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Please post a new question. You need to specify the bill's date and what letter is next to the date, not the letter next to the serial number.
What date? What series letter next to the date? What condition are they in? Please post a new question with more details.
"E" is the highest series letter on any US $100 bill, and that was only for the 1950 series. You may be referring to the Federal Reserve District letter instead. The series letter, if any, on US bills is next to the date. In most cases a bill's date and series letter are more important than the district that distributed it. Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question with those two pieces of information.
There is no ñJî series bill. The series letter is next to the date and corresponds to the Treasury Secretary and/or Treasurer who where in office when the bill was printed. The ñJî is almost certainly the Federal Reserve Bank Indicator letter. The face value of the bill would be $140 depending on the condition of the bill.
I think you are confusing the Federal Reserve district letter - the large letter inside the circular seal - with the series letter. The series letter, if there is one, appears next to the date. The highest series letter on a $1 bill was H, on the last silver certificates from the 1935 series. In any case, if you have a green-seal Federal Reserve note, none of these have any extra value if they've been circulated. Uncirculated $1 bills from 1963-69 might sell for as much as $2, that's all. Everything else is face value even if it's uncirculated.
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what is the next letter e h l q
X
S
c
Q
The next (and last) letter is C. Just as a countdown counts backwards, this series is "countdown" spelled backwards.
c is next
y
S
T
It's the letter D of course! Haven't you heard of Jason D?!