYING! WE BUY COINS AND CURRENCY FROM ALL COUNTRIES. CONTACT US AT: 630-968-7700 www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 23 ▲ Coin Market at a glance PART A-1 Brought to you by NumisMaster.com GOLD BULLION MARKET VALUES Pre-ANA action missing due to gold jitters Curiously the usual burst of dealer activity ahead of the ANA event in Chicago has not occurred. The market appears firm but normally for several weeks ahead there are increased dealer bids in all the desirable areas of U.S. coins, especially type coins. There is a great deal of anxiety associated with a possible breakdown by gold to test recent lows or even new lows. While it is not really true, gold is often seen as a barometer of all numismatic business by dealers. It applies to bullion-related material and has direct influence on Mint product and modern material, but has little effect on classic coins. These are better type coins, early issues and scarce dates, primarily those that are 50 or more years old. There is still strong underlying demand for early type coins, especially those of the Bust variety. These are popular. Bust half dollars are plentiful and avidly collected by date and variety. There is almost always promotional demand for the lower grade issues as well for all Bust type coins. Last year the $3 Indian Princess was in strong demand and rising going into the ANA show. This year it is declining. Key U.S. Type Coins Date Fair2 AG3 1869/9 1877 1908S 1909S Lincoln Cents KM#132 1909S 1909S VDB 1914D 1922 No D Die 2 Strong Rev 1922 No D Die 3 Weak Rev 1931S 1955/1955 1972/1972 1983/1983 1984/1984 1995/1995 Liberty Nickels KM#112 1885 1886 1912S Buffalo Nickels KM#134 1913S Ty'2 1914D 1916/16 1918/17D 1921S 1926S 1931S 1937D 3 Leg Jefferson Nickels KM#192a/A192 1939D 1943/2 1950D Barber Dimes KM#113 1892S 1893/2 1894O 1895 1895O 1896O 1896S 1897O 1901S 1913S Mercury Dimes KM#140 1916D 1921 1921D 1926S 1942/41 1942/1D Barber Quarters KM#114 1896S 1901S 1913S Standing Lib Qtrs KM#141/145 1916 1818/17S 1921 1923S Washington Qtrs KM#164 1932D 1932S $50 $390 $40 $335 $55 $425 $90 — $125 $30 — — — — — $195 $125 $70 $175 $28 $850 — $28 $9 $8 $225 — — — $33 $70 $34 $44 $200 $42 $48 $35 $40 $15 $400 $34 $45 $7 $300 $290 $395 $2,450 $875 $1,050 — — — $50 $60 $140 $475 $60 $425 $64 $565 $140 450 165 $45 — — — — — $375 $170 $110 $265 $49 $2,000 $685 $42 $14 $10 $375 — — — $45 $90 $46 $63 $275 $60 $65 $49 $55 $21 $550 $44 $53 $10 $350 $360 $550 $3,650 $1,325 $1,850 — — — $80 $90 By Harry Miller Indian Cents KM#90a 24 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 Good4 $190 $585 $79 $485 $85 $660 $190 550 300 $60 — — — — — $500 $265 $145 $345 $90 $3,850 $1,025 $64 $20 $15 $525 $4.0 $35 $9 $62 $135 $65 $85 $365 $80 $84 $68 $78 $32 $785 $55 $70 $12 $485 $465 $750 $4,950 $1,700 $2,750 $1,350 $155 $265 $110 $115 Gold is down $5 and silver is down 20 cents. Platinum is even with our last report. Strength in platinum and palladium is lending some support to gold and silver. Russia has been buying gold. In June it was 500,000 troy ounces, May 300,000 troy ounces and April 900,000 troy ounces. Silver Eagle sales at the U.S. Mint have been declining lately, but are expected to pick up after vacation season. Visit NumisMaster.com for daily pricing updates. Values listed are average retail prices. They are not offers to buy or sell. Values are compiled by the Krause Publications staff of market analysts and independent analysts. Actual Melt Value American Bison 1 T Oz $50 American Eagle 1 T Oz. $25 American Eagle 1/2 T Oz. $10 American Eagle 1/4 T Oz. $5 American Eagle 1/10 T Oz. U.S. American Art 1oz. U.S. American Art 1/2 oz. US $5 commemorative 1986 to date US $10 commemorative 1984 Australia kangaroo/Nugget 1 T Oz. Austria 1 Ducat Austria 4 Ducat Austria 10 Corona Austria 20 Corona Austria 100 Corona Austria Philharmonic1T Oz Austria Philharmonic 1/2 T Oz Austria Philharmonic 1/4 T Oz Austria Philharmonic 1/10 T Oz Belgium 20 Franc Canada Mapleaf 1T Oz Canada Mapleaf 1/2 T Oz Canada Mapleaf 1/4 T Oz Canada Mapleaf 1/10 T Oz Canada $20 Canada $100 (1976 business strike) Canada $100 1977-1986 China Panda 1 T. Oz China Panda 1/2 T. Oz China Panda 1/4 T. Oz PLATINUM BULLION MARKET VALUES SPOT PRICE $1,473.00 as of July 31, 2014 SPOT PRICE $1,294.40 as of July 31, 2014 MARKET PRICE $1,294 $1,294 $647 $324 $129 $1,294 $647 $313 $626 $1,294 $143 $573 $125 $250 $1,252 $1,294 $647 $324 $129 $242 $1,294 $647 $324 $129 $647 $324 $647 $1,294 $647 $324 $1,398 $1,391 $717 $368 $173 $1,325 $680 $340 $673 $1,380 $160 $631 $142 $276 $1,302 $1,372 $705 $361 $149 $263 $1,381 $705 $361 $150 $720 $346 $689 $1,387 $699 $360 China Panda 1/10 T. Oz $129 China Panda 1/20 T. Oz $65 Colombia 5 Peso $305 France 20 Franc rooster $242 Germany 10 Mark $149 Germany 20 Mark $298 Great Britian Soverign old (king) $305 Great Britian Soverign new (queen) $305 Hungary 100 Korona $1,252 Italy 20 Lire $242 Mexico 50 Peso $1,560 Mexico 20 Peso $624 Mexico 10 Peso $312 Mexico 5 Peso $156 Mexico 2.5 Peso $78 Mexico 2 Peso $62 Netherlands East Indies 1 Ducat $143 Netherlands 10 Gulden $252 Russia 5 Roubles $161 Russia 10 Roubles/Chevronetz $322 South Africa Krugerand 2 Rand $305 South Africa Krugerand 1 T Oz. $1,294 South Africa Krugerand 1/2 T Oz. $647 South Africa Krugerand 1/4 T Oz. $324 South Africa Krugerand 1/10 T Oz. $129 Swiss 10 Franc $121 Swiss 20 Franc $242 10 Karat Scrap Gold per gram $16.44 14 Karat Scrap Gold per gram $23.41 18 Karat Scrap Gold per gram $30.17 realizable value 85-98% AMV depending on quantity VG8 Fine12 VF20 XF40 XF45 AU50 AU58 MS60 MS61 MS62 $375 $700 $84 $495 $90 $675 $200 580 375 $66 $1,275 — — — — $600 $300 $180 $360 $132 $5,000 $1,450 $100 $42 $16 $585 $5.0 $45 $10 $110 $150 $100 $165 $525 $155 $150 $110 $140 $50 $1,450 $75 $115 $14.5 $490 $475 $1,675 $12,650 $2,250 $5,500 $2,000 $195 $385 $120 $125 $525 $1,000 $100 $510 $110 $695 $245 730 575 $71 $1,650 $225 — — — $800 $375 $215 $385 $165 $8,750 $2,750 $180 $100 $17 $610 $6.5 $60 $11 $215 $175 $220 $360 $900 $335 $325 $300 $375 $120 $2,500 $110 $185 $29 $510 $480 $2,450 $18,500 $5,150 $6,750 $2,650 $375 $650 $135 $135 $750 $1,550 $125 $600 $150 $800 $365 925 750 $77 $1,725 $260 $110 $90 — $995 $475 $460 $430 $200 $10,850 $4,950 $360 $260 $19 $725 $9 $75 $12 $255 $205 $285 $500 $1,275 $380 $360 $420 $480 $190 $3,950 $245 $365 $70 $540 $500 $3,600 $26,000 $8,000 $8,650 $4,500 $575 $1,000 $170 $165 $950 $2,475 $155 $725 $225 $1,025 $760 2,050 1,650 $135 $1,735 $290 $135 $100 — $1,250 $665 $810 $520 $335 $16,500 $7,950 $800 $750 $31 $965 $15 $95 $13 $285 $235 $430 $550 $2,375 $465 $400 $515 $565 $250 $6,350 $525 $640 $255 $675 $640 $4,675 $33,500 $11,000 $10,650 $7,250 $750 $1,450 $200 $220 $1,025 $2,600 $190 $825 $235 $1,175 $1,100 3,150 2,400 $138 $1,750 $320 $145 $120 $18 $1,375 $740 $1,025 $600 $365 $22,500 $9,600 $975 $1,350 $37 $1,175 $18 $140 — $300 $270 $500 $600 $2,800 $565 $465 $560 $600 $290 $7,500 $685 $835 $315 $785 $850 $5,400 $35,000 $12,350 $10,950 $10,000 $935 $1,650 $330 $225 $1,050 $2,750 $220 $920 $245 $1,325 $1,475 4,250 3,350 $140 $1,765 $375 $160 $135 $20 $1,600 $825 $1,300 $675 $390 $34,500 $10,500 $1,150 $2,450 $46 $1,225 $24 $200 $14 $320 $310 $600 $650 $3,450 $700 $510 $610 $650 $325 $8,900 $800 $985 $385 $900 $1,100 $6,350 $38,500 $13,850 $11,250 $11,850 $1,100 $2,000 $370 $235 $1,175 $3,250 $260 $1,025 $325 $1,550 $1,850 8,250 7,500 $152 $2,000 $390 $185 $155 $23 $1,875 $990 $1,400 $830 $455 $44,000 $27,500 $1,275 $4,150 $52 $1,950 $40 $245 — $375 $550 $1,375 $730 $4,850 $875 $665 $800 $850 $415 $11,500 $1,050 $1,170 $675 $1,875 $2,200 $7,850 $39,000 $14,900 $12,950 $17,250 $1,550 $2,450 $850 $380 $1,250 $3,350 $275 $1,100 $345 $1,620 $2,000 10,500 8,500 $160 $2,275 $410 $200 $175 $25 $1,950 $1,050 $1,475 $885 $475 $49,500 $36,500 $1,575 $4,950 $59 $2,275 $52 $275 $15 $410 $725 $1,750 $775 $5,750 $985 $740 $925 $1,065 $465 $13,200 $1,150 $1,250 $865 $2,650 $2,700 $9,850 $41,000 $15,500 $13,750 $19,850 $1,685 $2,650 $1,150 $465 $1,325 $3,850 $300 $1,125 $355 $1,630 $2,550 15,750 $10,650 $168 $2,850 $420 $230 $182 $28 $2,250 $1,500 $1,600 $975 $495 $79,500 $42,500 $1,750 $6,150 $70 $2,950 $60 $285 — $500 $1,000 $1,925 $865 $6,750 $1,325 $950 $1,100 $1,200 $525 $14,500 $1,350 $1,425 $1,025 $2,950 $3,000 $11,500 $42,500 $16,750 $15,500 $23,650 $1,865 $2,875 $1,275 $590 $1,450 $4,200 $330 $1,150 $365 $1,640 $3,150 21,500 12,850 $177 $3,350 $435 $270 $205 $30 $2,600 $2,100 $1,750 $1,040 $520 $110,000 $54,500 $1,950 $7,500 $82 $3,850 $70 $295 — $615 $1,325 $2,125 $1,000 $8,850 $1,875 $1,175 $1,290 $1,550 $600 $15,750 $1,650 $1,950 $1,185 $3,750 $3,875 $14,000 $45,500 $19,000 $17,850 $28,500 $2,150 $3,400 $1,500 $710 MS63 $1,675 $4,650 $365 $1,200 $375 $1,650 $3,750 29,500 14,500 $185 $4,100 $455 $300 $225 $35 $2,950 $2,450 $1,950 $1,100 $560 $145,000 $64,000 $2,150 $8,950 $95 $4,700 $80 $310 $16 $750 $1,650 $2,450 $1,150 $11,500 $2,350 $1,425 $1,450 $1,850 $700 $18,400 $2,100 $2,555 $1,350 $4,450 $4,950 $17,500 $48,850 $21,750 $19,000 $30,000 $2,350 $4,000 $1,675 $700 $153 $76 $326 $266 $168 $328 $344 $326 $1,315 $266 $1,627 $666 $343 $174 $92 $75 $157 $277 $193 $380 $335 $1,377 $705 $361 $148 $133 $266 $17.31 $24.24 $31.21 Actual Melt Value MARKET PRICE $100 American Eagle 1 T Oz. $1,473 $50 American Eagle 1/2 T Oz. $737 $25 American Eagle 1/4 T Oz. $368 $10 American Eagle 1/10 T Oz. $147 Mapleleaf 1 T. Oz $1,473 Noble 1 T. Oz $1,473 Koala 1 T. Oz $1,473 realizable value 75-95% AMV depending on quantity $1,655 $854 $427 $184 $1,622 $1,622 $1,609 SILVER BULLION MARKET VALUES SPOT PRICE $20.66 as of July 31, 2014 Actual Melt Value MARKET PRICE US 90% Dimes (pre 1965) $1.48 US 90% Quarters (pre 1965) $3.69 US 90% Halves (pre 1965) $7.39 US 90% Dollars (pre 1936) $15.98 US 40% Halves (1965-70, 1976) $3.06 US 40% Dollars (1971-76) $6.53 US 35% Wartime Nickels $1.16 US Silver Eagle $20.66 Canadian 80% Dimes (pre 1967) $1.24 Canadian 80% Quarters (pre 1967) $3.10 Canadian 80% Halves (pre 1967) $6.20 Canadian 80% Dollars (pre 1968) $12.40 Canadian Silver Mapleleafs $20.66 Mexico Libertad $20.66 Sterling Pvt. Mint per Troy Oz $19.11 Sterling scrap per Troy Oz $18.08 realizable value 75-105% AMV depending on quantity MS64 MS65 $1,850 $8,450 $515 $1,475 $575 $2,600 $7,750 65,000.00 44,000.00 $295 $11,500 $500 $350 $260 $50 $5,900 $3,850 $3,350 $1,650 $750 $325,000 $125,000 $3,000 $14,500 $155 $9,350 $85 $425 $17 $1,700 $3,250 $5,750 $1,500 $15,500 $4,850 $3,450 $2,850 $2,350 $985 $21,000 $2,250 $2,675 $1,685 $7,250 $7,250 $25,000 $56,000 $26,500 $21,000 $31,500 $2,975 $5,600 $2,450 $1,150 $2,350 $13,500 $700 $2,250 $1,150 $5,550 $18,000 175,000.00 — $685 $35,000 $610 $450 $325 $60 $8,650 $7,250 $5,850 $3,850 $1,600 $375,000 $350,000 $7,350 $125,000 $300 $37,000 $100 $640 $24 $3,750 $5,000 $14,500 $2,600 $25,000 $8,800 $4,250 $5,250 $4,950 $1,350 $26,500 $3,000 $3,050 $2,750 $15,500 $9,650 $56,000 $75,000 $37,500 $26,500 $92,500 $4,100 $6,000 $13,000 $4,750 $1.69 $4.24 $9.06 $27.87 $3.21 $7.18 $1.07 $24.41 $1.25 $3.13 $6.26 $13.14 $24.66 $22.91 $19.36 $16.58 MS66 MS67 $95,000 $7,500 $16,500 $3,150 $10,500 $110,000 — — $1,750 $60,000 $1,350 $750 $475 $80 $16,000 $18,500 $18,500 $7,500 $3,350 — — $37,500 — $1,000 $85,000 $140 $1,200 $55 $13,500 $7,500 $22,000 $5,250 $46,500 $15,500 $10,500 $8,500 $7,400 $3,000 $34,500 $4,750 $4,500 $4,500 $28,500 — $85,000 $118,000 $48,500 $34,500 $155,000 $5,250 $6,950 $125,000 $25,000 — — $75,000 $42,000 $72,000 — — — — — $5,000 $2,500 $875 $120 $55,000 — — $42,000 $22,000 — — — — $25,000 — $475 $2,250 $265 $22,500 — — $22,500 — — — $23,500 $14,000 $11,850 $75,000 — — $9,500 — — — $175,000 $75,000 — — $7,500 $9,750 — — www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 25 ▲ Coin Market at a glance Key U.S. Type Coins Barber Halves KM#116 Walking Halves KM#142 $21/2 Indian Gold KM#128 $5 Indian Gold KM#129 $10 Indian Gold KM#125/130 $20 Saint Gaudens KM#131 Date Fair2 AG3 1892O 1892S 1893S 1897O 1897S 1913 1914 1915 1916S 1921 1921D 1921S 1938D 1911D 1911D weak D 1909O 1911D 1929 1907 periods 1911D 1920S 1930S 1933 1907 High R 1908S 1920S 1921 1926D 1927D 1927S 1929 1930S 1931 1931D 1932 $125 $110 $60 $74 $65 $35 $63 $48 $45 $95 $125 $18 — — $195 $160 $95 $110 $100 $50 $98 $70 $75 $125 $195 $30 $45 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — PART A-2 Brought to you by NumisMaster.com Good4 VG8 Fine12 $320 $240 $145 $165 $150 $75 $145 $108 $108 $165 $295 $45 $60 — $400 $320 $220 $235 $220 $83 $165 $160 $135 $210 $370 $65 $71 — — — — — — — — — — — — — $515 $410 $300 $465 $370 $220 $320 $290 $280 $315 $575 $200 $100 $1,150 $650 — — — $9,450 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — $2,950 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — $5,950 $1,750 — — $7,500 — $4,950 — — $7,500 — — VF20 XF40 XF45 AU50 $565 $550 $550 $835 $540 $440 $585 $400 $440 $750 $900 $775 $110 $2,750 $950 $4,850 $600 $11,750 $13,850 $1,350 $12,500 $8,500 — $7,650 $2,450 $14,500 $35,000 $12,000 $155,000 $6,850 $9,850 $35,000 $10,500 $8,850 $12,500 $595 $600 $650 $1,075 $800 $615 $760 $590 $600 $2,150 $2,700 $4,150 $185 $3,800 $1,150 $6,500 $775 $14,750 $17,500 $1,600 $16,850 $11,250 $140,000 $9,350 $3,150 $18,500 $43,500 $15,900 $200,000 $8,850 $13,000 $42,500 $13,500 $11,500 $14,500 $650 $655 $675 $1,135 $875 $700 $860 $720 $650 $2,300 $3,350 $6,500 $215 $4,250 $2,450 $8,500 $875 $16,000 $18,850 $1,900 $18,750 $13,250 $150,000 $9,400 $3,950 $23,000 $49,000 $17,600 $220,000 $10,750 $13,750 $45,000 $16,350 $16,500 $16,250 $720 $715 $725 $1,250 $1,000 $825 $1,000 $875 $720 $3,150 $4,450 $8,300 $250 $4,650 $2,850 $10,000 $1,500 $18,000 $21,000 $2,250 $21,000 $14,850 $160,000 $11,000 $5,000 $28,500 $55,000 $20,500 $245,000 $13,250 $15,500 $49,500 $20,500 $21,000 $17,850 AU58 MS60 MS61 MS62 $775 $845 $985 $1,475 $1,275 $1,000 $1,250 $1,075 $925 $5,500 $8,350 $14,500 $415 $6,650 $4,450 $19,000 $3,750 $27,000 $24,250 $6,350 $33,000 $17,750 $170,000 $13,750 $7,250 $37,500 $80,000 $23,000 $285,000 $20,000 $18,000 $61,000 $26,500 $30,000 $23,500 $835 $910 $1,150 $1,650 $1,450 $1,125 $1,375 $1,250 $1,050 $6,300 $9,600 $18,250 $475 $8,650 $5,150 $31,500 $6,850 $29,000 $26,500 $10,250 $37,500 $23,500 $180,000 $14,250 $10,850 $51,000 $120,000 $23,500 $325,000 $26,500 $21,000 $71,500 $36,500 $42,000 $26,500 $1,000 $1,275 $1,800 $2,100 $1,950 $1,275 $1,475 $1,550 $1,325 $7,000 $11,500 $21,500 $500 $9,650 $5,750 $36,500 $10,400 $32,500 $31,000 $15,000 $47,500 $30,000 $190,000 $16,500 $14,500 $62,500 $138,000 $26,500 $550,000 $29,850 $28,500 $75,000 $42,500 $49,500 $28,250 $1,285 $1,685 $2,800 $2,850 $2,850 $1,450 $1,600 $1,975 $1,650 $7,850 $13,750 $27,500 $535 $11,500 $6,900 $54,000 $18,500 $35,000 $33,500 $18,500 $63,500 $37,500 $200,000 $18,800 $17,250 $75,000 $155,000 $25,500 $800,000 $33,500 $31,000 $81,000 $55,000 $58,500 $39,000 MS60Brn MS63Brn MS63RB MS63 $1,550 $2,150 $3,650 $3,650 $3,650 $1,650 $1,775 $2,350 $2,000 $8,850 $15,500 $33,500 $575 $18,750 — $75,000 $41,500 $48,500 $44,500 $34,500 $88,500 $47,500 $225,000 $25,000 $23,500 $105,000 $270,000 $28,500 $1,500,000 $60,000 $35,000 $105,000 $68,500 $71,500 $70,000 MS64 MS65 MS66 MS67 $2,850 $2,950 $13,850 $6,950 $5,850 $3,250 $3,450 $4,350 $3,250 $12,500 $18,500 $52,500 $695 $27,500 — $170,000 $62,000 $66,000 $50,000 $52,500 $159,500 $63,500 $350,000 $29,500 $27,500 $200,000 $400,000 $65,000 $1,600,000 $83,500 $47,500 $155,000 $84,000 $90,000 $88,500 $4,000 $4,950 $25,500 $9,500 $9,250 $4,850 $10,500 $6,500 $6,250 $22,000 $32,000 $130,000 $1,750 $65,000 — $550,000 $265,000 $115,000 $72,500 $140,000 $275,000 $79,500 $600,000 $47,500 $52,500 $335,000 1M $235,000 $1,750,000 $150,000 $110,000 $235,000 $108,000 $135,000 $108,000 $5,750 $9,500 $36,500 $17,500 $14,000 $10,500 $16,500 $17,500 $15,000 $39,000 $58,500 $275,000 $2,500 $165,000 — $700,000 $13,500 $23,500 — $27,500 $22,500 — — — $44,000 — — — $9,500 — — — — $95,000 — $150,000 $450,000 $139,000 — $78,500 $85,000 $540,000 $1,350,000 $345,000 $2,200,000 $180,000 $150,000 $350,000 $150,000 $215,000 $150,000 $1,750,000 $225,000 — $175,000 $150,000 — — — — $365,000 — $245,000 — — NOTE; Prices for Indian cents are MS60-62Brn, MS63-65RB, and MS66-67Red. Lincoln cents are MS60-62Brn, MS63RB, MS64-67Red. Copper U.S. Type Coins AG3 Good4 VG8 Fine12 VF20 XF40 AU50 AU58 Half Cent Liberty Cap left 1793 KM#10 Half Cent Liberty Cap right 1794-1797 KM#14 Half Cent Draped Bust 1800-1808 KM#33 Half Cent Classic Head 1809-1836 KM#41 Half Cent Braided Hair 1840-1857 KM#70 Large Cent Chain 1793 KM#11 Large Cent Wreath 1793 KM#12 Large Cent Liberty Capped 1793-1796 KM#13 Large Cent Draped Bust 1796-1807 KM#22 Large Cent Classic Head 1808-1814 KM#39 Large Cent Coronet Head 1816-1839 KM#45 Large Cent Braided Hair 1839-1857 KM#67 Flying Eagle Cent 1856-58 KM#85 Indian Cent Copper Nickel 1859 KM#87 Indian Cent Copper Nickel 1860-64 KM#90 Indian Cent Bronze 1864-1909 KM#90a Two Cent Piece 1864-1873 KM#94 $1,950 $265 $40.00 $36.00 $34.00 $3,650 $1,950 $250.00 $46.00 $65.00 $16.00 $14.00 $17.00 $8.00 $5.00 $0.90 $12.00 $3,900 $485 $60.00 $51.00 $54.00 $6,950 $3,150 $375.00 $65.00 $110.00 $25.00 $23.00 $26.00 $11.00 $8.75 $1.50 $16.50 $6,100 $700 $95.00 $70.00 $71.00 $10,600 $4,450 $610.00 $100.00 $175.00 $29.00 $26.00 $38.00 $16.00 $10.50 $2.10 $18.50 $10,750 $1,135 $135.00 $75.00 $77.00 $17,750 $7,750 $1,050.00 $225.00 $425.00 $37.50 $31.00 $41.50 $23.50 $12.00 $2.60 $20.00 $15,500 $2,500 $225.00 $82.00 $84.00 $36,500 $12,000 $1,775.00 $425.00 $950.00 $70.00 $37.50 $49.00 $45.00 $25.00 $3.75 $27.50 $27,000.00 $5,000.00 $385.00 $105.00 $96.00 $76,500.00 $23,000.00 $3,800.00 $1,200.00 $2,100.00 $125.00 $59.00 $135.00 $110.00 $48.00 $8.00 $42.50 $38,000 $9,500 $685 $155 $155 $90,000 $34,500 $5,850 $2,365 $4,500 $215 $135 $215 $185 $65.0 $20.0 $72.0 $62,500 $16,500 $1,150 $210 $200 $118,500 $47,500 $10,000 $3,300 $8,750 $225 $175 $390 $255 $94.0 $26.0 $85.0 $72,000 $20,000 $1,275 $235 $220 $140,000 $55,000 $12,500 $3,850 $10,500 $250 $195 $495 $290 $110.0 $32.0 $100 $86,000 $40,000 $3,200 $450 $400 $245,000 $75,000 $20,000 $9,000 $17,000 $660 $300 $975 $600 $190 $55.0 $150 U.S. Type Coins AG3 Good4 VG8 Fine12 VF20 XF40 XF45 AU50 AU58 MS60 Three Cent Nickel Composition KM#95 Three Cent Silver Ty'1 1851-1858 KM#75 Three Cent Silver Ty'2 1854-1858 KM#80 Three Cent Silver Ty'3 1859-1873 KM#88 Shield Nickel With Rays 1866-67 KM#96 Shield Nickel Without Rays 1867-83 KM#97 Liberty Nickel Without Cents 1883 KM#111 Liberty Nickel With Cents 1883-1912 KM#112 Buffalo Nickel Ty'1 1913 KM#133 Buffalo Nickel Ty'2 1913-1937 KM#134 Half Dime Flowing Hair 1794-1795 KM#15 Half Dime Draped Bust Sm Eagle 1796-1797 KM#23 Half Dime Draped Bust Heraldic Eagle 1800-1805 KM#34 Half Dime Capped Bust 1829-1837 KM#47 Half Dime Liberty Seated no Stars Obv. 1837-1838O KM#60 Half Dime Liberty Seated no Drapery 1838-1840 KM#62.1 Half Dime Liberty Seated Stars on Obv 1840-1853 KM#63.2 Half Dime Liberty Seated arrows at date 1853-55 KM#77 Half Dime Liberty Seated Stars on Obv 1856-59 KM#A62.2 Half Dime Liberty Seated Legend on Obv. 1860-73 KM#92 Dime Draped Bust Sm Eagle 1796-1797 KM#24 Dime Draped Bust Heraldic Eagle 1798-1807 KM#31 Dime Capped Bust Large Planchet 1809-1828 KM#42 Dime Capped Bust Small Planchet1828-1837 KM#48 Dime Liberty Seated no Stars Obv. 1837-1838O KM#61 Dime Liberty Seated no Drapery 1838-1840 KM#63.1 Dime Liberty Seated Stars on Obv 1840-1853 KM#63.2 $10.00 $20.00 $20.00 $24.00 $21.00 $13.50 $4.50 $1.10 $4.25 $0.65 $720 $990 $690 $33.50 $25.00 $12.50 $11.00 $11.00 $11.00 $11.00 $1,650 $385 $29.00 $26.00 $28.00 $14.00 $12.00 $15.50 $32.00 $39.50 $41.00 $29.00 $22.50 $7.00 $1.50 $12.00 $0.90 $1,165 $1,450 $1,085 $57.50 $37.50 $19.50 $17.50 $17.75 $17.50 $17.00 $2,875 $575 $39.00 $37.50 $37.50 $19.00 $16.50 $16.50 $48.50 $52.50 $54.00 $37.50 $28.00 $7.75 $1.85 $15.50 $1.20 $1,400 $1,825 $1,350 $67.50 $50.00 $24.50 $23.50 $22.50 $22.50 $21.00 $3,650 $900 $56.00 $48.50 $50.00 $22.50 $18.00 $17.50 $51.00 $57.50 $58.50 $55.00 $30.00 $8.50 $4.00 $17.00 $1.50 $1,950 $3,350 $2,000 $85.00 $88.00 $26.00 $24.00 $23.00 $23.00 $22.50 $5,500 $1,200 $68.50 $56.00 $100.00 $30.00 $20.00 $22.50 $61.00 $70.00 $72.00 $88.00 $37.50 $8.75 $10.00 $18.50 $1.90 $3,150 $4,900 $2,700 $118.00 $140.00 $33.00 $28.50 $28.00 $28.00 $27.00 $7,150 $1,650 $160.00 $100.00 $250.00 $50.00 $26.50 $37.50 $69.00 $120.00 $100.00 $150.00 $64.00 $12.00 $30.00 $20.50 $3.00 $5,800.00 $8,600.00 $6,600.00 $165.00 $225.00 $90.00 $60.00 $62.00 $52.50 $45.00 $12,750.00 $2,950.00 $425.00 $255.00 $470.00 $145.00 $47.00 $60.0 $160 $210 $180 $250 $115 $13.3 $52.0 $24.5 $6.5 $8,250 $10,250 $7,750 $225 $445 $200 $125 $135 $115 $75 $16,250 $3,975 $675 $440 $725 $290 $150 $85.0 $195 $255 $210 $275 $140 $21.0 $58.0 $29.0 $18.5 $12,000 $16,000 $12,300 $315 $575 $225 $155 $170 $155 $115 $23,000 $5,950 $1,100 $725 $860 $375 $250 26 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 $45.00 $100.00 $160.00 $130.00 $190.00 $86.00 $12.50 $40.00 $21.50 $4.00 $6,850.00 $9,250.00 $7,150.00 $190.00 $315.00 $135.00 $95.00 $98.00 $83.00 $58.00 $14,000.00 $3,300.00 $500.00 $315.00 $560.00 $165.00 $80.00 $100 $210 $280 $225 $320 $150 $25.5 $62.0 $32.5 $25.0 $13,000 $17,500 $13,500 $360 $625 $250 $175 $195 $175 $145 $25,000 $6,850 $1,350 $900 $965 $420 $290 $3,850 $650 $600 $24,500 $12,500 $18,500 $725 $345 $1,050 $650 $205 $66.0 $210 MS61 $118 $220 $365 $250 $315 $165 $31.0 $82.0 $38.0 $28.5 $15,000 $21,000 $16,250 $460 $685 $290 $200 $225 $195 $160 $31,000 $7,500 $1,650 $980 $1,175 $465 $365 MS64Brn $120,000 $51,500 $5,500 $650 $590 $33,500 $15,800 $23,500 $925 $440 MS62 $135 $240 $575 $290 $355 $185 $38.0 $108 $44.5 $32.5 $17,500 $23,850 $19,500 $625 $745 $330 $240 $255 $235 $190 $36,000 $9,000 $2,250 $1,260 $1,565 $650 $450 MS64RB MS64Red MS65BR $7,000 $1,125 $720 $400,000 $130,000 $44,500 $22,500 $24,500 $1,085 $525 $1,550 $1,260 $350 $105.0 $345 10,000.00 2,250.00 1,300.00 $8,500 $1,350 $1,050 47,500.00 26,000.00 — 3,450.00 1,150.00 $46,500 $3,300 $45,000 $1,475 750 210.00 700.00 120 365 MS63 MS64 $150 $275 $710 $335 $410 $205 $46.5 $127 $52.0 $36.5 $18,500 $27,500 $23,500 $965 $890 $445 $275 $290 $265 $238 $39,000 $12,000 $2,860 $2,050 $1,825 $850 $560 $240 $480 $1,300 $540 $750 $290 $68 $205 $75 $39 $26,500 $38,500 $24,500 $1,450 $1,450 $670 $600 $575 $585 $445 $62,500 $22,500 $4,450 $3,050 $3,500 $1,275 $1,050 MS65RB MS65Red $175,000 $76,500 $13,950 $2,800 $6,600 $525,000 $175,000 $70,000 $46,000 $48,500 $2,150 1,100.00 $22,500 $13,500 $6,250 $95,000 $60,000 — $10,500 $4,850 $3,650 $3,650 $995 $525 $1,700 150.00 MS65 MS66 MS67 $550 $825 $2,375 $910 $2,100 $615 $205 $465 $150 $52.5 $46,500 $90,000 $40,500 $2,750 $2,750 $1,800 $1,150 $1,410 $850 $775 $110,000 $41,500 $14,500 $8,500 $6,600 $2,975 $2,650 $1,250 $1,200 $5,000 $1,500 $5,500 $1,100 $550 $1,100 $290 $85 $95,000 $135,000 $78,000 $5,250 $5,500 $3,750 $2,750 $5,000 $2,000 $1,250 $155,000 $78,000 $20,000 $12,000 $2,850 $4,000 $15,000 $3,500 $17,000 $4,650 $4,000 $6,500 $1,100 $250 $175,000 $175,000 $160,000 $12,000.00 $20,000 $6,400 $4,450 $15,000 $4,000 $3,400 $275,000 $135,000 $40,000 $21,500 www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 27 ▲ Coin Market at a glance U.S. Type Coins Dime Liberty Seated arrows at date 1853-55 KM#77 Dime Liberty Seated Stars on Obv 1856-1860 KM#A63.2 Dime Liberty Seated Legend on Obv. 1860-91 KM#92 Dime Liberty Seated arrows at date 1873-74 KM#105 Dime Barber 1892-1916 KM#113 Dime Mercury 1916-45 KM#140 Dime Mercury 1916-45 KM#140 Full Split Bands Dime Roosevelt Silver 1946-64 KM#195 Twenty Cent Piece Liberty Seated 1875-1878 KM#109 Quarter Draped Bust Sm Eagle 1796 KM#25 Quarter Draped Bust Heraldic Eagle 1804-1807 KM#36 Quarter Capped Bust Large Planchet 1815-1828 KM#44 Quarter Capped Bust Small Planchet 1831-1837 KM#55 Quarter Liberty Seated no Drapery 1838-1840O KM#64.1 Quarter Liberty Seated no Motto Rev. 1840-1865 KM#64.2 Quarter Liberty Seated Arrows and Rays 1853 KM#78 Quarter Liberty Seated Arrows at date 1854-55 KM#81 Quarter Liberty Seated Motto on rev. 1866-91 KM#98 Quarter Liberty Seated arrows at date 1873-74 KM#106 Quarter Barber 1892-1916 KM#114 Quarter Standing Liberty Type 1 1916-17 KM#141 Quarter Standing Liberty Type 2 1917-30 KM#145 Quarter Standing Liberty Type 2 1917-30 KM#145 Full Head Quarter Washington Silver 1932-64 KM#164 Half Dollar Flowing Hair 1794-95 KM#16 Half Dollar Draped Bust Sm Eagle 1796-97 KM#26 Half Dollar Draped Bust Heraldic Eagle 1801-1807 KM#35 Half Dollar Capped Bust 1807-36 KM#37 Half Dollar Capped Bust Reeded Edge 50 Cents Rev. 1836-1837 KM#58 Half Dollar Capped Bust Reeded Edge Half Dol. Rev.1838-1839 KM#65 Half Dollar Liberty Seated no Drapery 1839 KM#68 Half Dollar Liberty Seated no Motto Rev. 1840-1866 KM#68a Half Dollar Liberty Seated Arrows and Rays 1853 KM#79 Half Dollar Liberty Seated Arrows at date 1854-55 KM#82 Half Dollar Liberty Seated Motto above Eagle 1866-91 KM#99 Half Dollar Liberty Seated arrows at date 1873-74 KM#107 Half Dollar Barber 1892-1916 KM#116 Half Dollar Walking Liberty 1916-47 KM#142 Half Dollar Franklin 1948-63 KM#199 Half Dollar Kennedy Silver 1964 KM#202 Half Dollar Kennedy 40% Silver clad 1965-70 KM#202a Dollar Flowing Hair 1794-95 KM#17 Dollar Draped Bust Sm Eagle 1795-98 KM#28 Dollar Draped Bust Heraldic Eagle 1798-1804 KM#32 Dollar Gobrecht 1836-39 KM#59.1 Dollar Liberty Seated No Motto 1840-66 KM#71 Dollar Liberty Seated w/Motto 1866-73 KM#100 Dollar Trade 1873-1885 KM#108 Dollar Morgan 1878-1904 KM#110 Dollar Peace 1921-35 KM#150 Dollar Eisenhower Nickel clad KM#203 Dollar Eisenhower 40% Silver clad KM#203a Gold U.S. Type Coins Gold $1 Indian Princess small Head Ty'1 1849-54 KM#73 Gold $1 Indian Princess small Head Ty'2 1854-56 KM#83 Gold $1 Indian Princess Large Head Ty'3 1856-89 KM#86 Gold $2 1/2 Capped Bust Right 1796 No Stars KM#27 Gold $2 1/2 Capped Bust Left 1796-1807 KM#27a Gold $2 1/2 Capped Head Left Large Head 1808 KM#40 Gold $2 1/2 Capped Head Left Large Diameter 1821-1827 KM#46 Gold $2 1/2 Capped Head Left Reduced Diameter 1829-1834 KM#49 Gold $2 1/2 Classic Head 1834-1839 KM#56 Gold $21/2 Liberty Head 1856-1907 KM#72 Gold $21/2 Indian Head 1908-15 KM#128 Gold $3 Indian Princess 1854-89 KM#84 Gold $4 Stella Gold $5 Capped Bust Right Small Eagle1795-96 KM#19 Gold $5 Capped Bust Right Heraldic Eagle 1796-1807 KM#28 Gold $5 Capped Bust Left 1807-1812 KM#38 Gold $5 Capped Bust Left Large Diameter 1813-1829 KM#43 Gold $5 Capped Bust Left Reduced Diameter 1829-1834 KM#43A Gold $5 1834-1838 Classic Head KM#57 Gold $5 Liberty Head 1839-1866 No Motto Above Eagle KM# 69 Gold $5 Liberty Head 1866-1908 Motto Above Eagle KM#101 Gold $5 Indian Head 1908-29 KM#129 Gold $10 Capped Bust Right Small Eagle 1795-1797 KM#21 Gold $10 Capped Bust Right Heraldic Eagle 1797-1804 KM#30 Gold $10 Liberty Head LL 1838-1839 KM#66.1 Gold $10 Liberty Head SL 1839-1866 No Motto Above Eagle KM66.2 Gold $10 Liberty Head 1866-1907 Motto Above Eagle KM# 102 Gold $10 Indian Head No Motto1907-08 KM#125 Gold $10 Indian Head W/Motto1908-33 KM#130 Gold $20 Liberty Head No Motto on Rev.1849-1866 KM#74.1 Gold $20 Liberty Head W/Motto 1866-1876 KM#74.2 Gold $20 Liberty Head Dollars added on Rev. 1877-1907 KM#74.3 Gold $20 Saint Gaudens 1907 High Relief KM#126 Gold $20 Saint Gaudens 1907-33 KM#131 28 AG3 Good4 VG8 Fine12 $12.00 $11.50 $11.00 $12.00 $2.01 — — — $80.00 $6,250.00 $375.00 $68.00 $42.00 $23.00 $18.00 $16.50 $16.50 $16.50 $17.00 $5.0 — — — — $775.00 $27,500.00 $130.00 $38.00 $38.50 $38.50 $32.00 $20.00 $21.00 $20.00 $21.00 $22.00 $10.8 — — — — $1,250 $975 $700 $3,500 $170 $175 $65 — $16.00 $15.50 $15.00 $16.00 $2.76 $1.69 — — $110.00 $12,000.00 $525.00 $95.00 $68.00 $35.00 $28.00 $27.50 $27.50 $27.50 $28.00 $8.5 . $6.4 — $4.2 $1,025.00 $36,500.00 $195.00 $55.00 $58.00 $58.00 $50.00 $44.00 $36.50 $36.50 $36.50 $44.00 $15.5 $10.1 — — — $1,925 $1,850 $965 $4,400 $275 $275 $110 $26.4 $23.0 — — $17.50 $17.00 $16.50 $19.00 $3.0 $1.74 — — $125.00 $17,500.00 $625.00 $135.00 $110.00 $42.00 $31.50 $31.00 $31.00 $31.50 $32.00 $9.8 $50.00 $6.8 — $4.3 $1,525.00 $46,000.00 $245.00 $72.00 $73.00 $70.00 $100.00 $52.00 $48.00 $48.00 $47.50 $56.00 $22.5 $10.6 $9.2 — — $2,300 $2,300 $1,275 $5,250 $310 $310 $145 $31.4 $27.0 — — $19.00 $18.50 $18.50 $26.00 $4.8 $1.81 — $1.69 $150.00 $25,500.00 $965.00 $215.00 $135.00 $53.00 $34.00 $34.00 $33.00 $33.50 $37.50 $16.00 $63.50 $7.7 — $4.4 $2,700.00 $54,000.00 $365.00 $79.00 $83.00 $82.00 $365.00 $67.50 $72.00 $60.00 $66.00 $72.00 $48.50 $10.8 $9.3 — — $4,300 $4,000 $1,775 $6,950 $335 $340 $150 $34.0 $27.3 — — $31.00 $21.00 $21.50 $60.00 $7.50 $2.1 — $1.74 $185.00 $36,500.00 $1,865.00 $515.00 $170.00 $120.00 $45.00 $44.00 $42.00 $40.00 $62.00 $27.00 $85.00 $11.00 — $4.5 $4,250.00 $80,000.00 $700.00 $89.00 $115.00 $120.00 $580.00 $80.00 $97.50 $73.50 $88.00 $90.00 $125.00 $11.0 $9.4 — — $6,150 $5,450 2,750.00 $9,500 $410 $420 $160 $33.6 $27.5 — — XF40 XF45 AU50 AU58 $230 $420 $235 $95,000 $14,500 $71,500 $12,250 $9,950 $850 $320 $285 $1,100 $54,500 $31,500 $8,000 $6,250 $7,750 $50,000 $795 $565 $425 $505 $52,500 $17,000 $2,750 $1,075 $740 $810 $795 $2,225 $1,675 $1,465 $9,350 $1,475 $250 $460 $260 $110,000 $16,500 $77,500 $13,750 $11,500 $1,025 $365 $298 $1,195 $58,500 $38,500 $9,000 $6,650 $9,000 $5,250 $1,050 $580 $435 $490 $54,500 $18,500 $3,750 $1,100 $750 $820 $805 $2,300 $1,850 — $9,850 — $245 $525 $255 $125,000 $18,500 $102,000 $16,500 $13,750 $1,325 $370 $310 $1,225 $63,500 $43,000 $10,000 $8,200 $11,000 $57,500 $1,350 $595 $440 $540 $59,000 $20,500 $6,250 $1,165 $760 $835 $815 $2,550 $1,750 $1,475 $10,400 $1,485 $325 $885 $305 $210,000 $28,000 $150,000 $27,500 $19,500 $2,500 $395 $325 $1,625 $74,500 $70,000 $13,250 $12,000 $13,500 $67,500 $2,400 $685 $460 $545 $96,000 $30,500 $15,000 $1,650 $775 $860 $840 $3,650 $1,900 $1,485 $13,650 $1,495 — — VF20 $215 $350 $225 $72,500 $6,650 $36,500 $8,250 $6,950 $510 $300 $275 $845 $46,000 $25,000 $4,500 $3,850 $3,650 $33,500 $575 $510 $420 $485 $36,000 $10,750 $1,200 $1,025 $740 $790 $780 $2,175 $1,650 $1,455 $7,650 $1,465 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 PART A-3 Brought to you by NumisMaster.com VF20 XF40 $48.50 $42.00 $31.00 $155.00 $25.00 $2.5 — $1.8 $235.00 $55,000.00 $4,100.00 $1,575.00 $400.00 $450.00 $75.00 $170.00 $77.50 $67.50 $195.00 $53.50 $120.00 $30.00 — $4.6 $11,750.00 $118,000.00 $2,050.00 $159.00 $200.00 $205.00 $1,275.00 $125.00 $270.00 $145.00 $118.00 $250.00 $195.00 $18.1 $9.5 $9.1 $3.2 $13,750 $11,000 $5,500 $11,850 $555 $550 $270 $34.9 $28.0 $1.45 $6.6 MS60 $400 $1,800 $463 $245,000 $34,500 $175,000 $30,000 $21,500 $3,850 $450 $380 $2,275 — $77,500 $14,750 $13,250 $14,000 $70,000 $4,750 $1,800 $462 $565 $120,000 $34,500 $25,500 $3,350 $860 $1,200 $855 $4,250 $2,175 $1,500 $14,350 $1,510 XF45 $85.00 $70.00 $48.00 $210.00 $33.00 $2.7 — $1.9 $280.00 $58,500.00 $4,350.00 $1,850.00 $560.00 $625.00 $115.00 $275.00 $140.00 $100.00 $310.00 $80.00 $145.00 $42.00 — $4.7 $16,250.00 $139,500.00 $3,000.00 $240.00 $290.00 $295.00 $2,000.00 $165.00 $460.00 $230.00 $140.00 $310.00 $265.00 $19.0 $9.6 — — $16,500 $14,250 $6,900 $12,750 $700 $700 $310 $39.0 $33.2 $1.50 $6.6 MS61 $440 $2,450 $550 $300,000 $38,500 $210,000 $35,000 $25,000 $4,400 $455 $435 $2,550 — $96,500 $16,500 $15,000 $15,000 $75,000 $5,650 $2,400 $500 $615 $139,500 $39,500 $31,750 $5,150 $865 $1,450 $890 $6,000 $2,650 $1,545 $16,500 $1,535 AU50 AU58 MS60 MS61 MS62 MS63 MS64 MS65 $145 $138 $75 $305 $61.0 $3.3 — $2.0 $385 $63,500 $5,850 $2,300 $825 $860 $185 $425 $255 $155 $425 $120 $182 $72.5 $80.0 $4.8 $18,000 $175,000 $4,900 $360 $425 $450 $2,875 $245 $615 $305 $210 $455 $385 $22.5 $9.7 $9.2 $3.3 $20,500 $18,500 $9,250 $14,400 $935 $960 $365 $39.6 $30.8 $1.7 $6.7 $240 $215 $120 $375 $90 $4.5 $5.0 $2.2 $540 $76,500 $9,000 $3,900 $1,550 $1,250 $245 $725 $500 $260 $750 $210 $215 $90 $105 $4.9 $38,500 $265,000 $8,250 $875 $1,000 $1,075 $5,850 $385 $1,250 $475 $320 $735 $500 $29.5 $9.8 — — $46,500 $36,500 $18,850 $16,000 $1,900 $1,950 $775 $47.6 $33.8 $1.8 $6.7 $275 $270 $150 $425 $110 $6.0 $7.0 $2.5 $660 $83,000 $11,000 $4,350 $1,850 $1,625 $330 $1,025 $610 $290 $850 $245 $225 $125 $145 $5.5 $46,500 $300,000 $9,350 $1,225 $1,210 $1,300 $6,900 $450 $1,500 $585 $390 $900 $600 $33.5 $9.9 $9.3 $3.5 $68,500 $52,000 $25,000 — $2,275 $2,350 $1,050 $51.0 $44.0 $2.0 $6.8 $350 $345 $170 $575 $130 $7.0 $8.5 $2.5 $700 $88,500 $11,200 $4,350 $2,100 $1,950 $340 $1,350 $725 $365 $1,000 $300 $240 $135 $185 $5.7 $58,500 $320,000 $11,500 $1,500 $1,450 $1,500 $14,000 $600 $1,850 $865 $500 $1,275 $700 $36.0 $10.0 — — $84,500 $59,500 $37,500 — $2,600 $2,750 $1,350 $53.5 $45.5 $2.2 $7.1 $465 $440 $185 $725 $165 $8.0 $10.5 $2.6 $1,075 $97,500 $14,750 $5,500 $3,150 $3,250 $440 $1,775 $940 $485 $1,225 $360 $270 $175 $250 $6.0 $89,500 $355,000 $14,850 $1,850 $2,150 $2,150 $22,500 $840 $2,650 $1,250 $775 $1,700 $900 $42.0 $10.6 — — $119,000 $96,000 $55,000 — $3,250 $3,650 $1,650 $56.0 $46.5 $2.4 $7.3 $610 $550 $235 $855 $235 $9.5 $12.5 $2.7 $1,575 $185,000 $19,250 $6,900 $4,550 $4,600 $605 $2,250 $1,375 $610 $1,520 $440 $305 $210 $385 $6.6 $108,000 $375,000 $20,500 $2,250 $2,950 $2,850 $29,500 $1,065 $3,450 $1,425 $880 $2,050 $1,155 $53.0 $12.4 $9.5 $4.0 $155,000 $115,000 $77,500 — $3,700 $4,750 $2,000 $61.0 $48.5 $2.7 $8.0 $1,000 $990 $440 $1,525 $360 $12.0 $17.0 $3.0 $2,050 $205,000 $36,500 $12,750 $7,500 $9,100 $960 $4,600 $2,925 $935 $1,925 $630 $365 $310 $530 $9.0 $235,000 $415,000 $41,500 $4,200 $5,850 $5,750 $57,500 $2,100 $5,100 $2,700 $1,500 $3,100 $1,600 $72.0 $18.0 $15.0 $6.5 $265,000 $210,000 $120,000 — $6,650 $6,350 $3,150 $80.0 $61.0 $12.0 $17.0 $2,150 $2,100 $770 $3,675 $610 $22.0 $44.5 $5.0 $3,725 $460,000 $116,000 $30,000 $26,500 $36,500 $3,350 $17,000 $8,900 $1,800 $3,750 $1,135 $685 $465 $795 $12.0 $550,000 $575,000 $90,000 $11,850 $23,500 $17,500 $200,000 $5,500 $24,500 $8,500 $4,175 $15,500 $2,950 $119 $30.0 $20.0 $12.5 $400,000 $490,000 $250,000 — $56,000 $67,500 $12,500 $215 $160 $34.0 $18.5 MS64 MS65 MS66 MS67 PF60 $975 $15,000 $810 $850,000 $130,000 $625,000 $110,000 $57,500 $14,650 $735 $785 $5,800 — $325,000 $52,000 $45,000 $52,500 $138,000 $21,500 $11,500 $795 $2,150 $550,000 $140,000 $142,000 $32,500 $1,345 $6,500 $1,375 $10,500 $46,500 $1,980 $28,000 $1,660 $3,350 $33,500 $1,320 $2,000,000 $325,000 $900,000 $175,000 $98,000 $46,500 $1,405 $1,950 $14,000 — $585,000 $135,000 $128,000 $105,000 $220,000 $65,000 $38,500 $2,375 $12,350 $975,000 $320,000 $235,000 $105,000 $3,375 $14,850 $3,400 $13,850 $275,000 $3,400 $47,500 $2,175 $8,000 $50,000 $3,650 — — — $235,000 $165,000 $67,500 $3,200 $11,000 $27,500 — — $195,000 $200,000 $250,000 $300,000 $120,000 $67,500 $6,450 $27,500 $1,250,000 $375,000 $400,000 $145,000 $11,500 $20,000 $15,000 $39,000 $440,000 $8,000 $78,500 $2,900 $18,500 $95,000 $4,500 — — — $350,000 $295,000 $110,000 $4,650 $33,500 $85,000 — — — $300,000 — $400,000 — $135,000 $16,500 $65,000 — — — $185,000 $36,500 $50,000 $50,000 $112,000 $625,000 $62,500 $175,000 $7,750 MS62 $535 $3,950 $520 $485,000 $46,500 $295,000 $47,500 $31,500 $5,650 $500 $445 $3,300 — $110,000 $18,500 $16,750 $16,500 $80,000 $6,350 $3,000 $520 $735 $165,000 $43,500 $37,500 $7,750 $915 $1,800 $990 . $3,600 $1,575 $18,250 $1,560 MS63 $660 $8,000 $650 $575,000 $71,500 $440,000 $77,500 $35,500 $10,250 $610 $615 $4,550 — $165,000 $31,500 $27,500 $23,500 $87,500 $11,000 $5,750 $635 $1,180 $325,000 $71,500 $88,500 $16,750 $1,165 $4,250 $1,110 $9,300 $12,200 $1,790 $24,500 $1,620 MS66 MS67 $4,350 $9,000 $1,150 $28.0 $60.0 $12.0 $64,000 $500,000 $4,250 $37.50 $25.00 — $750,000 $35,000 $37,500 $52,500 $6,500 $35,000 $15,500 $2,600 $6,350 $2,350 $1,150 $750 $1,500 $40.0 — $750,000 $110,000 $18,500 $34,000 $40,000 — $75,000 $80,000 $70,000 $10,000 $60,000 $29,500 $5,000 $15,000 $4,850 $3,000 $1,250 $4,500 $150 — — $145,000 $35,000 $75,000 $85,000 — $5,250 $225 $33.0 $60.0 $35.0 $16,500 $875 $44.00 $350 $125 $685,000 $400,000 — $85,000 $110,000 $26,500 $340 $670 $75.0 $22 — $175,000 $160,000 $70,000 $865 $5,150 $3,000 $45 PF63 PF64 PF65 $— $— — — $$$$$$5,750 $128,500 — — — — $— $$$4,650 — — — $$4,500 — $$$$- $— $— — — $$$$$$12,500 $165,000 — — — — $— $$$9,850 — — — $$13,500 — $$$$- $— $— — — $$$$$$17,000 $215,000 — — — — $— $$$17,500 — — — $$21,500 — $$$$- $— $— — — $$$$$26,000 $35,500 $255,000 — — — — $— $$$— — — $$43,500 — $$$$- $- $- $- $- www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 29 COIN CLINIC Mint made its own coin presses ■ Did the U.S. Mint ever make its own coin presses? I know they made their own scales to weigh bullion and coins. The Philadelphia Mint did manufacture its own coin presses. In 1940 a total of nine presses were built, at a cost of $8,500 each, with the notation that this was about $1,000 cheaper than bids from an outside press manufacturer. At the time they joined some of the old Carson City coin presses that were still operating at Philadelphia. The oldest of that group was a coin press made in a railroad machine shop in 1867. The same source mentions an item about the Mint using foreign equipment, because it lists four French-made coin presses in use (built to metric scale) along with presses from such American manufacturers as Morgan and Orr, and Waterbury and Farrel, long since gone from the scene. ■ Did the Treasury issue any of the silver dollars that were in the vaults prior to the run in the 1960s? Three million were released for Christmas 1954, mostly coins of the 1880s. Uncirculated 1889 dollars that were found in the bags sold for $16. Other newspaper stories cited values to $17. One bank in Montana got a bag of 1,000 1893-CC dollars. ■ Didn’t a Mint official once make a flat statement that no more dollars would ever be produced? Mint Director George E. Roberts on June 30, 1904, said: “There will never be another silver dollar minted in this country.” ■ Did the Treasury Department resist striking the Morgan dollars? Many times, but the silver lobby was too powerful. Secretary of the Treasury Charles T. Fairchild in his 1887 annual report said: “It is a waste to coin and store any more silver dollars at present. There is no function which those that are coined after this time will probably ever perform, except to lie in government vaults and be a basis upon which Silver Certificates can be issued. The five, two and one dollar Certificates furnish a convenient currency, and it is evident that the future 30 use of the silver dollar will be almost exclusively in that form.” ■ Where was the Desert Mint? The actual spelling is Deseret Mint. It was established in 1849 by the Mormons in Salt Lake City. During its lifetime it struck $2.50, $5, $10 and $20 gold coins, the latter the first $20 struck in what is now the United States. Utah didn’t become a state until 1896, but its territory had been acquired from Mexico in 1848. ■ How many dies were used to strike the rare 1895 proof Morgan dollars? Walter Breen lists a total of five obverses. Authenticators at the American Numismatic Association in 1985 listed four different dies, an unusually high number for the minuscule proof mintage of 880. At least three of the dates on the dies tilt up to the right, so identification must be made by the location of the digits over the denticles. Several of the 1895-O and 1895-S dollars have dates in identical locations, so the position alone is not enough to authenticate the coin. The branch mint coins are frequently altered by removing the mintmark. ■ How many medals did the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission authorize for the Bicentennial celebration in 1976? The ARBC, in addition to the nearly two dozen that they handled directly authorized a total of more than 900 medals that were struck by both the U.S. Mint and a number of private mints for local, state and national Bicentennial organizing groups. A California collector, Robert Young, reportedly has the largest existing collection of these medals. Some years ago he reportedly was preparing a catalog of the medals, a task the ARBC failed to complete because of a lack of funds. ■ When was the first American Numismatic Association mid-winter convention (now called the National Money Show) held? Following on the heels of the longstanding tradition of the annual summer convention, the ANA decided to hold its first mid-winter show at Colorado Springs, Colo., on Feb. 16-18, 1978. Since then the mid-winter has moved around the country Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 and around the calendar, as it has been held as late as May. ■ After reading about the 1990 nomintmark proof cents, I’m curious as to how many inspectors looked at the coins without seeing that the mintmark was missing? The figure provided by the Mint some years ago was that at least 14 people inspect either the dies or the finished coins from the time the dies are made until the coins are packaged to be shipped to customers. This figure is probably low if you include everyone who works on the dies and on the coins. ■ I’ve seen two conflicting dates for the first issue of a Canadian $5 trade coin. Can you figure out which one is right? The Calgary Stampede, the “mother of all rodeos,” struck a gold-plated $5 trade coin for release in 1982, along with four different $1 pieces. This was billed as the first issue of a $5 trade coin in Canada. The confusion arose because the Calgary Stampede issued two $5 pieces in 1968 and 1970, but rather than being trade dollars, those pieces were casino tokens. The Calgary trade coin series dates back to the first issue in 1963. ■ Why isn’t the motto IN GOD WE TRUST on the 1892 and 1893 Columbian half dollar? This question doesn’t come in as often as the “missing” motto on 1950 Federal Reserve Notes, but the answer is the same. Back then there was no specific requirement for the motto. In the case of the Columbian half, even LIBERTY is also missing. ■ Can you identify a piece that I have? It is a round brass disk with the letters “WPA” and a number. It is a tool check, or identification check, issued to workers for the Works Progress Administration, which spent more than $10 billion on projects to employ the eight million unemployed during the Depression. Ten billion dollars doesn’t seem like much today. It went further 80 years ago when someone on a WPA road project in New Hampshire pushing a wheelbarrow was paid 25 cents an hour. E-mail inquiries only. Do not send letters in the mail. Send to [email protected]. Because of space limitations, we are unable to publish all questions. Coins for the Collector! Take 10% off your order!!! exclusive online sale for numismatic news express subscribers!!! USE CODE: NNEXPRESS *Some restrictions may apply and terms are subject to change *This discount cannot be used or combined with any other offer *This offer is only valid online at www.LCCOINS.com www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 31 Medals, currency trace World War I By Kerry Rodgers By mid-August 1914 the opening gambits of the war had been played. Battles now raged along two European fronts. The first casualties had been sustained and interred. Over the ensuing months of 1914 a series of increasingly bloody conflicts would test the strength and resolve of all soldiers. These would establish a series of battle lines that would see few significant positional changes over the next three years. The body count would rise relentlessly throughout. On home fronts, major and irreversible changes were under way in the social, political and economic lives of all countries involved. One tangible consequence was the rapid replacement of gold by paper in Britain and Germany. And these first months would usher in the age of the propaganda medal alongside an ever-growing number of families qualified to receive memorial plaques. Belgium Germany invaded neutral Belgium on Aug. 3. It was an essential phase of Obverse of 1914 Belgium gold francs showing the remarkable King Albert. Following the German invasion, Albert took personal command of the Belgian army and organized its stubborn defense. Throughout the next four years he refused to take sanctuary abroad but fought alongside his troops. His wife, Queen Elisabeth, worked as a nurse at the front. They allowed 14-year-old Prince Leopold to enlist and fight as a private. Image courtesy Heritage Auctions. Germany’s Schlieffen Plan. The object was to catch the French off guard and capture Paris quickly, as in the Franco-Prussian war. Within a few days, the German high command experienced its first check. The Belgian army was a tenth the size of the German, its troops had less training, and it was quipped with just 102 machine guns — no heavy artillery. Nevertheless, it stymied the German offensive for nearly a month during which French and British forces had time to organize a response. The German army was outraged. It reacted with multiple large-scale attacks on Belgian civilians, coupled with destruction of historic buildings. In the city of Leuven, the university’s library of 300,000 medieval books and manuscripts was deliberately burned. Between August and November, the German army executed more than 6,500 French and Belgian civilians, many in random actions. High-profile Belgians were held hostage in Germany. These outrages were quick to change public perceptions in neutral countries, including the United States. They prompted a famous numismatic response: American sculptor Paul Manship’s bronze “The Foe of Free Peoples.” By late 1914, the Belgian king had just 60,000 soldiers left. Nonetheless, these WWI/Page 34 Bearers of Culture / Allies in World War / 1914 The introduction of non-white colonial troops into the Western Front late in 1914 by Britain and France promoted a savage, racist reaction from Germany. The colonial soldiers were portrayed as savages lacking any worth or culture. Descriptions included: an anthropological show of uncivilised … hands and hordes … a motley crew of colour and religions … dead vermin of the wilderness. In early 1915, the German Foreign Office issued a memorandum, Employment, Contrary to International Law, of Coloured Troops upon the European Theatre of War by England and France. The non-white troops were accused of blinding and cutting off ears, noses and heads of wounded and captured German soldiers. By comparison, Karl Goetz’s 1914 medal is relatively moderate. Image © Henry Scott Goodman, www.KarlGoetz.com 32 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 33 WWI/from Page 32 troops had stopped the Schlieffen Plan in its tracks. For the duration of the war, they would prevent the German army from occupying the entire country or capturing strategic Channel ports. David vs. Goliath Serbia had its army fully mobilized in four days. The nation could summon 350,000 men to arms — 185,000 of whom were combat trained — from its population of less than 5 million, and its officer corps was highly professional. However, the Serbs were poorly equipped. They had only 180,000 modern rifles, less than enough to arm frontline units. Ammunition reserves were poor. Artillery shells were limited to 100 per unit. Arrayed against the Serbs was the might of three Austro-Hungarian armies consisting of 350,000 fully-equipped men drawn from a population 12 times that of Serbia. These forces were tasked with destroying the entire Serbian military. However, the Austro-Hungarian armies had issues, too. More than a quarter of the soldiers were illiterate. Most were conscripts from throughout the empire who were unable to understand either German or Hungarian. Many were Slavs with links to Austria-Hungary’s enemies. On July 29, Austro-Hungarian ships shelled Belgrade. On Aug. 12, their forces invaded across the Drina River. The initial thrust came from Austria-Hungary’s 5th Army, whose General Oskar Potiorek was anxious to win a quick victory for Kaiser Franz Josef’s birthday. To the astonishment of the Serbs, the Austro-Hungarian attack came through the hills, rather than the plains. After a four-day battle the AustroHungarians were forced to retreat. A second offensive in early September went badly for the Serbians and ended bogged in trench warfare. A massive Austro-Hungarian attack in early November saw the battered Serbian 1st army withdraw and Belgrade abandoned on Dec. 2. However, the Serbs realized the Austro-Hungarian forces were now dangerously overstretched. When fresh ammunition supplies and replacement units turned up, a Serb counterattack saw the Austro-Hungarian 6th army driven back across the border, with Belgrade liberated on Dec. 15. In short, after a four-month slugfest, the there was no change in border position. The Serbs had lost 170,000: killed, wounded, captured or missing. AustroHungarian losses were 227,000 out of a 34 Early in the war, Germany protested the use of dum-dum (expanding) bullets against their troops by Belgian, British and French troops. Protests included a telegram from Kaiser Wilhelm to President Wilson, and the Goetz medallion shown was issued to mark the first occasion of use of dum-dums by French troops. Obverse inscription reads: [Hate did you sow firstly]; the reverse: [All respect for the Grande Nation]. The French cockerel on the reverse kicks the Geneva Convention into the dirt, presumably having soiled it. Goetz is in error here. The use of such bullets was outlawed by the Hague Convention of 1899, not the Geneva Convention as shown. Image © Henry Scott Goodman, www.KarlGoetz.com American sculptor Paul Manship’s The Foe of Free Peoples bronze medal produced in response to the German atrocities undertaken in neutral Belgium following invasion. Image courtesy Medallic Art Company/Northwest Territorial Mint. force of 450,000. Then, the worst typhus epidemic in world history erupted during the Serbian winter and claimed hundreds of thousands of civilians. The Russians are coming! War out east began with a Russian invasion of Germany’s East Prussia and the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia on Aug. 17, 1914. The latter relieved the pressure on Serbia. The former turned into a rout. The Battle of Tannenberg was one of the most important conflicts of 1914. In the four days between 26 Aug. 26 and Aug. 30, the only forces Germany had in the east, its 8th army, destroyed the Russian 2nd army despite a Russian to German troop ratio of 29 to 16. Some 2,000 Russian troops were captured and 78,000 killed or wounded. Just 10,000 escaped. The Germans suffered 12,000 casualties out of their 150,000 troops. Sixty trains were required to transport Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 captured Russian equipment to Germany. It was a triumph for the German commander Paul von Hindenburg and his senior field officers. It was made sweeter by the severe mauling handed out to the Russian 1st army some days later that saw it forced to retreat beyond the pre-war border. Russian forces would not march on German soil again until 1945. It was not a complete victory. German forces could not advance into Russia, and an unnecessary relocation of German troops from west to east would complete undoing of Germany’s Schlieffen Plan. Meanwhile, on the Austro-Hungarian front to the south, Austro-Hungarian Chief of Staff Conrad von Hötzendorf knew an early victory was his only chance against the vast number of men the Russians could muster. On Aug. 23, he launched his offensive WWI / Page 36 2014 Mint and Proof Sets 2014 S 14pc Silver Proof Set 2014 S 14pc Clad Proof Set SKU: 90-02-000007 SKU: 90-00-100726 Check & Wire: $60.09 Check & Wire: $38.75 Price: $61.95 2014 S 5pc Clad America The Beautiful Quarter Proof Set SKU: 90-00-100723 Check & Wire: $18.38 2014 S 4pc Presidential Dollars Proof Set SKU: 90-00-100724 Price: $39.95 2014 S 5pc Silver America The Beautiful Quarter Proof Set SKU: 90-02-000004 Price: $18.95 Check & Wire: $35.84 Price: $36.95 Prices listed are subject to change. Check & Wire: $22.26 Price: $22.95 2014 014 14pc Mint Set SKU: 80-00-000175 Check & Wire: $31.96 Price: $32.95 NN-G-062414 www.SilverTowne.com/NumismaticNews 1-877-477-COIN (2646) 120 East Union City Pike. Winchester, IN 47394 The Victor of Tannenburg, Oberbefehlshaber Paul Ludwig Hans Anton von Beneckendorff und von Hindenburg, decorates the reverse of a 59.5 x 59.5 mm, 189.3 g iron medallion issued by the German-Austrian and AustriaHungary Relief Society of Chicago in 1914. Image courtesy www.ha.com WWI / from Page 34 through the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia into Russian Poland. The first battle lasted the two days it took the Austro-Hungarian 1st army to destroy Russia’s 4th army. The second battle at Komarów from Aug. 26 to Sept. 2 saw the AustroHungarian 4th army smash the infantry of Russia’s 5th army, with more than 20,000 of Russia’s best soldiers taken prisoner. With the Russians in retreat in the north, the Austrians now advanced in the south to meet Russia’s 3rd and 8th armies at Gnila Lipa. The result was disastrous for the Austro-Hungarians, who were utterly routed and unable to halt a Russian drive west that was slowed only by poor roads. The Austro-Hungarian’s 4th army was immediately ordered south to deal to the Russian advance. This left a gap between the 1st and 4th armies, into which that Russia’s 3rd army drove. The Austrians escaped encirclement by beating a lengthy retreat and abandoning large numbers of men and considerable equipment. In an effort to stem the Russian flow, Austria-Hungary recalled its 2nd army from Serbia. It was too late. The entire Austrian front collapsed in Galicia, leaving the Russians in control. These Russian successes led to even more German forces being transferred from west to east. Battles at Vistula River and 36 First time duty of Red Cross dogs. Karl Goetz, 1914. Image © Henry Scott Goodman, www.KarlGoetz.com Łód caused little change, come Christmas, along an Eastern Front that now stretched 965 km from the Baltic Sea southward through East Prussia and Austria to the Carpathian Mountains. The cost in the first four months of the war: 225,000 Russian and 324,000 AustroHungarian casualties, the latter of which included many of the empire’s best officers. British Expeditionary Force In the aftermath of the Second Boer War of 1899-1902, the British Army was totally reorganized. An Expeditionary Force was created of seven divisions, and it was this force that went to the aid of France as Germany advanced through Belgium. It would be the first time in more than 1,000 years French troops would fight alongside British. At the start of the war, the British Army consisted of volunteers rather than conscripts and numbered just 247,432 regular troops — considerably smaller than its French and German counterparts. On Aug. 7, a British Expeditionary Force (BEF) of six infantry divisions and five cavalry brigades landed in France, led by Field Marshal John French. It represented half the combat strength of the British army. Kaiser Wilhelm was famously dismissive of the BEF. He reportedly told Generaloberst Helmuth von Moltke on Aug. 19 to “exterminate ... the treach- Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 erous English and walk over General French’s contemptible little army.” No record of any such order exists in the German imperial archive, but the story led to soldiers of the BEF being known as “The Old Contemptibles.” The BEF’s first conflict with the Germans came at Mons on Aug. 23 on the Belgian-French border. Their orders were to hold the line of the Mons–Condé Canal against the advancing German First army. A sudden withdrawal of the French 5th army exposed the British right flank and forced a retreat that lasted for two weeks, until the Battle of Marne. Following Marne, the BEF became part of the September counter-offensive popularly known the Race to the Sea to seize control of strategic Channel ports. The Race culminated in the First Battle of Ypres on Flanders fields. Between Oct. 14 and Nov. 30, BEF casualties numbered 7,960 dead, 29,562 wounded and 17,873 missing. The BEF had arrived in France with 84,000 infantry. By the end of Ypres, the BEF had suffered 86,237 casualties most of whom were infantry. Come the end of 1914 Britain’s pre-war professional army had been eliminated. Stalemate on the western front Modifications to the Schlieffen Plan by the Moltke in 1906 underlay the problems WWI/Page 38 E! T A PD r cke y i t f C s denti A in. eC oi Th ps t ty co i hel qual a Then why do CAC stickered coins bring a premium? While it is true that CAC-verified coins bring a premium in the market, the “little green” sticker is not what adds the value. Truth is, with or without a CAC sticker, a quality coin will always bring a premium. 550,000 > CAC has evaluated over 450,000 coins with a market value over $ 2.4 $2.0 billion. Only those coins which meet stringent standards for quality billion within a grade are awarded a sticker. That is why CAC stickered coins bring a premium - they are placed on only quality coins. What’s more, CAC is a powerful market maker for its stickered coins. In fact, CAC has recently purchased over $300,000,000 worth of coins. $340,000,0 > U CAC Stickers Do Not Add Value! 00 So the CAC sticker does not add value - It is just an easy way to identify coins that are solid for the grade. And it gives you confidence in the value of a coin. ¹*MKI][M+WVÅLMVKMQ[8ZQKMTM[[º www.caccoin.com www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 37 Like Belgium, neutral Luxembourg was invaded by the Germany army on its way to Paris. Emergency money became the order of the day. This 5 francs / 4 mark of 28.11.1914, P-23, has French on the face and German on the back. Image www.ha.com WWI/from Page 36 Germany and Austria-Hungary experienced out east. Moltke’s tinkering was to undo the plan completely in the west and precipitate years of trench warfare. Along with its mid-August advance through Belgium, the German army was simultaneously engaged in a series of battles along the France’s eastern frontier. Like the Germans, the French wanted a quick victory. On Aug. 7 France invaded Alsace-Lorraine, precipitating the first major French-German battle of the war. German heavy artillery and machineguns caused massive French casualties that included 27,000 killed in one day, the worst one-day death toll in France’s history. After suffering 300,000 casualties, the French fell back toward Paris. The British and French withdrawal from the Belgian border had allowed the Germans to strike through northern France. Rear guard actions delayed the German advance sufficiently for the French to transfer forces from elsewhere to bolster the defense of Paris. The upshot was the First Battle of the Marne, Sept. 5-12. It was now that the depletion of the German army through relocation of significant troop numbers to the east came into play. At Marne, six French field armies and the BEF stood their ground and counterattacked along the river. They stopped the down-sized German army in its tracks. Moltke suffered a nervous breakdown, and his officers ordered a retreat to the northeast. The French 6th army had been considered by the Germans to be the weak point in the allied chain. It was bolstered by the sudden transfer of 10,000 French reserve 38 infantry that occurred Sept. 6-7. More than 6,000 of these were transported by several hundred Parisian cabs: les taxis de la Marne. This number, of course, was but a drop in the ocean of more than a million men involved at Marne, half of whom would be wounded or killed. The retreating Germans were pursued by the French and British, but the exhausted forces could not keep pace. Eventually, after 64 km, the German armies dug in on the Aisne River. These trenches were to last for years. Mobile warfare had ended in the west. Both sides now became entrenched along a meandering fortified line that stretched from the North Sea to the Swiss frontier: The Western Front. This front would remain essentially unchanged for most of the war. With Germany facing a two-front war, Moltke is reported to have told Kaiser Wilhelm: “Your Majesty, we have lost the war.” On Sept. 14, Erich von Falkenhayn replaced Moltke as chief of staff. The Ottomans cast their lot The Ottoman Empire had signed a secret pact with Germany in August 1914 when it saw the European war as an opportunity to recover territories lost to Russia from 1877–78. Germany regarded this action as a valuable distraction of Russian forces and seconded advisers to the Ottoman Army. On Aug. 5, the Ottoman Empire closed the Dardanelles, and on Oct. 29 its fleet shelled the Russian port of Odessa. Three days later, Russia declared war on Turkey and swept across the common frontier in the Caucasus. By the end of 1914, things were not looking good for the Ottoman armies. Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 In the Persian Gulf, a major British offensive had begun on Nov. 6, when the 6th Indian Division invaded Mesopotamia. Its objective was to protect the oil pipeline from Persia. Two weeks later, the city of Basra fell. Subsequently, Britain’s secretary of state announced, “in view of the state of war arising out of the actions of Turkey, Egypt is placed under the protection of His Majesty and will henceforth constitute a British Protectorate. The Suzerainty of Turkey is terminated.” On Nov. 11 Sultan Mehmed V declared Jihad on all forces of the Triple Alliance. Christmas Around Christmas 1914, a series of widespread, unofficial cease-fires took place along the Western Front. Some 100,000 men are reported to have been involved. Season’s greetings and songs were exchanged across the barbed wire. British and a few French troops fraternized with German soldiers in No Man’s Land on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. They exchanged cigarettes, sang carols, shared joint burials, and even played football. Officers on both sides were not amused. The Christmas truce was spontaneous. Perhaps headquarters on both sides were to blame. They had drawn the prospect of fraternization to their troops’ attention by forbidding it and threatening those who disobeyed with execution. There were those who obeyed. Platoon Commander Charles de Gaulle expressed total dismay at the socializing. And young Corporal Adolf Hitler of the 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry made it clear he would take no part whatsoever. THE NEW THE PREMIER SITE FOR GLOBAL COINS AND CURRENCY PRICING, NEWS AND ANALYSIS. Daily Pricing Updates World’s Largest Searchable Database Timely News and Analysis Up-to-Date Calendar of Shows and Auctions Dedicated Network of Expert Contributors Coming This Summer! www.NumisMaster.com www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 39 Mystery of $2 note folds solved This month we are diverging once again from the national banks format so that I can present to you the solution to a currency mystery that has mystified me for more than a decade. Many of you readers, especially currency dealers, may have also been intrigued by this mystery, and will appreciate finally knowing what it was about. I have been dealing in United States currency for 20 years now, and over that time I have not infrequently encountered Series of 1899 $2 Silver Certificates (Fr. 249-258), notes sometimes referred to colloquially as “mini-portholes” or “Washington in Cameo” types, that bore the same mysterious heavy diagonal folds that spread down from the top margin of the note to join at a point just below Washington’s bust. I have included photos of typical type note of this series, and that same note where I have superimposed the type of diagonal folds encountered on notes of this series. I would not normally have been surprised to see folds on circulated notes of this type, but over the years, I continued to find, from time to time, more often than to just be coincidental, notes with the exact same diagonal fold pattern. I began to examine them more closely, trying to figure out what the pattern would produce once properly folded. This was not easy, since I did not want to buy the notes, and I did not want to be seen folding up other dealers’ notes at their tables. I have included a photo of a star note of this series, featured in the recent Lyn Knight Memphis Sale, that bears the telltale folds. I became fairly certain that once properly folded, a design would emerge that would reek of sexual innuendo. We have all seen U.S. large cents with the “E” in the word “CENT” altered so as to produce a slang word for female sexual organs. People are people, and when the opportunity presents itself, people will amuse their prurient interests in this way. I recall, and many of you may recall also, that as a boy we used to take a box of Land O’Lakes butter, which has a kneeling Indian woman on it, and with clever use of scissors and specific folding, move her bare knees up to where her breasts should be. It was very amusing to pubescent boys. 40 In any event, the mystery surrounding the Series of 1899 $2 notes continued unabated until this past April, when I literally stumbled upon the solution. I was at a small coin show in western Maryland, and as I approached the table of a dealer friend, I spied an 1899 $2 Silver Certificate, neatly folded into a triangle, sitting in the case. I was dumbfounded. I asked to see it, and gingerly examined it. It was a beautiful original fold job; the dealer told me it had walked into his shop just that way. It wasn’t for sale, but he didn’t mind my photographing it, which was just fine with me. I present it to you here, photos of both the face and back of the folded note. You will easily see that both sides clearly depict devices that are found on the face of the note. Viewed propHotz/Page 42 A typical Series of 1899 $2 Silver Certificate, the type note that this article discusses. Photo courtesy LKCA The same 1899 $2 type note, with superimposed fold lines to show how the note was originally folded. Here is a Series of 1899 $2 Silver Certificate Star note that exhibits the diagonal folds discussed in the article. This note was recently featured in Lyn Knight’s Memphis sale. Photo courtesy LKCA Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 APD Currency.com Specials for September 2014 Prices are good for 30 Days. Shipping by Priority or First Class Mail. $7 Priority Mail $300 or less, $10 over $300, $5 First Class Mail $300 or less, $7 over $300. 1928C $5 GemCu GemCu $2 ea $10 ea $10 ea 1928C $5 GemCu GemCu GemCu $15 ea $25 $45 1953B 1928F 1928F 1953 $5 $5 $5 $5 GemCu GemCu $15 ea $30 ea 1988A $1 GemCu $120ea GemCu $150 Small Size Notes 2009 2013 2013 2013 $1 FRNs $1 FRNs $1 FRNs $5 FRNs 2009 2009 2013 $5 FRNs $5 FRNs $10 FRNs 2013 2009A $20 FRNs $100 FRNs 2009A BK (dc),FN(fw)p1; KJ(fw)p1 KA(fw)I3 JA(fw) EA(fw) K*(fw)R2 MCA(dc),MGA(dc), MHA(dc) MLA(dc),MLA(dc) JA*(dc) R2 JA*(dc) R1 (640K) MAA(fw),MBA(fw),MCA(fw), MGA(fw),MHA(fw) MAA(dc), MBA(dc) LBJ(fw), LBL(fw), LBK(fw), LGA(fw),LFD(fw),LLA(fw) BK Notes LC*(fw), LG*(fw)LL*(fw) Star Notes $100 FRNs FRN District Bk & Star Sets 1963,1969,1969B,2001.2006 $1 1963,1963A,1969,1974,1977 $1 1963A,1969D,1977, $1 1995. 1999, .2001, $1 2009 $1 2009 $1 2003A BK set with F star $2 FRN District Star Sets FRN District Block Sets FRN District Star Sets FRN District Block Sets FRN District Block Set FRN District Block Set FRN District Star Sets $125 12 District Notes $75 12 District Notes $125 12 District Notes $75 12 District Notes $35 12 District Notes $40 12 District Notes all AA blocks GemCu $149 FR 1528 FA Bk Julian/Morgenthau FR 1528m Mule EA Bk Julian/Morgenthau FR 1534* *A Smith/Dillon FR 1531 Wi Wide I (IA Bk) FR 1531 Wi Wide I (IA Bk) FR 1532 (AABlock) PMG 65 EPQ $99 PMG 58 PMG 63 EPQ PMG 64 EPQ PMG 58 EPQ PMG 58 EPQ $60 Scarce Mule $125 $65 $35 $25 Federal Reserve Notes 1988A 2003A 1950D $1 $2 $5 2006 2004A 2006 $5 $10 $20 FR 1917-B (BL Block) Web Note FR 1917 FV Web Note FR 1938-F* (F* Block) FR 1965-I* 1950D Star Note FR 1993 F* (IF* Block) FR 2039-G*(GG* Block) FR 2094G (IG* Block) PMG 55 PCGS 64 PPQ PMG 66 EPQ $750 Rare Web Block $45 $75 PCGS 64 PPQ PMG 67 PPQ PMG 67 PPQ PMG 66 EPQ $425 Scarce star $69 $99 $75 Treasury Coin Notes 12 District Notes 1891 $1 FR 352 Bruce/Roberts 1886 1896 1899 $1 $1 $1 1899 $1 FR 219 Martha Washington FR 224 Educational Note Fr 236 Black Eagle VA BK Speelman/White Fr 236 Black Eagle RA BK Speelman/White Fr 236 Black Eagle TA BK Speelman/White Fr 260 Silver Dollar Back PMG 65 EPQ $2,150 Silver Certificates 1995 FRN Block Set $5 1995 FRN Block Set $10 1996 A*,B*.C*,D*E*F*G*H*L* $20 FRN District Block Set FRN District Block Set FRN District Star Set $1 $225 12 District Notes $295 12 District Notes $425 All 8 stars 3rd Party Graded Notes Silver Certificates 1953A 1934C $10 $5 1934D $5 1928A 1928D $1 $1 FR 1707* *A Priest/Anderson FR 1653W* Wide *A Julian/Snyder FR 1654 WI 1934D TA Julian/Snyder FR 1651 1934A HA or GA BKJulian/Morgenthau FR 1654 Wii Wide II UA Bk (Scarce) FR 1601 (QA) Woods/Mellon FR 1604 HB Julian/Woodin 1957B 1935H $1 $1 FR 1621 R00002990 Fancy # PCGS 67 PPQ FR 1618 EJ BK Granahan/Dillon CGA 65 OPQ 1928G 1953C 1928C $2 $2 $5 FR 1508 EA Bk Clark/Snyder FR 1512* *A Granahan/Dillon FR 1528* 1928C *A Julian/Morgenthau (star) FR 15311Wi 1928F *A Clark/Snyder (star) 1934D $5 1934 $5 PCGs 64 PPQ $675 PMG 63 EPQ $200 PCGS 64 EPQ $39 PMG 64 EPQ $45 PMG 55 EPQ PMG 63 EPQ PMG 64 EPQ $69 $65 Funny Back $425 Scarce Series $75 $20 Legal Tender Notes 1928F $5 PMG 64 EPQ PMG 64 EPQ $50 $60 PMG 64 EPQ $695 PMG 63 EPQ $395 FREE SHIPPING on all orders over $29 and over Prices are Good for 30 Days. 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We have thousands of notes. www.apdcurrency.com PCGS 55 PCGS 53 EPQ $1,600 $1,700 PCGS 64 PPQ $600 PMG 64 EPQ $550 PMG 64 EPQ PCGS 40 $600 $4,750 1886 $5 1917 1923 $1 $1 FR. 37 Elliot/Burke FR 40 Speelman/White PMG 25 Very Fine PMG 35 EPQ 1862 1880 1901 1901 1878 $2 $5 $10 $10 $20 FR 41 Chittenden/Spinner FR. 73 “Wood Chopper” Bruce/Wyman FR 122 Bison Speelman/White FR 119 Bison Parker/Burke FR 129 $20 Legal Tender Note Extra Fine PMG 64 EPQ PCGS 40 PCGS 55 Appnt PCGS 50 Appnt Legal Tender Notes $99 $375 $1,350 $1,700 $2,100 $2,675 $1,700 Federal Reserve Bank Note 1918 1918 $1 $1 FR 713 New York Elliot/Burke FR 721 Richmond PCGS 65 PPQ PMG 45 EPQ $1,050 $395 1918 $5 FR 785 Cleveland Teehee/Burke PMG 63 EPQ $1,495 Federal Reserve Notes 1914 1914 $5 $10 FR 855b Philadelphia White/Mellon FR 919a Cleveland White/Mellon PMG 63 EPQ PCGS 63 Ch New $399 $550 UPCOMING SHOWS Sept. 7, Parsippany Coin & Currency Show APD Currency Corp. Please note our PO Box Number has changed P.O. Box 577, Pittstown, NJ 08867 • E-mail: [email protected] Phone: (908) 479-1899 • Fax: (908) 479-1661 Member: PCDA, ANA, SPMC, PMCM, CCLI www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 41 LEFT The original folded Series of 1899 $2 note the author discovered at a local coin show. This view shows the Washington portrait side. RIGHT Here is the other side of the original folded note, showing the allegorical figures of Mechanics (male) and Agriculture (female) facing each other. EXTENSIVE OFFERS! Coins & Paper Money, Medieval, Foreign. England, Great Britain & Colonies. German States, German Empire & 3rd Reich. Many other seldom offered countries. Including Philippines, under Spain & U.S., including Confederate States of America Paper Money. Free PRICE LIST on request *Special Offer* 1500 YEAR OLD ROMAN COIN 1 Coin $8.95 3 Different Emperors $25.00 PPD 5 Different $39.00 PPD Nice condition at least Fine Plus book list & coin list M&R COINS P.O. Box 7, Dept. NNE Palos Park, IL 60464-0007 Phone: 708-361-9523 Welcome 42 $10 LIBERTY GOLD 1879 NGC MS-61 ................ $1,075 1884-S PCGS MS-61 ............ 1,050 1885 NGC MS-60 ..................... 810 1885-S NGC MS-60 ................. 810 1887-S PCGS MS-62 ............... 850 1888-S NGC MS-61 ................. 830 1890 NGC MS-61 .................. 1,025 1891 NGC MS-62 ..................... 925 1892-O PCGS AU-55 ............... 950 1893-S PCGS MS-62 ............ 1,175 1894 NGC MS-61 ..................... 775 1894-O NGC MS-60 .............. 1,250 1897-O PCGS MS-60 ............ 1,250 1897-S PCGS MS-61 ............ 1,275 1899-O NGC AU-55 .............. 1,150 1899-S NGC MS-61 ................. 950 1903-O NGC MS-61 .............. 1,025 1904-O PCGS MS-61 ............ 1,125 1906 PCGS MS-61 ................... 830 1906-O NGC AU-58 .............. 1,100 1907 NGC MS-62 ..................... 850 1907-D NGC MS-62 .............. 1,100 1907-S NGC MS-61 .............. 1,150 1907-S NGC AU-58 .................. 925 15-Day Return. Postage Paid. I. Kleinman 973-783-1237 P.O. Box 3033, Memorial Station Upper Montclair, NJ 07043 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 Hotz/from Page 40 erly, the triangle is long point down. Washington’s portrait is crowned by the words “TWO SILVER DOLLARS,” with two large numeral “2”s placed at the two top points of the triangle. The back of the folded note is carefully folded to have the two allegorical figures on the note, the male “Mechanics” and female “Agriculture,” now seemingly joined together in some sort of makeshift sexual position. This must have been very amusing at the time, and it was no common skill to accomplish this careful currency origami. Although I have seen more than several dozen of the Series 1899 $2 notes unfolded but bearing the telltale folds over the years, I had never seen, nor even imagined, the finished product which I located that day. Many thanks go to John Senior for exhibiting this note and allowing me to photo it for this article. And so, another currency mystery is solved. Readers may address questions or comments about this article or National Bank Notes in general to Mark Hotz directly by email at [email protected]. Inventory eBay Auctions FAQ Error News About Us Contact Us Links Home Fred Weinberg & Co. Dealer in Major Mint Error Coins & Currency 16311 Ventura Blvd. Suite # 1298 Encino, California 91436 (818) 986-3733 Welcome to FredWeinberg.com, your key source for exceptional Major Mint Errors. Fred Weinberg & Co. has the world’s largest and most comprehensive selection of United States major mint error coins for purchase. Please feel free to browse our inventory to see if we have what you are looking for, or email us your want list. [email protected] Available Now for $25.00 Delivered No Shipping Fees Autographed upon request. BUYING MAJOR ERROR COINS & CURRENCY If you have a single major mint error coin, either a recent issue or an older type coin, or 1,000 Off-Center Cents, please contact us. We stock over 60,000 Major Mint Error Coins and constantly need to purchase Major Error Coins for our clientele (please note that we do not deal in or buy Die Varieties, Damaged Coins, Doubled Dies, Filled Dies, or Die Cracks). We do buy Major Mint Errors - such as Off-Center, Off-Metals, Double Strikes, Clad Layers missing, Die Caps, Double Denomination, etc. Because of the many differences in each Error Coin we request that you send your coin(s) to us for our examination and firm cash offer. Coin Shows Where to Find Us.... ANA World’s Fair of Money Rosemont, IL Table #917 August 5th - 9th, 2014 Pre-Show - TBA Long Beach Coin Expo Long Beach, CA Table #833 September 4th - 6th, 2014 See us during the PNG/ANA Trade Show, August 2-4 & ANA World’s Fair of Money Week at Table # 917. www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 43 EXCLUSIVE OFFER now at ENJOY 10% OFF educational products, resources, projects and more – enter code NUMISPUB10 at check-out and save 10% off select products. 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Visit our Web site at www.juliancoin.com I have handled, developed and sold many of the finest rare coin collections (Colonials through Modern Issues) in the country including: or visit us at eBay Id: juliancoin • Rare Colonial issues including several 1792 issues • Assemblage of specialized collections of all early U.S. coins by die variety • Simultaneous ownership and subsequent sale of two high quality 1838-O 50¢ • Assisted in the completion of the finest collection of Double Eagles ever assembled including the 1927-D • Sale of the Wilkinson Gold Pattern Collection in 1973 and later bought and sold individual pieces including the unique 1907 Indian Head $20, and the 1872 6-piece Amazonian Set and 1874 Bickford $10 • A bourse dealer at hundreds of local, regional and national coin shows and conventions. • Participation at every major U.S. auction held since 1968 representing as many as 25 auction bidders at the same time • Consultation to corporations, dealers, and collectors in order to develop, build and expand collections as well as being instrumental in the promotion of the numismatic hobby • Recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Professional Numismatic Guild WHAT CAN I DO FOR YOU? With total confidentiality, I will tailor my services to fit your needs, and: • Assist in the formation and location of any U.S. coin and currency collection • Counsel collectors, dealers and corporations on any aspect of the numismatic business of hobby • Act as personal representative for any numismatic transaction at a maximum commission of 10% • Appraise collections or individual pieces on an hourly basis • Assist in ORDERLY disposition of current holdings at current values. PLEASE ASK FOR A COPY OF MY BROCHURE ON THIS SUBJECT. Outstanding references available from collectors, investors, dealers and institutions from all regions of the country. Inquiries invited from qualified and serious individuals, businesses and institutions by letter or telephone. Or, stop by my table at any of the major shows. I have a table at all of them! If you are in the Washington, D.C. area, make sure you visit my shop: Bonanza Coins. JULIAN M. LEIDMAN 940 Wayne Avenue Silver Springs, MD 20910 (301) 585-8467 • www.juliancoin.com L.M. 664 www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 45 SHOW DIRECTORY FOR COMPLETE SHOW LISTINGS VISIT numismaster.com THIS WEEK’S SPONSOR 29th Annual The weekly Show Directory lists all coin & paper money events scheduled within 1 month of the issue cover date. Show dates & times sometimes change at the last minute. Please contact the show promoter BEFORE traveling long distances. National Coin & Currency Convention November 21-23, 2014 SHOW PROMOTERS: Run your show announcement FREE for up to 4 weeks!* Just complete & return the form below. All timely listings are also included in both Bank Note Reporter and World Coin News at NO CHARGE. Early Birds: November 20 - 1PM-6PM *Dependant upon date of submission relevant to deadline and space availability. Want to make your show really STAND OUT? Whether you need dealers on the floor or collectors at the gate, KP offers the best, most qualified coin & paper money collector and dealer audience around — AND we have the means to reach them! Contact the Numismatic News ad department for information on multiple show promotion opportunities: 1-800-573-0333. ALABAMA Aug 9-10 AL, Foley. Gold Coast Coin & Currency Show. Civic Center, 407 East Laurel Avenue. SP: South Baldwin Numismatic Society. A: Free. T: 37. F: $125. Gerald Overshiner, PO Box 836, Foley, AL, 36536. Gerald, PH: 251269-3089 or [email protected]; [email protected]. Sep 20 AL, Pelham . Central Alabama Coin Show. Pelham Civic Complex, 500 Amphitheater Rd.. SP: Alabama Numismatic Society. A: Free. T: 38. F: $60. Carl Shory, 2206 Cahaba Valley Dr., Birmingham, Al, 35242. PH: 205- 620-0560. ARIZONA Aug 10 AZ, Scottsdale. Camelback Collectibles Coin & Stamp Show. Elks Lodge 2148, 6398 E. Oak St. A: Free. Wayne Imbrogno, PO Crown Plaza Chicago O’Hare • 5440 North River Rd. • Rosemont, IL Bourse: Kevin Foley Phone: 414-807-0116 · [email protected] Box 3641, Gilbert, AZ, 85299. PH: 602- 3152069. Sep 7 AZ, Chandler. Greater Chandler AZ Coin & Currency Show, 1st Sunday of Each Month. American Legion Post 35, 2240 W Chandler Blvd. A: Free. T: 35. Jeff, PH: 480229-4986. ARKANSAS Aug 22-23 AR, Mountain Home. 6th Annual North Central Arkansas Coin Show. Ramada Inn Convention Center, 1127 Highway 62 East. A: $1. T: 16. F: $90. Bill Burdick, PO Box 155, Mountain Home, AR, 72654. PH: 870- 425-7799 or [email protected]. CALIFORNIA Aug 10 CA, Fairfield. 25th Annual Coin & Collectibles Show. Fairfield Community Free Numismatic News Show Directory Form To have your show listed in the Numismatic News Show Directory just fill out and mail or fax this form. Show site: (City (State) Date: Zip Time: Name of Show: Sponsor: Site location (hotel, convention center, etc): Street Address: Admission charge No: Number of tables: Yes: Amount: Table Fee: If the show is multi-hobby, (including stamps, sports cards or other collectible tables), please indicate the number of tables offering primarily numismatic items: Bourse chairman: Chairman’s telephone number: E-mail address: Address: ❯ Call 1-800-573-0333 or fax 1-715-445-4087 to list your show in additional issues for $10 a week! Mail to: 46 Numismatic News Show Directory 700 E. State St., Iola, WI 54990 or e-mail [email protected] Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 Center Willow Hall, 1000 Kentucky Street. SP: Fairfield Coin Club. A: $1. , PO Box 944, Fairfield, CA, 94533. Bob Belleau, PH: 707- 567-6938 or Jon Marish, PH: 707- 3843793 or [email protected] or www. solanoclub.com. Aug 16 CA, Pasadena. Coin & Currency Show. Scottish Rite Center, 150 North Madison Ave. A: $3, kids free. Paul Vreede. PH: 818486-7285. Aug 23-24 CA, Arcadia. 25th Annual Golden State Coin Show. Masonic Center, 50 West Duarte Road. SP: Numismatic Assoc. of Southern California. A: $4. T: 55. F: $225. PH: 909- 823-6997 or [email protected]. Aug 23-24 CA, Long Beach. 25th Annual Golden State Coin Show. Arcadia Masonic Center, 50 W. Duarte Rd.. SP: NASC. T: 55. Kay Lenker, PH: 619- 222-8739 or [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]. Aug 23-24 CA, Arcadia. 25th Annual Golden State Coin Show. Masonic Center, 50 West Duarte Road. SP: Numismatic Assoc. of Southern California. A: $4. T: 55. F: $225. Kay Lenker. PH: 619- 222-8739 or capnkay@ earthlink.net or www.nasc.net. Aug 30 CA, Tarzana. Tarzana Coin & Currency Show. Masonic Center, 19620 Ventura Blvd.. A: $3. PH: 818- 667-2329. Sep 4-6 CA, Long Beach. Coin, Currency, Stamp & Sports Collectibles Expo. Convention Center, Hall A, 100 S. Pine Ave.. Expos Unlimited - Long Beach Expo, Taryn Warrecker, PO Box 6280, Newport Beach, CA, 92658. PH: 805- 680-0294 or www.longbeachexpo.com. Sep 4-6 CA, Long Beach. Coin, Currency, Stamp & Sports Collectibles Expo. Convention Center, Hall A, 100 S. Pine Ave.. Expos Unlimited - Long Beach Expo, Taryn Warrecker, PO Box 6280, Newport Beach, CA, 92658. PH: 805- 680-0294 or www.longbeachexpo.com. Sep 14 CA, Livermore. 52nd Semi-Annual LVCC Coin Show. Elks Lodge, 940 Larkspur Drive. SP: Livermore Valley Coin Club. A: Free. T: 35. F: $125. Steve Kramer, PO Box 610, Livermore, CA, 94550. PH: 925- 9809307 or [email protected]. Sep 19-21 CA, Santa Clara. Santa Clara Coin, Stamp & Collectibles Show. Convention Center, 5001 Great America Parkway. A: $6. T: 100. Scott Griffin, PO Box 1876, Suisun, CA, 94585. PH: 415- 601-8661. Sep 26-27 CA, Santa Rosa. North Bay/Santa Rosa Coin Show. Flamingo Resort Hotel, 2777 Fourth St. T: 31. Bill Green, PO Box 846, Alamo, CA, 94507. PH: 925- 351-7605 or [email protected]. Sep 28 CA, Van Nuys. Coin Show. Masonic Hall, 14750 Sherman Way. SP: R.A.M. Rare Coins. A: $3. T: 30. F: $125. Richard Murachanian, Shows/Page 48 Palace Station Hotel and Casino 2411 W Sahara Ave Meet the Experts! Silver Dollar Seminar Grading Services Nevada Civil War Association FREE Appraisals! 300 Dealers from The The The TArgent he Argent Argent Argent Group Group Group Group Alhambra Alhambra Alhambra Alhambra Coin Coin Coin Coin Center Center Center Center Leo Leo Leo Leo Frese Frese Frese Frese Rare Rare Rare Rare Coins Coins Coins Coins Tangible Tangible Tangible Tangible Investments Investments Investments Investments Mike Mike Mike Mike Byers Byers Byers Byers Rare Rare Rare Rare Coins Coins Coins Coins Emporium Emporium Emporium Emporium Rare Rare Rare Rare Coins Coins Coins Coins &&Currency Currency && Currency Currency Provident Provident Provident Provident Metals Metals Metals Metals and and and and more! more! more! more! Jack Jack Jack Jack Beymer Beymer Beymer Beymer Riviera Riviera Riviera Riviera Hotel Hotel Hotel Hotel & Casino &&& Casino Casino Casino Visit CKShows.com or call 888-330-5188 FREE ADMISSION WITH THIS AD 092014 Shows/from Page 46 PO Box 800801, Santa Calrita, CA, 91380. PH: 661- 287-1651 or ramrarecoins@yahoo. com. COLORADO Aug 9-10 CO, Colorado Springs. SERTOMA. Colorado Springs Event Center, 3960 Palmer Park Blvd.. SH: Sat. 9am-5pm, Sun. 9am4pm. PH: 719- 630-3976 or prospectorsgs@ gmail.com or www.sertoma.org. Aug 16 CO, Golden. Jefferson County Coin Show. Jefferson County Fairgrounds, Exhibit Hall, 15200 W. 6th Ave.. A: Free. T: 45. F: $85. David Fox, PO Box 2013, Centennial, CO, 80161. PH: 303- 290-6138 or [email protected]. Aug 23 CO, Aurora. Coin Show. Red Lion Hotel, 3200 S. Parker Rd. A: Free. Theo. PH: 303364-1572 or www.Tozan.com. Sep 13-14 CO, Colorado Springs. SERTOMA. Colorado Springs Event Center, 3960 Palmer Park Blvd.. SH: Sat. 9am-5pm, Sun. 9am4pm. PH: 719- 630-3976 or prospectorsgs@ gmail.com or www.sertoma.org. Sep 20 CO, Golden. Jefferson County Coin Show. Jefferson County Fairgrounds, Exhibit Hall, 15200 W. 6th Ave.. A: Free. T: 45. F: $85. David Fox, PO Box 2013, Centennial, CO, 80161. PH: 303- 290-6138 or [email protected]. CONNECTICUT Sep 14 CT, West Haven. Liberty Coin Club Show. Elks Club, 265 Main St. F: $35-$50. Perry Carpinella. PH: 203- 248-1053. Sep 14 CT, Danbury. Coin Club Coin Show. Ethan Allen Inn, 21 Lake Ave Extension. A: Free. T: 38. F: $60. Phil Jones. PH: 203740-2892. Sep 28 CT, Hartford. Coin & Currency Show. Ramada East Hartford, 363 Roberts St.. SP: SNECDA. A: Free. T: 40. F: $55. John Stassins Jr, PO Box 140262, Howard Beach, NY, 11414. PH: 718- 323-1930 or [email protected]. FLORIDA Aug 9 FL, St. Petersburg. Coin Club Show. DAV, 4801 37th St. N. A: Free. T: 30. F: $60. Robert Wiley. PH: 727- 580-4108. Aug 10 FL, Melbourne. Coin, Stamp & Collectible Show. Eau Gallie Civic Ctr., 1551 Highland Ave.. A: Free. Alysha Wilson. PH: 321- 751-3647 or [email protected]. Aug 24 FL, Greenacres. 4th Sunday of the Month Show. American Polish Club, 4275 Lake Worth Road. A: Free. T: 50. F: $60. Tony Swicer, PO Box 5823, Lake Worth, FL, 33466. PH: 561- 964-8180 or swicer@ comcast.net. Sep 6 FL, Zephyrhills. 1st Saturday Coin Club Show. Eagle Lodge #3752, 4249 New River Rd., corner of SR 54. A: Free. F: $40.. Dennis Jones. PH: 813- 355-6813. Sep 6-7 FL, Ocala. Florida Stamp Dealers Association & The General Francis Marion Stamp Club Show. Ocala National Guard Armory, 900 S. W. 20th St.. A: Free. F: $295. Sheldon Rogg, PO Box 1076, Port Richey, FL, 34673. PH: 727- 364-6897 or h.rogg@ verizon.net. Sep 7 FL, Maitland. Coin & Currency Show. Civic Center, 641 South Maitland Avenue. T: 25. PH: 407- 730-3116. Sep 13 FL, St. Petersburg. Coin Club Show. DAV, 4801 37th St. N. A: Free. T: 30. F: $60. Robert Wiley. PH: 727- 580-4108. Sep 14 FL, Melbourne. Coin, Stamp & 48 Collectible Show. Eau Gallie Civic Ctr., 1551 Highland Ave.. A: Free. Alysha Wilson. PH: 321- 751-3647 or [email protected]. Sep 20 FL, New Port Richey. Gold Coast Coin & Stamp Show. Pearl of the West Masonic Lodge, 6319 Louisiana Avenue. A: Free. T: 30. F: $35-$50. Paul Watson. PH: 727- 2476390 or [email protected]. Sep 26-28 FL, Orlando. Central Florida Coin Club Coin and Currency Show. Central FL Fairgrounds, Bldg. C, 4603 W. Colonial Dr.. A: Free. T: 125. Donna Moon, PO Box 568061, Orlando, FL, 32808. PH: 407- 657-6440 or [email protected]. Sep 27-28 FL, Tampa. Stamp & Coin Expo. Holiday Inn Express, 4750 N. Dale Mabry Hwy.. A: Free. F: $235. Sheldon Rogg, PO Box 1076, Port Richey, FL, 34673. PH: 727364-6897 or [email protected]. Sep 28 FL, Greenacres. 4th Sunday of the Month Show. American Polish Club, 4275 Lake Worth Road. A: Free. T: 50. F: $60. Tony Swicer, PO Box 5823, Lake Worth, FL, 33466. PH: 561- 964-8180 or swicer@ comcast.net. Dec 13 FL, St. Petersburg. Coin Club Show. DAV, 4801 37th St. N. A: Free. T: 30. F: $60. Robert Wiley. PH: 727- 580-4108. GEORGIA Aug 15-17 GA, Dalton. Blue Ridge Numismatic Association 55th Annual Convention. NW GA Trade & Convention Ctr., 2211 Dug Gap Battle Rd.. A: Free. T: 200. F: $316. Belinda Brush. PH: 864- 617-3378 or jbrush2@ gmail.com. Sep 14 GA, Marietta. Greater Atlanta Coin Show. Hilton Atlanta/Marietta Hotel & Conference Center, 500 Powder Springs Street. A: Free. T: 37. F: $65. Bob O’Brien. PH: 770- 772-4359 or [email protected] or www.atlcoin.com. ILLINOIS Aug 5-9 IL, Chicago. ANA World’s Fair of Money. Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont. T: 1100. ANA Conventions, 818 N Cascade Ave, Colorado Springs, CO, 80903. PH: 719- 482-9849 or convention@ money.org. Aug 10 IL, Countryside. West Suburban Coin & Collectibles Show. Operating Engineers Local 150 Union Hall, 6200 Joliet Rd.. A: Free. T: 85. Kevin Wasmer. PH: 630- 3999060 or westsuburbancoinshow.com. Aug 17 IL, Itasca. 3rd Sunday N.O.I.S.E. Coin Show. Holiday Inn, 860 Irving Pk.. A: Free. T: 50. F: $55. N.O.I.S.E., Joe, PO Box 193, Crystal Lake, IL, 60039. PH: 815- 479-0350 or [email protected]. Sep 7 IL, Olney. Coin Club Show. The Holliday Motel, 1300 S West St. A: Free. T: 12. F: $15. George Totten, 2899 E Post Ln, Olney, IL, 62450. PH: 618- 723-2474 or coincollec@ aol.com. Sep 7 IL, Palatine. 1st Sunday Coin Show. Holiday Inn Express, 1550 Dundee Rd. A: Free. T: 45. F: $60. Joe, PO Box 193, Crystal Lake, IL, 60039. PH: 815- 479-0350 or [email protected]. Sep 11-13 IL, Tinley Park. 55th Annual Illinois Numismatic Association Coin & Currency Show. Tinley Park Convention Center, 18451 Convention Center Dr. A: Free. T: 220. Jim Paicz, PO Box 628, Richton Park, IL, 60471. PH: 708- 670-3469 or [email protected] or www.chicagocoinshow.com. Sep 14 IL, Countryside. West Suburban Coin & Collectibles Show. Operating Engineers Local 150 Union Hall, 6200 Joliet Rd.. A: Free. T: 85. Kevin Wasmer. PH: 630- 399- Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 9060 or westsuburbancoinshow.com. Sep 21 IL, Itasca. 3rd Sunday NOISE Coin Show. Holiday Inn, 860 Irving Pk.. A: Free. T: 50. F: $55.. Joe DeModica, PO Box 193, Crystal Lake, IL, 60039. PH: 815- 479-0350. Sep 21 IL, Pekin. Coin Show. Moose Lodge, 2605 Broadway St. SP: Tazewell Numismatic Society. A: Free. T: 60. F: $50. Jeff Pollitt, PO Box 696, Pekin, IL, 61554. PH: 309- 6853421 or Steve Rassi, PH: 309- 263-0739 or [email protected]. Sep 28 IL, Rockford. 116th Semi-Annual Coin Show. Radisson Hotel & Conference Center, 200 S. Bell School Rd. Buis. 20 off I-90. A: Free. T: 45. F: $55. Gail Tennant. PH: 815654-2745 or [email protected]. Oct 11 IL, Tinley Park. Coun & Collectibles Show. Trinity Lutheran School Gymnasium, 6850 W. 159th Street. A: Free. PH: 708- 7723664 or [email protected]. INDIANA Aug 16 IN, Highland. Calumet Area Coin & Stamp Show. St James Parish Hall, 45th & Kennedy Ave. A: $1. T: 12. F: $40. Paul. PH: 219- 789-2822 or [email protected]. Aug 17 IN, Terre Haute. Wabash Valley Coin & Currency Show. Wabash Valley Fairgrounds, 3901 South US 41. A: Free. T: 26. F: $35. Marvin Mericle, PO Box 7112, Terre Haute, IN, 47802. PH: 812- 898-1260 or marv626@ att.net. Aug 23 IN, South Bend. Coin & Currency Show. Comfort Stes., Corner of SR 933 & Cleveland. A: Free. T: 30. F: $45-$50. David Brody, PO Box 724, South Bend, IN, 46624. PH: 574- 272-9198. Sep 13 IN, Highland. 75th Anniversary Calumet Numismatic Club Coin Show. St. James Parish Hall, 9640 Kennedy Ave. A: Free. T: 40. Paul. PH: 219- 789-2822 or collect1a@ comcast.net. Sep 20 IN, South Bend. Coin & Currency Show. Comfort Stes., Corner of SR 933 & Cleveland. A: Free. T: 30. F: $45-$50. David Brody, PO Box 724, South Bend, IN, 46624. PH: 574- 272-9198. Nov 28-29 IN, Evansville. Evansville Coin Club Annual Coin Show. Tropicana Convention Center, 421 NW Riverside Dr. A: Free. T: 32. ECC Show, Brad Lisembee, PO Box 881, Evansville, IN, 47706. PH: 812- 431-6547 or [email protected] or www.evansvillecoinclub.com. IOWA Aug 17 IA, Council Bluffs. Monthly Coin & Bullion Show. Hilton Garden Inn, 2702 Mid Ameica Dr.. A: Free. T: 40. F: $35-$42.50. Ed Bishop. PH: 402- 721-7364 or PH: 402- 7203355 or [email protected]. Aug 23-24 IA, Spirit Lake. 35th Annual Iowa Great Lakes Coin, Card & Paper Money Show. Community Building. A: Free. F: $70. Don McCulloch. PH: 712- 336-4618 or PH: 712- 330-3671 or dmcculloch32@mchsi. com. Aug 24 IA, Decorah. Annual Coin Club Coin & Currency Show. Community Building, Decorah Fairgrounds, Montgomery Street. A: Free. F: $25. Dave Sanderson, 307 West St. SW, Waukon, IA, 52172. PH: 563- 568-2371 or [email protected]. Sep 21 IA, Council Bluffs. Monthly Coin & Bullion Show. Hilton Garden Inn, 2702 Mid Ameica Dr.. A: Free. T: 40. F: $35-$42.50. Ed Bishop. PH: 402- 721-7364 or PH: 402- 7203355 or [email protected]. Nov 9 IA, Clear Lake. North Iowa Coin & Shows/Page 50 FLORIDA UNITED NUMISMATISTS, INC. ••• 2015 ••• 60th Annual F.U.N. Convention January 8-11, 2015 Orange County Convention Center Orlando, Florida SHOW HOURS Thursday- Jan. 8 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. • Friday-Jan. 9 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Saturday-Jan. 10 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. • Sunday- Jan. 11 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 11 is an optional dealer participation date and a reduced size show. Dealer Set-up: Jan. 7th 2-8 p.m. Contact: Cindy Wibker • PO Box 471147, Lake Monroe, FL 32747-1147 PH: 407-321-8747 • FAX: 407-321-5138 • email: [email protected] FLORIDA UNITED NUMISMATISTS, INC. 9th Summer FUN! July 9-11, 2015 • ORLANDO, FLORIDA Orange County Convention Center 9800 International Drive SHOW HOURS Thurs. - July 9 • 10:00-6:30; Fri. • July 10 - 10:00-6:30; Sat. - July 11 • 10:00-5:30 Dealer Set-up Wednesday, July 8 Heritage Numismatic Auctions - 1-800-US-COINS (1-800-872-6467) Cindy Wibker PO Box 471147, Lake Monroe, FL 32747 PH: 407-321-8747 • FAX: 407-321-5138 • email: [email protected] For more information, visit our website: www.funtopics.com www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 49 Shows/from Page 48 Stamp. Best Western Holiday Lodge, 2023 7th Ave. N.. F: $45. Daniel Lemke, PO Box 472, Northfield, MN, 55057. Leave message, PH: 507- 663-6184 or Jerry Swanson, PH: 507- 289-5099. KANSAS Aug 16-17 KS, Wichita. The Wichita Show. Cessna Activity Center, 2744 Geo. Washington Blvd.. SP: Wichita Stamp Club. A: Free. F: $115. Ralph Lott, 10716 E 31st South, Wichita, KS, 67210. PH: 316- 6836593. Coin & Knife Show. Estill Co. Fairgrounds Event Building, 38 S. Irvine Rd. A: Free. F: $15. Rick H, 1575 Rice Station Rd., Irvine, KY, 40336. PH: 606- 723-6682 or areharris. [email protected]. Sep 25-27 KY, Louisville. 54th Annual Louisville & Kentucky State Numismatic Assoc. Coin & Currency Show. Fern Valley Conference Center, 2715 Fern Valley Rd.. A: Free. T: 80. F: Single $155; corner (2) $265. or 502-5517530 John Bolly, PH: 812- 945-3622 or Jim Brown, PH: 502- 228-4279 or Steven Wolfe, PH: 812- 734-0909 or [email protected] or www.louisvilleandkscoinclub.com. LOUISIANA KENTUCKY Sep 13 KY, Irvine. Little Mountains 9th Annual Sep 7-8 LA, Baton Rouge. Red Stick Coin & Currency Show. Holiday Inn South, 9940 Illinois Numismatic Association 55th Coin & Currency Show Tinley Park Convention Center 18451 Convention Center Rd. • Tinley Park, IL 60477 Thursday 8-9 Dealers • 9-Noon Early Birds • Noon-6 Open to the Public Friday & Saturday 8 a.m. Dealers & Early Birds Friday 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. Open to Public Saturday 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Open to Public 220 Tables Saturday Seminars & YN Auction 1:00 p.m. For more info see: www.ilnaclub.info Dealer Info: Jim Paicz 708-670-3469 • [email protected] NOV. 28, 29, 30, 2014 CONVENTION AND COIN SHOW Fri & Sat Sunday 10:00 am to 6:00 pm 10:00 am to 3:00 pm Featuring Stack’s Bowers Online Auction! Come see th SPECIALe ANA Exhibit $5 million ra ri 1804 Dollar es 1913 “V” N & ickel MACOMB COMMUNITY COLLEGE SPORTS & EXPO CENTER South Campus • 14500 East 12 Mile, Warren, MI (Building P) ADDITIONAL FREE EVENTS • Professional Appraisals (Sat. 11-3) Do you have the next million dollar coin? • Educational Exhibits • Educational Seminars • Kids’ Program (Sat. 11-3) • World’s Largest Chocolate Money Exhibit • Admission and Parking www.michigancoinclub.org For more informaon contact: [email protected] or call 734-453-0504 50 Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 MAINE Sep 28 ME, Thomaston. Knox County Coin Show. American Legion Post . SP: Knox County Coin Club. A: Free. T: 10. F: $30-$40. Barrie Jenkins, PO Box 147, Warren, ME, 04864. PH: 207- 701-8411. MARYLAND Aug 24 MD, Timonium. Hunt Valley - Timonium Coin Show. Holiday Inn Timonium, 9615 Deereco Rd.. SP: Legacy Coins & Currency. A: Free. T: 30. F: $80-6ft.. Ralph Piedmont, PO Box 5334, Timonium, MD, 21094. PH: 410- 929-8178 or [email protected]. Sep 14 MD, Annapolis. Coin & Currency Show. Knights of Columbus Hall, 2590 Solomon’s Island Rd.. A: Free. T: 30. Carl Earl Ostiguy, PO Box 92, Savage, MD, 20763. PH: 443623-7025 or [email protected]. MASSACHUSETTS SEPT. 11, 12 & 13, 2014 HOURS: Airline Hwy. A: Free. T: 45. Kevin Keithly, 9555 Joor Rd, Baton Rouge, LA, 70818. PH: 804- 347-9840 or www.kmcurrency.com. Aug 10 MA, Auburn. Greater Worcester Coin Show. Elks Lodge, 754 Southbridge St. (Rt. 12). A: Free. T: 46. EBW Promos., PO Box 3, Wilmington, MA, 01887. PH: 978- 658-0160. Aug 13 MA, Whitinsville. 2nd Wednesday Night Coin Show. Brian’s Resturant, 91 Providence Rd.. A: Free. T: 10. Mike McDonald, PO Box 435, Douglas, MA, 01516. PH: 774- 2804333. Aug 24 MA, Westford. Monthly Coin Show. Westford Regency Hotel, 219 Littleton Rd. A: $1. T: 85. EBW Promos., PO Box 3, Wilmington, MA, 01887. PH: 978- 658-0160. Aug 24 MA, Chicopee. First Sunday Monthly Coin, Sports & Postcard Show. Boy’s & Girl’s Club, 580 Meadow St. A: $1. T: 40. F: $30. Joe Garrity. PH: 413- 593-6046 or mrjmgjr@ yahoo.com or [email protected]. Sep 7 MA, Dedham. 1st Sunday Monthly Coin & Stamp Show. Holiday Inn, I-95 exit 15A. A: Free. Harry Tong. PH: 603- 978-3459. Sep 10 MA, Whitinsville. 2nd Wednesday Night Coin Show. Brian’s Resturant, 91 Providence Rd.. A: Free. T: 10. Mike McDonald, PO Box 435, Douglas, MA, 01516. PH: 774- 2804333. Sep 14 MA, Auburn. Greater Worcester Coin Show. Elks Lodge, 754 Southbridge St. (Rt. 12). A: Free. T: 46. EBW Promos., PO Box 3, Wilmington, MA, 01887. PH: 978- 658-0160. Sep 28 MA, Westford. Monthly Coin Show. Westford Regency Hotel, 219 Littleton Rd. A: $1. T: 85. EBW Promos., PO Box 3, Wilmington, MA, 01887. PH: 978- 658-0160. MICHIGAN Aug 16 MI, Grandville. Coin Show. Neil Fonger American Legion Post #179, 2327 Wilson Avenue. Stephen Friedman. PH: 616- 8228383 or [email protected]. Aug 17 MI, Redford Twp.. Redford Coin Show. VFW Hall, 27345 Schoolcraft. A: Free. T: 60. F: $50. Don Reid, PH: 313- 737-9141 or Hanna Reid, PH: 313- 244-7444. Aug 24 MI, Troy. Polish American Numismatic Society & Huron Valley Numismatic Society Show. American Polish Cultural Ctr., 2975 E. Maple Rd. at Dequindre Rd.. A: Free. T: 105. F: $90. Les Rosik, PH: 248- 909-2670 or Brett Irick, PH: 313- 207-3562 or www. pans-club.org. Sep 6 MI, Flint. Coin, Stamp & Sports Card Show. Dort Mall, 3600 S. Dort Hwy.. A: Free. F: $60. Tom Ragnone, 1223 Townline Rd., Grand Blanc, mi, 48439. PH: 810- 695-6430 or [email protected]. Sep 13 MI, Grandville. Grand Rapids Coin Club Show. Neil Fonger American Legion Post #179, 2327 Wilson Avenue. John Chirco. PH: 616- 667-7381 or [email protected]. Sep 20-21 MI, Midland. Michigan Antique Festival. Midland County Fairgrounds, Building 39, 6905 E. Mann Ave. A: $6. Lori Oberlin. PH: 989- 687-9001 or [email protected]. Sep 27 MI, Lansing. Michigan Token & Medal Society Breakfast & Swap Meet. Coral Gables Restaurant, 2838 E. Grand River. T: 6. F: $25 (incl. breakfast). Tom Klunzinger, PO Box 585, Okemas, MI, 48805. PH: 517349-0799 or [email protected]. Sep 28 MI, Mt Pleasant. Coin, Stamp & Baseball Card Show. Soaring Eagle Casino & Hotel, 6800 Soaring Eagle Blvd.. A: Free. F: $45-6’. Tom Ragnone. PH: 810- 695-6430 or [email protected]. Sep 28 MI, Redford Twp.. Redford Coin Show. VFW Hall, 27345 Schoolcraft. A: Free. T: 60. F: $50. Don Reid, PH: 313- 737-9141 or Hanna Reid, PH: 313- 244-7444. Nov 28-30 MI, Warren. MSNS Fall Convention and Coin Show. Macomb Community College Sports & Expo Center, Building “P”, 14500 E 12 Mile. A: Free. T: 175. F: $400. Mike Strub. PH: 734- 453-0504 or secretaryMSNS@aol. com or www.michigancoinclub.org. MINNESOTA Aug 9 MN, Roseville. Coin Show. Skating Center, 2661 Civic Center Dr.. A: Free. T: 20. F: $50.. Andrew Swammi. PH: 612- 770-6578 or [email protected]. Aug 10 MN, Bloomington. Coin, Currency, Stamps and Cards Show. Crowne Plaza, In’tl. Airport, 3 Appletree Square (I-494 & 34th Ave. S.). A: free. T: 63. F: $40-$50. Del, PH: 763- 355-9436. Aug 17 MN, South Saint Paul. Coin Show. VFW, 111 Concord Exchange S. A: Free. T: 38. F: $55. Byron Meyer. PH: 651- 731-9275 or [email protected]. Sep 13 MN, Grand Rapids. 4th Annual Fall Coin & Currency Show. Moose Lodge, Intersection Hwy. 169 East & 10th Ave. NE. SP: Northern Lakes Coin & Curreny Club. A: Free. T: 16. F: $50. Ken Olson, 603 SE 1st Ave, Grand Rapids, MN, 55744. PH: 218- 244-9299 or [email protected]. Sep 13 MN, Roseville. Coin Show. Skating Center, 2661 Civic Center Dr.. A: Free. T: 20. F: $50.. Andrew Swammi. PH: 612- 770-6578 or [email protected]. Sep 14 MN, Bloomington. Coin, Currency, Stamps and Cards Show. Crowne Plaza, In’tl. Airport, 3 Appletree Square (I-494 & 34th Ave. S.). A: free. T: 63. F: $40-$50. Del, PH: 763- 355-9436. Sep 21 MN, South Saint Paul. Coin Show. VFW, 111 Concord Exchange S. A: Free. T: 38. F: $55. Byron Meyer. PH: 651- 731-9275 or [email protected]. Nov 2 MN, Owatonna. Annual Fall Cabels’s Coin, Currency & Stamp Show. Holiday Inn. SP: Southern California Coin & Stamp Club Assoc.. F: $45. Daniel Lemke, PO Box 472, Northfield, MN, 55057. leave message, PH: 507- 663-6184. MISSISSIPPI Aug 23-24 MS, Vicksburg. 87th Vicksburg Coin Show. Battlefield Inn, 4137 I-20 Frontage Rd.. SH: 9am - 5pm. SP: Vicksburg Coin Club. A: Free. T: 40. F: $100 for both days. Milton Myers. PH: 601- 618-7140 or [email protected]. MISSOURI Sep 20 MO, St. Charles. International Coin Fair. American Legion Post 312, 2500 Raymond Drive. SP: The World Coin Club of Missouri. F: Free. The World Coin Club of Missouri, PO Box 410652, Saint Louis, MO, 63141. Sep 27 MO, Joplin. The Original Route 66 Coin, Gold & Silver Show. Continental Banquet Center, 2802 N. Range Line Rd. A: Free. T: 25. F: $65-$130. Dave Sorrick, PO Box 162, Mindenmines, MO, 64769. PH: 620- 4236600 or [email protected]. NEBRASKA Aug 16-17 NE, Lincoln. NE State Coin Show. Borders Inn, 5250 Cornhusker Hwy.. SP: Lincoln Numismatic Society. A: Free. T: 35. F: $75. Brian Owens, PH: 402- 483-1291 or David Willsie, PH: 402- 483-2868 or brian_owens500@hot- mail.com or [email protected]. Aug 17 NE, Omaha. Monthly Coin Show. Comfort Inn & Suites, 7007 Grover St.. T: 50. F: $25. Corey Clinebell. PH: 402- 812-7062 or [email protected] or www.abccoinsandcollectables.com. Aug 30-31 NE, Omaha. NTCA Annual Convention & Show. Ramada Plaza Omaha, 3321 S. 72nd St.. A: Free. T: 40. F: $150. Ron Matson, PO Box 460953, Papillion, NE, 68046. PH: 402- 895-7715 or papiocoin@ aol.com. Sep 13 NE, Gering-Scottsbluff. 8th Annual Wyobraska Coin & Stamp Collectors Show. Civic Center, 1050 M St. A: Free. T: 12. F: $60. Lawrence Gibbs, PO Box 83, Gering, NE, 69341. PH: 308- 641-6310 or oth@ prairieweb.com. Shows/Page 52 BATTLEFIELD COIN SHOW GETTYSBURG, PA SEPTEMBER 20-21, 2014 Hours: 9:30AM-5:30PM 150+ Dealer Tables Available Eisenhower Hotel & Conf Center • 2634 Emmitsburg Rd, Gettysburg, PA Bourse Chairman: Michael Dixon 301-788-6232 [email protected] 5601 Bobolink Place, New Market, MD 21774 Our 2014 show dates are December 5, 6, 7 Sponsored by: Shenandoah Valley Coin Club & the Weyers Cave Lion’s Club Weyers Cave Community Center, Weyers Cave, VA Free admission • 75+ tables • Food available Refreshments available • Raffle Tickets for hourly drawings • Tickets are available at the door and from SVCC Members. SHOW INFORMATION: http://svccshow.info Melissa Smith, Show Bourse 540-363-7777 A Youth activity Center will be available in the rear of the center for all youth interested in collecting coins. www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 51 Shows/from Page 51 Sep 21 NE, Omaha. Monthly Coin Show. Comfort Inn & Suites, 7007 Grover St.. T: 50. F: $25. Corey Clinebell. PH: 402- 812-7062 or [email protected] or www.abccoinsandcollectables.com. NEVADA Aug 22-23 NV, Carson City. CC Mint Coin Show & Fair. Nevada State Museum, 600 N. Carson St. A: $4. T: 28. Deborah. ext 237, PH: 775687-4810 or [email protected]. Sep 12-14 NV, Las Vegas. Las Vegas Numismatic Society Fall Coin Show. Palace Station Hotel and Casino, 2411 W Sahara Ave. A: $3. T: 150. CK Shows, Dawn, POB 95517, Las Vegas, NV, 89193. PH: 888- 3305188 or [email protected]. Sep 12-14 NV, Laughlin. Coin, Currency, Jewelry & Stamp Expo. Colorado Belle Hotel, Mardi Gras Ballroom, 2100 S. Casino Dr.. A: $3. F: $295-$595. Israel I. Bick, PO Box 854, Van Nuys, CA, 91408. PH: 818- 997-6496 or [email protected]. NEW HAMPSHIRE Aug 17 NH, Nashua. 3rd Sun. Coin Show. Holiday Inn , 9 Northeastern Blvd. T: 49. EBW Promotions, PO Box 3, Willmington, MA, 01887. PH: 978- 658-0160. Sep 21 NH, Nashua. 3rd Sun. Coin Show. Holiday Inn , 9 Northeastern Blvd. T: 49. EBW Promotions, PO Box 3, Willmington, MA, 01887. PH: 978- 658-0160. NEW JERSEY Aug 9 NJ, Colts Neck. Coin & Currency Show. Saint Mary’s Church, Rte. 34 North & Phanlax Rd. A: Free. T: 40. Jimmy Cirronella. PH: 732526-7337 or [email protected]. Aug 10 NJ, Burlington Township. US & World Coin & Paper Money Show. Lodge No. 32, 2308 Mt. Holly Rd. A: Free. T: 40. Walt, PO Box 145, Columbus, NJ, 08022. PH: 609291-5670. Aug 17 NJ, Old Bridge. Coin, Currency & Collectibles Show. Old Bridge First Aid & Rescue Squad Bldg., 200 Marlboro Rd. & Ferris Rd.. A: Free. T: 30. Matt Sulikowski. PH: 732- 566-6369 or PH: 732- 740-4604. Sep 13 NJ, Colts Neck. Coin & Currency Show. Saint Mary’s Church, Rte. 34 North & Phanlax Rd. A: Free. T: 40. Jimmy Cirronella. PH: 732- 526-7337 or cardfather@optonline. net. Sep 14 NJ, Burlington Township. US & World Coin & Paper Money Show. Lodge No. 32, 2308 Mt. Holly Rd. A: Free. T: 40. Walt, PO Box 145, Columbus, NJ, 08022. PH: 609291-5670. Sep 21 NJ, Clifton. World Money Show. Recreation Ctr., 1232 Main Ave.. A: Free. T: 45. F: $45.. Mark Schiffer. PH: 973- 983-2449. Sep 21 NJ, Old Bridge. Coin, Currency & Collectibles Show. Old Bridge First Aid & Rescue Squad Bldg., 200 Marlboro Rd. & Ferris Rd.. A: Free. T: 30. Matt Sulikowski. PH: 732- 566-6369 or PH: 732- 740-4604. Sep 28 NJ, Ogdensburg. Sussex County Coin Club / Collectibles Show. Fire Department, 1 Firehouse Lane. SP: Sussex County Coin Club. A: Free. F: $35. Sussex County Coin Club, James J. Ingram, PO Box 2393, Oak Ridge, NJ, 07438. PH: 973- 534-3421 or [email protected]. NEW YORK Aug 9-10 NY, Niagara Falls. Collectors’ Show/ Expo 2014. Elks Lodge #346, 1805 Factory 52 Outlet Blvd. A: Free. Brian Trietley, 6589 Main St., Williamsville, NY, 14221. PH: 716- 8311526 or PH: 716- 633-4104 or briantrietley@ yahoo.com. Aug 10 NY, Melville. Coin, Stamp & Collectibles Show. Catapano Engineering Hall, 585 Rte. 110 (Broadhollow Rd.). A: Free. F: $70.. George Schulteis. PH: 516- 557-7096. Aug 24 NY, Melville. Coin, Stamp & Collectibles Show. Catapano Engineering Hall, 585 Rte. 110 (Broadhollow Rd.). A: Free. F: $70.. George Schulteis. PH: 516- 557-7096. Sep 7 NY, Albany. CDCDA Coin & Hobby Show. Polish Community Center , 225 Washington Ave. Ext. A: $1.50 adults, $.50 under 12. F: $60. Ron Pugh, PO Box 2081, Scotia, NY, 12302. Ron, PH: 518- 372-3611 or rpugh2@ nycap.rr.com. Sep 14 NY, Jamestown. Jamestown Coin Show. Celeron Legion, 318 E. Fairmont Ave.. SP: Jamestown Coin Club. A: Free. T: 35. F: $35. Jan Agnew, 1600 Allegheny Ave., Warren, PA, 16365. PH: 814- 726-9486. Sep 14 NY, Melville. Coin, Stamp & Collectibles Show. Catapano Engineering Hall, 585 Rte. 110 (Broadhollow Rd.). A: Free. F: $70.. George Schulteis. PH: 516- 557-7096. Sep 14 NY, Danbury. Coin Club Coin Show. Ethan Allen Inn, 21 Lake Ave Extension in Danbury CT. A: Free. T: 38. F: $60. Phil Jones. PH: 203- 740-2892. Sep 21 NY, Buffalo-Cheektowaga. Buffalo Numismatic Assoc. Monthly Bourse. Columbus Hall, 2735 Union Rd.. A: Free. T: 56. Hal Folckemer, 5295 Broadway, Lancaster, NY, 14086. PH: 716- 908-3097 or [email protected]. Sep 21 NY, Syracuse. Onondaga Numismatic Association Coin & Currency Show. Ramada Inn, 1305 Buckley Rd.. A: Free. T: 25. Mark Caiello, 652 Old Liverpool Rd., Liverpool, NY, 13088. PH: 315- 461-9379. Sep 27 NY, Bath. Coin Show. Bath Fire Department, 50 E. Morris St.. SP: Bath Collector’s Club. A: Free. T: 21. F: $30. James Silliman, 2 E. William St., Bath, NY, 14810. PH: 607- 776-6370 or [email protected]. Sep 28 NY, Melville. Coin, Stamp & Collectibles Show. Catapano Engineering Hall, 585 Rte. 110 (Broadhollow Rd.). A: Free. F: $70.. George Schulteis. PH: 516- 557-7096. Sep 28 NY, Dunkirk. Lakeshore Coin Show. Moose Lodge, Lakeshore Dr West. SP: Lakeshore Coin Club. A: Free. T: 25. F: $30, 2/$55. John Boner, 779 Deer St, Dunkirk, NY, 14048. PH: 716- 679-8155 or renob5555@ yahoo.com. NORTH CAROLINA Aug 9-10 NC, Statesville. Iredell-Statesville Coin Club 19th Annual Show. Civic Center, 300 S. Center St. A: Free. T: 70. Bill Brewer, 560 Turnersburg Hwy, Statesville, NC, 28677. PH: 704- 450-1639 or [email protected]. Aug 23-24 NC, Newbern. Original Coin & Currency Show. Riverfront Convention Center, 203 S. Front St.. A: Free. Stacy Silvers. PH: 919- 723-1410. Sep 12-14 NC, Charlotte. Carolina Coin & Currency Show. Metrolina Trade Show Expo., 7100 Statesville Rd.. A: Free. Dot Hendrick, PO Box 12052, Raleigh, NC, 27605. PH: 919- 828-9450. Sep 13-14 NC, Jacksonville. Original Coin & Currency Show. Econo Lodge Convention Hall, 701 N Marine Blvd. Stacy Silvers. PH: 919- 790-8544. Sep 19-21 NC, Raleigh. Original Coin & Currency Show. NC State Fair Grounds Martin Building, 1025 Blue Ridge Blvd.. A: Free. Stacy Silvers. PH: 919- 723-1410. Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 Oct 18-19 NC, Wilmington. Wilmington Fall Show. American Legion Post 10, 702 Pine Grove Dr.. A: $1. T: 40. F: $130. Larry Debellis, PO Box 1044, Wilmington, NC, 28402. PH: 910- 471-2581. OHIO Aug 9 OH, Canton. Canton/Route 30 Monthly Coin Show by Canal Coin & Currency. Perry Grange Hall, 6300 Richville Dr. SW. A: Free. T: 28. F: $30. Dennie Lebo, 5870 C Fulton Drive NW, Canton, OH, 44718. PH: 330- 8442138 or [email protected]. Aug 17 OH, Toledo. Blue Ribbon Coin & Stamp Show. Saint Clements Hall, 3030 Tremainsville Rd.. A: Free. T: 70. F: 1-$40, 2-$65, 3-$80. John Begovatz. PH: 419- 9724176 or [email protected]. Aug 17 OH, Hilliard. Columbus Coin Show 3rd Sunday Every Month. Makoy Center, 5462 Center St.. A: $2. T: 30. F: $45. Dan Rich, PO Box 340123, Columbus, OH, 43234. PH: 614- 785-9967 or [email protected]. Aug 17 OH, Eastlake. Super Mega Pawn Monthly Show. Super Mega Pawn, 35500 Lakeland Blvd. A: Free. T: 27. F: $35-$65. Al Hancovsky. PH: 440- 918-7740. Aug 24 OH, Cincinnati. Greenhills Classic Show. American Legion Post 530, 11100 Winton Rd.. A: Free. T: 55. F: $42. Jim Huffman, PO Box 63, Xenia, OH, 45385. PH: 937- 376-2807 or numismaniaofohio@ woh.rr.com. Aug 29-31 OH, Dublin. Ohio State Coin Show. Crown Plaza Hotel, 600 Metro Place North. A: $4. T: 125. Evan Brill, PMB 239, 829 Bethel Rd, Columbus, OH, 43214. PH: 614- 4515055 or [email protected]. Sep 7 OH, Cleveland. Universal Coin, Currency & Stamp Show. American Legion Hall, 22001 Brook Park Rd & West 220 St. A: Free. T: 36. John Cotleur. PH: 440- 864-7473. Sep 13 OH, Canton. Canton/Route 30 Monthly Coin Show by Canal Coin & Currency. Perry Grange Hall, 6300 Richville Dr. SW. A: Free. T: 28. F: $30. Dennie Lebo, 5870 C Fulton Drive NW, Canton, OH, 44718. PH: 330- 8442138 or [email protected]. Sep 21 OH, Toledo. Blue Ribbon Coin & Stamp Show. Saint Clements Hall, 3030 Tremainsville Rd.. A: Free. T: 45. F: 1-$40, 2-$65, 3-$80. John Begovatz. PH: 419- 9724176 or [email protected]. Sep 21 OH, Hilliard. Columbus Coin Show 3rd Sunday Every Month. Makoy Center, 5462 Center St.. A: $2. T: 30. F: $45. Dan Rich, PO Box 340123, Columbus, OH, 43234. PH: 614- 785-9967 or [email protected]. Sep 21 OH, Eastlake. Super Mega Pawn Monthly Show. Super Mega Pawn, 35500 Lakeland Blvd. A: Free. T: 27. F: $35-$65. Al Hancovsky. PH: 440- 918-7740. Sep 28 OH, Cincinnati. Greenhills Classic Show. American Legion Post 530, 11100 Winton Rd.. A: Free. T: 55. F: $42. Jim Huffman, PO Box 63, Xenia, OH, 45385. PH: 937- 376-2807 or numismaniaofohio@ woh.rr.com. OKLAHOMA Sep 6-7 OK, Tulsa. ONA Fall Show. Elks Lodge, 5335 S. Harvard. A: Free. T: 40. F: $120. Shane Cornell, PO Box 277, Jenks, OK, 74037. PH: 918- 629-0208 or smcornell@ cox.net. Sep 12-13 OK, Duncan. Duncan’s Annual Coin Show. Stephens County Fairgrounds , 1618 South 13th. A: Free. T: 50. F: $70. Ed McGill, PO Box 684, Duncan, OK, 73533. PH: 580- Shows/Page 54 SUPPLIES Call for our FREE 2014 Supply Catalog COWENS STAPLE CARDBOARD HOLDERS BOURSE COIN TRAYS (100 minimum per size) Red or Black 2x2 or 1½x1½ List $18.95 ea. 1/15.25, 6/79.50, 18/204.65 Dealer Showcase (holds 4 trays) 144.95 100 2X2 Sizes: 1¢, 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, Lg $, Sm $ 1½ X 1½ Sizes: 1¢, 5¢, 25¢, 50¢, Sm $ 2x2 1½x1½ 2x2 1½x1½ 2x2 1½x1½ 2.20 2.35 1,000 20.95 21.95 3,000 58.75 61.80 Plier type stapler $17.95; Staples 5,050 per box $3.40 Boxes available $1.15 ea. or 12/10.80 COIN BOXES Size Whitman Slab (20) PCGS Slab (20) NGC Slab (20) 2x2x9 12” Dbl Row (slab) 14” Dbl Row (2x2) Type Plastic Plastic Plastic Plastic Board Board List 12.99 7.95 11.95 5.99 6.75 6.75 Net 8.95 5.95 8.95 3.95 4.95 4.95 Doz. 93.60 67.20 96.00 42.95 48.60 48.60 PLASTIC 2x2 COIN HOLDERS 8 Sizes: 1¢, 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, Large $, Small $ or American Eagle $ List 89¢ ea., 10/6.25, Box of 25 (one size) 11.75 COIN CLEANERS Prod. Ea. Doz. MS70 (8 oz.) 6.95 67.20 Koinsolv (16 oz.) 31.95 3/83.85 Jeweluster (Ez-est) (5 oz) 3.35 34.95 Jeweluster (gallon) 31.45 4/111.95 Prod. Ea. Doz. Copper Coin Cleaner 10.50 — Nic-A-Date 4.50 43.15 Coin Care (2 oz.) 4.95 46.95 Silica Gel (40 gram) 5.20 6/27.00 Cotton Gloves (pair) 2.40 21.60 LIGHTHOUSE COIN CAPSULES SIZES: 1¢, 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, Large $, Small $ or American Eagle$ $3.40 per pack of 10 pieces 8 100 pc (same size) list $38.50 - net $28.95 3-RING COIN & CURRENCY PAGES Gallery Vinyl Pages 3, 4, 12, 20, 30 Pocket 10 Pages $6.40 25 Pages 13.95 ONE size only 100 Pages 48.00 300 Pages 131.95 BCW PVC Free 3, 4 or 20 Pocket 10 Pages 3.50 25 Pages 7.75 ONE size only 100 Pages 23.50 300 Pages 58.50 2” 3 Ring Binders 1 pc 6.85 6 pcs $35.10 SUPERSAFE SELF SEALING 2X2’s Available in: 1¢, 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, $1.00, sm $1.00 & ass’t, 50 Pieces (ONE size) 8.35 1,000 Pieces (ONE size) 105.95 UNPLASTICIZED CURRENCY HOLDERS 10 25 100 300 Fract. 2.10 5.00 16.95 42.00 Medium 2.60 6.25 18.25 51.00 Large 10 25 100 300 2.70 6.75 20.95 60.00 CURRENCY BOXES Medium $4.25 ea. 12/42.00 • Large $4.60 ea. 12/45.35 DOUBLE POCKET FLIPS WITH INSERTS Safety Safety Safety Qty 2x2 2½x2½ NO INSERTS 100 6.35 9.95 2x2 2½x2½ 1,000 55.65 87.50 44.95 69.65 E.T. SAFLIP MYLAR 2x2 50 Pieces (no inserts) .............................6.95 E.T. SAFLIP 2½x2½ 50 Pieces (no inserts) .............................8.95 2x2 COIN ENVELOPES Type Vinyl 100 5.95 500 26.95 1,000 45.90 Type Paper 100 4.95 500 17.55 1,000 33.95 ROUND SCREW TOP COIN TUBES OR SQUARE COIN TUBES 8 Sizes: 1¢, 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, Lg. $, Sm. $, or AE$ ROUND SQUARE 1 Pc to 100 Pc 28¢ each 84¢ each 500 (in groups of 100) 107.50 142.50 For Lg. $ & AE $ size add 10¢ per tube. ONE Size Only Round Square 100 1¢ thru 50¢ & sm $ 21.95 28.95 100 Lg. $ or AE $ 28.95 Lg. $ Only 38.00 3/4 In. Labels 200 pcs. 1.75 Am. Eagle 38.95 POCKET MAGNIFIERS Bausch & Lomb 5x 16 x Loupe #1020 10x LED illum mag Clip-on 5x eyeglass loupe Zoom LED scope 20x-40x Digital scope 20x-200x List 11.60 13.99 12.95 8.95 29.95 169.95 Net 8.70 9.80 9.70 6.70 23.95 135.95 ea. Quantity 6/45.25 6/50.40 6/50.50 6/34.90 5/62.90 WHITMAN OR HARRIS FOLDERS All titles $2.60 each • 60 or more $2.40 each STANDARD REFERENCE CATALOGS List Net Doz. 2015 Blue Book of US Coins Softcover 9.95 6.95 72.65 Red Book of US Coins Professional 5th Ed 29.95 19.45 6/98.80 2015 Red Book of US Coins Spiral Soft Cover 14.95 8.95 98.50 2015 Red Book of US Coins Hard Cover 16.95 10.25 110.95 2015 Red Book of US Coins Large Print 29.95 17.95 197.67 American Platinum Eagles, Guide to: Moy 29.95 20.95 3/53.85 American Silver Eagles, Guide to: Mercanti 2nd Ed. 29.95 20.95 3/53.85 ANA Grading Guide 7th Ed. 19.95 13.95 6/71.85 Auth. Ref. to Barber Halves 49.95 34.95 3/89.95 Auth. Ref. to Barber Quarters 33.95 23.75 3/59.35 Auth. Ref. to Barber Dimes 32.95 23.10 3/59.35 Above 3 Barber Books 116.85 SPECIAL $52.50 Buffalo Coins: Bisons on Coins, Tokens, Medals, Paper 14.95 10.50 6/53.70 Buffalo Nickel 3rd Ed. (Lange) 42.95 29.95 3/77.40 Canadian Coins by Haxby 2014 18.95 13.75 6/68.10 Canadian Coins Vol. 1 Numismatic Iss. 24.95 18.70 6/97.30 Canadian Coins Vol 2 Collector/Maple 34.95 26.20 6/136.20 Canadian Gov’t Paper Money 26th Ed by Graham 29.95 22.45 3/58.40 Carson City Morgan Dollars, by Crum, Ungar, Oxman 24.95 17.45 6/89.70 Charleton Canadian Coins 2014 Numis. Iss. 24.95 18.70 3/48.60 Cherry Pickers Vol. 1 5th Ed. (Half Cent to Jeff 5¢) 39.95 27.95 3/71.95 Cherry Pickers 5th Ed. Vol. 2, 1/2 Dime-up 39.95 27.95 3/71.95 Coin Chemistry 3rd Ed. 12.95 9.75 6/46.80 Collecting World Coins (Circulating Coins) 14th Ed. 44.95 31.50 3/81.00 Commem. Coins of the U.S. by Swiatek SPECIAL $89.95 Confederate Paper Money/Fricke, Field Edition 2014 39.95 29.95 3/71.90 Confederate States Paper Money 12th 29.99 20.99 6/108.00 Early 1/4 $ of U.S. 1796-1838 by Rea 100.00 75.00 3/180.00 German Coins 1501+Up 3rd Ed. 125.00 87.50 3/225.00 Gold Coins of the Dahlonga Mint 1838-1861 3rd Ed. 39.95 29.95 3/71.85 Modern Commem Coins 1982+Up 22.99 16.10 6/82.20 Morgan/Peace $ Van Allen 4th Ed. 99.95 74.95 3/191.85 Morgan $, America’s Love Affair w/a Legendary Coin 29.95 20.95 6/152.80 Obsolete Paper Money Vol 1 Intro/Coll. & Historians 39.95 27.95 3/71.85 Obsolete Paper Money Vol 2 New England:CT,ME,NH 49.95 34.95 3/89.85 Overton’s Early 50c Die Varieties, 1794-1836 5th Ed. 85.00 63.75 4/221.00 Paper of U.S./Friedburg 20th Ed. Hard 67.50 SPECIAL $39.95 Photograde “Grading Guide” 14.95 10.45 6/53.70 Red Book, Buffalo & Jefferson Nickels 19.95 13.95 6/71.70 Red Book, Flying Eagle/Indian Cent 19.95 13.95 6/71.70 Red Book, Lincoln Cents (by Bowers) 19.95 13.95 6/71.70 Red Book, Morgan $ 4th Ed. (Bowers) 19.95 13.95 6/71.70 Red Book Peace Dollars by Bowers 19.95 13.95 6/71.70 Red Book U.. Paper Money 4th Ed. 24.95 17.50 6/89.70 Red Book U.S. Proof Sets 2nd Ed. 19.95 13.95 6/70.00 Roman Coins & Values, Vol. 4 93.95 79.50 3/210.45 Secret History of First U.S. Mint 24.95 17.45 6/89.70 Silver/Trade Dollars of te US by Bowers 19.95 13.95 3/35.85 South Asian Coins & Paper, Indian Ed. 60.00 42.00 3/108.00 Spink’s Coins of England & UK 49th Ed. by Skingley 49.95 39.95 3/104.85 U.S. Military Pay Cert. by Chambliss 29.95 20.95 6/107.70 U.S. Silver Dollars 1794-1804 by Bowers 49.95 39.95 — Unusual World Coins 6th Ed. 54.99 38.50 659.00 Krause World Coins 1601-1700 5th Ed. 85.00 59.50 3/153.00 Krause World Coins 1701-1800 6th Ed. 85.00 59.50 3/153.00 Krause World Coins 1801-1900 7th Ed. 85.00 59.50 3/153.00 Krause World Coins 1901-2000 42nd 70.00 49.00 4/168.00 Krause World Coins 2001 & Up 9th Ed 45.00 31.50 4/108.00 World Paper-Pick Vol. I Spec. Iss. 12th Ed. 90.00 62.95 3/162.00 World Paper Pick Vol. III 1961-Date 20th Ed. 70.00 48.95 3/126.00 Visa, MasterCard and Discover accepted (in Continental U.S.). New York residents add proper sales tax. Please provide street address for shipments. Shipping: East of Miss. river under $89.50, add $8.95, over $89.50 add 10%; West of Miss. River under $66.95 add $9.95, over $66.95 add 15%. Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico add 20% for shipping, minimum $12.95. Prices subject to change without notice. Orders under $35.00 must be accompanied by check or placed at our website. Visit our Web site at www.brooklyngallery.com – SERVING YOU FOR 43 YEARS – BROOKLYN GALLERY COINS & STAMPS INC. 8725 4th Ave., Dept. NNW • (718) 745-5701 • Fax (718) 745-2775 • Brooklyn, New York 11209-0003 www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 53 Shows/from Page 52 252-3818 or PH: 580- 475-4570. OREGON Aug 16-17 OR, Florence. Annual Florence Coin Show. Event Center, 715 Quince Street. A: Free. T: 64. F: $150. Dennis Hankins, PO Box 213, Sweet Home, OR, 97386. Terry Woodward, PH: 541- 997-2682 or Dennis, PH: 541- 401-0949 or sandy642@hotmail. com. PENNSYLVANIA Aug 17 PA, Trevose. Coin Show. Fire House, 4900 Street Rd.. A: Free. T: 42. F: $80-$135. John Bachman, PO Box 44, Magnolia, DE, 19962. PH: 610- 937-0332 or johnbach@ comcast.net. Aug 17 PA, Shrewsbury. Coin Show. Fire Hall, 21 West Forrest Ave. A: Free. T: 40. F: $65. Fred Beihl. PH: 717- 993-3163 or [email protected] or www.auctionzip.com/ pa.html. Aug 23 PA, Lebanon. 74th Lebanon Valley Coin Club Show. Lebanon Valley Expo & Fairgrounds, 80 Rocherty Road. A: Free. T: 30. F: $80-$85. Ken Zimmerman, 41 Jay Ann Drive, Lebanon, PA, 17042. PH: 717- 2720037 or [email protected]. Aug 24 PA, Fort Washington. Tri-State Coin & Stamp Show. Holiday Inn, Exit 339 of PA Tpke., 309 Expwy.. A: Free. F: $80. Allen Brock. PH: 305- 852-7678. Sep 19-21 PA, Monroeville. C.A.M.P. Invitational Fall Coin Show. Monroeville Convention Ctr., South Wing, 209 Mall Blvd. A: Free. T: 100. F: $250. Kathy or John Paul Sarosi *, PO Box 1315, Johnstown, PA, 15907. PH: 814- ADVERTISER’S INDEX I A Alex Delatola Corp. . 41 IL Numismatic Assoc. ANACS .................... 21 .............................. 50 Archives Int’l ........... 39 K B Kleinman, I.............. 42 Battlefield Coin Show L .............................. 51 L & C Coins ............ 31 Beymer, Jack........... 11 Leidman, Julian....... 45 Brooklyn Gallery...... 53 M C M&R Coins ............. 42 Certified Acceptance Corp ...................... 37 MI State Numis. Civitas Galleries ........ 7 Society .................. 50 CK Shows ............... 47 N Coast to Coast Coins N.G.C. ..................... 33 .......................... 2, 3 National Coin & CoinWeek ................ 55 Currency Conv....... 46 D S Distinctive Coins Shenandoah Valley ......................... 22,23 Coin Club .............. 51 F Silvertowne, LP ....... 35 Fred Weinberg Inc... 43 Skyline Coins ........ 8, 9 Stack’s-Bowers G Galleries .................. 5 Goldberg’s Coins & Collectibles ............ 15 Steinberg’s .............. 19 The advertisers’ index is provided as a reader service. Occasional last-minute changes may result in ads appearing on pages other than those listed here. The publisher assumes no liability for omissions or errors. 54 535-5766. Sep 20 PA, Indiana. 56th Annual Fall Coin Club Show. S&T Bank Arena, 497 East Pike Road. A: Free. T: 40. F: $70. John F. Busovicki, 510 Walcott St., Clymer, PA, 15728. PH: 724254-2471. Sep 20-21 PA, Gettysburg. Battlefield Coin Show. Eisenhower Hotel & Conference Center Ballroom, 2634 Emmitsburg Road. A: Free. T: 600. F: $250. Michael Dixon, 5601 Bobolink Pl, New Market, MD, 21774. PH: 301- 788-6232 or [email protected]. Sep 21 PA, Trevose. Coin Show. Fire House, 4900 Street Rd.. A: Free. T: 42. F: $80-$135. John Bachman, PO Box 44, Magnolia, DE, 19962. PH: 610- 937-0332 or johnbach@ comcast.net. Sep 28 PA, Fort Washington. Tri-State Coin & Stamp Show. Holiday Inn, Exit 339 of PA Tpke., 309 Expwy.. A: Free. F: $80. Allen Brock. PH: 305- 852-7678. RHODE ISLAND Sep 21 RI, Woonsocket. Blackstone Valley Coin Club Show. Elks Lodge #850, 380 Social St.. A: Free. F: $30. Mike McDonald, PO Box 435, Douglas, MA, 01516. PH: 774- 280-4333. SOUTH CAROLINA Sep 5-7 SC, Ladson. Low Country Coin Club Winter Show. Exchange Park Fairgrounds , 9850 Hwy 78. A: Free. T: 50. Low Country Coin Club, PO Box 62248, North Charleston, SC, 29419. Randy Clark, PH: 843- 367-0141 or [email protected]. Sep 27 SC, Camden. Camden Coin Club’s Fall Coin Show. Camden Recreation Dept., 1042 W. Dekalb St.. T: 25. Pascal Brock, 169 Wildwood Ln, Lugoff, SC, 29078. PH: 803438-2866 or [email protected] or [email protected] or www.sc-na.org. SOUTH DAKOTA Sep 13 SD, Piedmont. Black Hills Coin & Stamp Club. Piedmont Fire Dept., 15755 Sturgis Rd. . A: Free. F: $40. Jim Coulthard. PH: 605381-4625 or [email protected]. TENNESSEE Sep 6 TN, Knoxville. Coin Show. Rothchild Center, 8807 Kingston Pike. A: Free. T: 25. Robert Bruner, POB 465, Strawberry Plains, TN, 37871. PH: 865- 660-8692 or rcb03@ bellsouth.net. Sep 6-7 TN, Jackson. 54th Annual Coin Show. Madison County Agricultural Extension Service Auditorium, 309 North Parkway. SH: 9am-3pm. A: Free. T: 32. Mac Mann. PH: 731394-3972 or [email protected]. TEXAS Aug 9 TX, Sherman. Texoma Coin Show. Quality Inn, 3605 Hwy 75 South Exit 56. A: Free. T: 30. F: $60-$80. Gary Rollins, PO Box 744, McKinney, TX, 75070. PH: 972- 978-1611 or [email protected]. Aug 15-17 TX, Richardson. Plano Coin Show. Civic Center, 411 Arapaho Rd. A: Free. T: 85. F: $195. Mark Schroeder, 805 E 15th St, Plano, TX, 75074. PH: 972- 424-1405 or [email protected]. Aug 23-24 TX, Amarillo. Amarillo Coin & Currency Show. Civic Center, Regency Room, 401 S Buchanan. A: $3. T: 40. F: $200. Jim Fitzgerald *. PH: 817- 688-6994 or [email protected]. Sep 6-7 TX, Ft. Worth. Cowtown Coin Show. Lockheed-Martin Rec. Center, 3400 S. Bryant Irvin Rd.. A: $3. T: 53. F: $245. Gary Andrews, 2901 Flat Rock Rd., Azle, tx, 76020. PH: 817444-4813 or [email protected]. Numismatic News EXPRESS / August 19, 2014 Sep 13 TX, Waco. Waco Fall Coin Show. Bellmead Civic Center , 3900 Parrish. SP: Waco Coin Club. A: $2. T: 32. F: $75. Tom Campbell, 312 Blue Bonnet Circ., McGreger, TX, 76657. PH: 254- 224-7761 or trcam_51@ hotmail.com. Sep 13 TX, Beaumont. Coin Show. Civic Center, 701 Main St. A: $2. T: 20. F: $90. Jerry Williams, PO Box 302, Beaumont, TX, 77704. PH: 409- 385-7028. VERMONT Aug 9 VT, Brattleboro. 2nd Saturday Monthly Coin Show. Holiday Inn Express, Chickering Drive Exit 3 I-91. SH: 8:30am-2:30pm. SP: Tri-Town Shows LLC. A: Free. T: 15. F: $30. Tri Town Coin Shows, Joseph Fuller, 498 Coleman Hill Rd, Rawsonville, VT, 05155. PH: 802- 379-2353 or pepsijoseph@yahoo. com. Aug 10 VT, Barre. Coin Show. American Legion, 320 North Main St. A: $1. , 35 Porters Point Court, Colchester, VT, 05446. PH: 802- 8635711 or [email protected]. Sep 14 VT, Burlington. Burlington Coin & Collectible Show. VFW, 176 South Winooski Ave. A: $1. Robert Larmay, 35 Porters Point Court, Colchester, VT, 05446. PH: 802- 8635711 or [email protected]. VIRGINIA Aug 16-17 VA, Newport News. V.P.C.C. Coin Show. Scottish Rite Masonic Center, 65 Saunders Rd.,. SP: Virginia Peninsula Coin Club. A: Free. F: $100. Richard Schornak, 372 Wythe Creek Rd. #E, Poquoson, VA, 23662. PH: 757- 659-0235 or PH: 757- 4385174 or [email protected] or www. vp-cc.org. Sep 26-28 VA, Fredericksburg. 56th Virginia Numismatic Association Convention, Coin & Currency Show. Expo & Conference Center, 2371 Carl D. Silver Pkwy. T: 150. Gregg Coburn, PO Box 824, Bealeton, VA, 22712. PH: 540- 272-1524 or coburngregg@gmail. com or www.vnaonline.org. WASHINGTON Aug 23-24 WA, Tacoma. Tacoma/Lakewood Coin Club Show. King Oscar’s Convention Ctr., 8820 South Hosmer. A: $1. T: 43. F: $165. David Schmidt, PO Box 11192, Tacoma, wa, 98411. PH: 253- 565-6565 or [email protected]. WISCONSIN Aug 17 WI, Fond du Lac. Coin Club Show. Holiday Inn, 625 Rolling Meadows Dr. A: Free. T: 65. F: $45. Randy Miller, PO Box 254, Oshkosh, WI, 54903. PH: 920- 231-6161 or [email protected]. Sep 7 WI, Menomonie. Coin Show. Econo Lodge Motel Conference Room, just south of I-94 exit 41. A: Free. T: 18. F: $45-$80. Terry Parzyck, 500 E. Main St., Rm. 305, Menomonie, WI, 54751. PH: 715- 231-4075 or [email protected]. WYOMING Sep 6-7 WY, Cheyenne. Fall Coin Show. Laramie County Community College, 1400 E. College Dr.. A: $1. F: $80. Bill Arnold, PO Box 20233, Cheyenne, WY, 82003. PH: 307- 630-2350 or [email protected]. FOREIGN Sep 7 Netherlands, Tilburg. International Coin Fair Tilburg. Best Western Hotel “de Druiventros”, Bosscheweg 11, 5056PP Berkel Enschot. M Mannesse. muntenbeurs@gmail. comwww.muntenbeurs-tilburl.nl www.numismaticnews.com / August 19, 2014 55