A 1920 Mercury head dime is fairly common. It is 90% silver and 10% copper, with a value of $2.00 just for the silver. The collectible value is $4.00-$8.00 for an average circulated coin.
It's a common date, worth about $2 for its silver content.
It's worth about $2.30 for its silver content.
dimes made in the 1920's are called mercury dimes. they aren't that rare so most of them are only worth their silver content. which is around $1.20
They're all worth at least $2 for their silver content.
If it was post-1964 it is worth ten cents, so long as you can get someone to recognize it as a dime. If it is pre-1965 and made out of silver, it is worth its silver content, worth up to around $1.85.
It's worth at least $2 for its silver content, and possibly more depending on condition.
About $1 for the silver content unless it is a proof or very high-grade uncirculated coin.
1920 is a common date for mercury dimes. In circulated condition, your dime is worth about $2 in silver melt. In better shape it might be worth closer to $10 or even more if well struck and completely uncirculated.
Because of the silver content in the dime, quarter(s) and half dollar.
To a collector it worth around 2 dollars fir the silver content.
That's Roosevelt, not "Roseavelt" It can't be a half dollar either, because FDR's picture is on the dime. If you have a 1960 Roosevelt dime it's worth about $1 for its silver content. If you have a 1960 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN half dollar it's worth about $5 for its silver content.
It isn't a "JS" (and JS isn't the mintmark, the mintmark, if any would be found on the reverse) dime. It is a Roosevelt Dime, the JS are the designer's initials. It is silver, however, and worth around $2.15 in silver content.