A silver dollar bill with a full ladder refers to the serial number on the bill either increasing or decreasing in numerical order. For example: A12345678 or A87654321.
There's no difference. All silver dollars minted in 1894 used the Morgan design, named for the famous designer George T. Morgan.
A Morgan dollar IS a silver dollar. The term Morgan refers to the designer George T. Morgan who created the images used from 1878 to 1904 and in 1921.
There is no difference. They are the same coin but many people refer to them as "Liberty Dollars".
Replica coins are required to have the word "COPY" stamped on them somewhere.
Aside from the minor differences in design, the greatest difference between the US Trade Dollar and the Seated Liberty Dollar is the weight. The Liberty Seated Dollar weighs 26.73 grams while the US Trade Dollar weighs 27.22 grams. Both contained 90% silver and 10% copper altthough the Trade Dollar had slightly more silver in it. The Trade Dollar was issued primarily for circulation in the Orient while the Seated Liberty Dollar was issued for circulation in the USA.
If it has the CC mintmark it means it was made at the Carson City mint.
Generally speaking, the Carson City silver dollar will have a greater value than one minted elsewhere during the same time period.
The 1921 Chapman was a proof version of the Morgan Dollar. Very few were minted and because of this, they command a premium price.
There's a set of pictures at the site under Related Links.
Please post a new and rephrased question. You're asking if a Carson City dollar is a Carson City dollar, which is of course ALWAYS true.
Silver dollars were minted for use in circulation and spending. They contained $1 worth of silver metal, about 0.77 troy ounces at the time. Silver rounds are slightly larger (one full troy ounce, usually), and are a method of collecting and/or investing in silver. Their "one dollar" denomination is artificial, and is shown only to meet legal requirements.
All proof silver dollars are silver dollars, but not all silver dollars are proofs. That's because proof coins are specially struck for collectors, while (at least up till 1935 in the US) regular silver dollars were struck for use in ordinary commerce. Please see the Related Question for more details.