The series dates 1928, 1935, and 1957 all had third runs with a "B" series letter. Check your bill's date, then look at the Related Questions for a specific answer.
In worn condition, face value only. If it's only slightly worn, up to $8.
The value of a 1959 series B ten dollar bill can change often. As of 2014, online auctions have such bills priced between 18 and 25 dollars.
These are very common among collectors and retail for only about 25 to 50 cents above face value.
Depending on condition, $1.50 to $3.00. Even though they're no longer in circulation they're quite common, I'm afraid.
If worn from circulation, face value to $70 depending on the amount of wear. If crisp and unfolded, series dates 1934, 1934C and 1934D retail for about $125; 1934A and B are about $175.
1934 ten dollar bill green with B stamp
$5.00
Both $5 and $10 silver certificates were printed with that series date and letter. Please check the Related Questions for specific answers.
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 B US 5 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
As of 04/2013: 1934: $625.-$1300. circulated, $1500+ uncirculated. 1934-A: $610.-$1200. circulated, $1400+ uncirculated. 1934-B, 1934-C: None released to circulation.
It depends on the series letter that may be next to the date. Value ranges, depending on condition, are: No letter or A: $22.-$24. B: $22.-$26. C: $22.-$28. D: $22.-$30.
100-1000 or so depending on specifics
1934 B is the rarest silver certificate with that series date. As of 10/2012 retail values are $50 to $300 for a circulated bill, while uncirculated ones sell in excess of $2000. Note that 1934 B $10 bills were also issued as Federal Reserve Notes. A silver certificate will have those words across the top, and the serial numbers and seal are blue. Federal Reserve Notes have a green seal and numbers.
1934 $10 silver certificates only carried series letters A - D. Please check again and post a new question. You may have confused the series letter with part of the serial number or a printing plate id. The series letter will be right next to the date; note however that the first issue in a given year is always blank. That means an "A" bill is actually the second series, "B" is the third, etc.
$3 to $6 depending on condition
The value of the Stevens WestPoint 20 GA Model 168 series B shotgun ranges between 120 and 200 United States dollars.