The obverse (heads) side looks the same as any other Lincoln cent since 1909, and the reverse (tails) is the same as all other wheat pennies.
They all look the same except for different dates and mintmarks. Lincoln on the obverse and Wheat Ears on the reverse.
Please look at the date again. 1958 was the last year for Wheat Penny's.
1958 was the last year for Wheat penny's, look at the coin again and post new question.
The front of a 1917 penny looks very similar to a present day penny. The reverse had shafts of wheat with ONE CENT and THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
Wheat cents were made from 1909 to 1958. Please check your coin again and post a new question.
It has doubling in liberty and in god we trust and there only 2 unowned
Look at the coin again. The first US one cent coin was struck in 1793.
With the date of 1963 the coin is not a Wheat ear reverse, look at the coin again and post new question.
To set things straight there's no such coin.> Indian, not "indain"> Penny, not "pennie"> Indian Head OR wheat but not "Indian Head Wheat"Indian Head cents were made from 1859 to 1909. Wheat cents were made from 1909 to 1958. They're completely different. There are pictures at many sites - www.coinfacts.com is one place to look.
In you search box of your browser, type in 1937 Wheat Cent and click on images, this will show you what one looks like.
Please look at the coin again. No 1903 U.S. one cent coin can have a D mintmark.
The last year for the Lincoln Wheat cent was 1958. 1959 is the first year for the Memorial reverse. There is an unconfirmed 1959 "mule" cent with the wheat reverse but a 1959 date. It looks just like a standard wheat cent except for its year, but as of this writing (2010) no one has been able to either authenticate the coin or prove that it's a fake, so it remains a mystery.