There's no way to know for sure without knowing the bill's series year.
The Chief 1899 $5 dollar silver certificate is paper money.
Yes. These are no longer made. They were last made in 1899.
A 1 dollar denomination silver certificate was not made in 1933 only 10 dollar. That being said if you have one it is fake.....its worth $0.00
You need to be a bit more specific.There are no US government issued silver certificates made since the suspension of the silver standard in 1964.There may be private mints and storage companies that do provide silver certificates (for example, you place one silver dollar in storage and they give you a certificate that promises to pay one silver dollar to whoever redeems that certificate in the future. These certificates, if valid, would be worth what one silver dollar is worth (minus perhaps the fees to actually obtain physical possession of that silver dollar)Or perhaps you are referring to a certificate of authenticity for a 2008 silver eagle. If this is just a certificate of authenticity for a 2008 dated coin, it is nearly worthless without the coin. With the coin it might add a couple of cents to a dollar to its value, but just the piece of paper itself would be worth about 2-3 cents.
The only US bills dated 1935 were $1 silver certificates. $5 silver certificates were printed in the 1934 and 1953 series.
Please check again. It's a United States Note, not a silver certificate. Silver certificates from the 1930s to the 1950s all had blue seals. See the Related Question for more information.
No US dollar coins were made in 1950
To explain, Hawaii-overprint bills weren't made in Hawaii. They were printed during WWII in Washington and had special seals and lettering so they could be declared worthless if captured by the enemy. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar silver certificate with HAWAII on it?".
Yes they are.
By the mint mark on the reverse of the coin, but silver dollar coins with no mint mark are made in Philadelphia
It is made of 90% silver and 10% copper.
There were no silver dollars made in the US in 1946.