1981
Debt settlement by far. If you go through bankruptcy, you may still owe and have to pay the debts, AND you will have this ugly mark on your credit rating that will haunt you for the next seven year or longer. Best option is not to go into debt. Pay cash whenever possible.
There is no such thing as a real US $1,000,000,000 (one billion dollar) bill. However, there are some currencies that have issued banknotes of one billion or more of their currency units. The Weimar Republic in Germany issued 100 trillion Mark bills (100,000,000,000,000 Marks), and just after World War II Hungary issued banknotes in the amount of 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 (100 quintillion) pengo.
The U.S. didn't mint any silver dollars in 1920.
There is always an advantage to paying off any debt. The seven year rule does not apply to all judgments. Many judgments can be and are renewed until the debt is satisfied.
Total income surpasses the million dollar mark.
Oh YES. India was a member of the elite group of country's whose market share is over a Trillion US Dollars. The Indian market had first achieved a trillion-dollar size about four and half years ago on May 28, 2007. It was a historic landmark, but about a year later on July 1, 2008 it lost its tag of "A Trillion dollar market". However, India again joined this elite club of markets with trillion-dollar valuation about a year later on June 3, 2009. The Indian market was, in fact, seen inching towards the two-trillion dollar mark at least twice in the past; first in early 2008 and then at the beginning of 2011 when our Market Size was as high as USD 1.9 trillion
The Mark (or Deutsche Mark) was the German monetary unit prior to the Euro. It was the equivalent of the Dollar in America and the Pound in England. However, English speakers still refer to it as the Mark. It is not called the German Dollar or the German Pound.
The mint mark on any Morgan dollar is on the reverse above the letters DO in dollar.
above the DO in the dollar
There is no mint mark on the 1921 Peace dollar because they were all minted in Philadelphia and thus carry no mint mark.
The mint mark is on the reverse of the coin between the tail and the D in the word dollar.
No mint mark means the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
a pfennig to a mark is a cent to a dollar~ in a mark, it is 100 pfennig~
above the d on dollar
above the DO in dollar on the back :]
The mint mark on a Morgan dollar (if any) will be found on the reverse of the coin under the wreath between the "D" and "O" in "DOLLAR".
By the mint mark on the reverse of the coin, but silver dollar coins with no mint mark are made in Philadelphia