See the link below for a full explanation.
To clarify things:The bill isn't from Hawaii, it was printed in Washington for use in that territory during WWIIThe seal color is brown rather than redPlease see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 5 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?" for more information.
"F" is the highest series letter for 1928 $5 red-seal notes. Please check your bill again and see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 5 dollar bill with a red seal?" for more information.
Please check the date again. There were no 1968 US bills and the last red-seal $5 bills were dated 1963.
Please check again. The last red-seal $5 bills were dated 1963 and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1964.If the date on your bill is 1963 please see the Related Question "What is the value of a 1963 US 5 dollar bill with a red seal? "
The U.S. didn't print any bills dated 1954. The closest date for a $5 US Note is 1953.Also note that a serial number is mostly just a counter and rarely affects the value of a bill. It's much more important to list the date and series letter plus the seal color.
$5
Many of the bills are valued in price close to $30 each. The exact price will vary depending upon the condition that the bill is in.
Depending on the nature of the error, it could be worth $200 to $500 at retail. Missing serial numbers can occur if the bill wasn't fed through the part of the printing process that adds the seal and serial numbers, or if it was fed in upside down and the seal and serial numbers were printed on the back. In any case it should be seen by a dealer or appraiser who specializes in error currency.
Serial numbers are counters and a security feature but rarely affect a bill's value or help to ID it. Please post a new, separate question with the bill's date and what letter, if any, is next to the date.
To clarify things:The bill isn't from Hawaii, it was printed in Washington for use in that territory during WWIIThe seal color is brown rather than redPlease see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 5 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?" for more information.
wait send me a picture of it and ill clearify it!ps it might be rare!
About $6 to $8. BTW, you don't need to post bills' serial numbers. They almost never affect a bill's value.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The only seal colors used on 1934 A $5 bills were blue, green, yellow, and brown. The serial numbers will be the same color.
If your bill has a red seal and serial numbers it's a United States Note rather than a silver certificate. Please look at the banner across the top of the front of the bill to make sure of the wording, then check one of the Related Questions below for values.
In 1935 several varieties of $5 bills could be found in circulation. The predominant front color was black ink on white, and the reverse was green on white. All had a similar layout with a small portrait of Abraham Lincoln in an oval in the center of the bills' front. The major difference was the seal color and how the bills were backed by the government.United States Notes (1928) - red seals and serial numbers. Backed by the credit of the US. Exchangeable only for other paper money or coins.National Currency (1929) - reddish-brown seal / serial. Same as US Notes.Federal Reserve Notes (1928,1934) - green seal / serial. Same as US Notes.Silver Certificates - (1934) - blue seal / serial. Backed by $5 in silver bullion on deposit with the Treasury. Exchangeable for silver metal in addition to coins and paper currency.
Serial numbers can't readily be used to ID a bill.Please post a new question with its date, seal color, and whether there's a small letter next to the date.
You need to provide more and different information. A bill's serial number isn't usually important to its value. What matters are its seal color, date, and the series letter (if any) next to the date. Please either post a new question with the series letter, or check out the Related Question.