Assuming the coin is circulated, the 1918-S Liberty Walking half is a better date coin. For an accurate assessment of value the coin needs to be seen and graded. Most coins show a lot of wear. In general retail values for low grade coins are $9.00-$18.00, better grade are $35.00-$91.00 and coins showing almost no wear run from $204.00-$408.00. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer
A 1918 US $100 bill should be a National Currency Federal Reserve Banknote; the last $100 silver certificates were dated 1891. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1918 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
There are no 1918 silver dollars Please see the Related Question for information about 1922 dollars.
The bill must be a $1 silver certificate. All $2 bills issued after 1918 are either US Notes or Federal Reserve Notes, and none were dated 1935.
If the coin shows so much wear you can't read the date, value is only for the silver about a dollar
Look at the coin again and post new question. No US 1 dollar coins are dated 1918.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. There were no federally issued red-seal $2 bills dated 1918.
36.491.942 coins were struck in 1918. Value : about 1 dollar.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. No US bills were dated 1932, and the last $100 bills with blue seals were dated 1918.
3d
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The US didn't print any $5 silver certificates dated 1920. The nearest dates are 1918 and 1923.
No such coin exists. From 1905-1920 there was no dollar coin minted.
Please check again and post a new question. No silver dollars were minted from 1905 to 1920 inclusive. If your coin is actually a HALF dollar (check the back for its denomination!) there's more information at the Related Question.