The number 982 printed in red ink in the 1911 English census likely indicates that there was a mistake or discrepancy in the record. Red ink was often used to highlight errors or issues that needed attention. It is advisable to review the surrounding information to determine the reason for the red ink annotation.
Its simply because the heading of the initial prospectus of the company is printed in Red Ink.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The last red-seal $1 silver certificates were printed in 1896. All later $1 silver certificates had blue seals. Red ink was used on United States Notes, but none of those were printed in 1957.
Please check the wording on your bill. It's a United States Note, not a silver certificate.
The 'Red Letter Bible' commonly has words spoken by Jesus - usually while on Earth - printed in red ink.
Silver certificates have blue seals, not red. There were no silver certificates printed in 1975. The last red seal $1 bills were printed in 1928. Please check your bill more carefully and post a new question with the correct date and bill type. If there is a letter next to the date include that information. The bill's serial number is not necessary or important.
Not enough information. Most but not all $5 silver certificates were printed with blue ink, and most but not all $5 U.S. notes were printed with red ink. Please post a new question with the bill's date and what letter if any is next to the date. The serial number is not important, so you don't have to copy it.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. > No US $5 bills were printed in 1957, only $1 bills and those had blue seals. > The last red-seal $1 silver certificates were printed in 1896. All later $1 silver certificates had blue seals. Red ink was used on United States Notes, a different form of paper money that was printed up till the late 1960s.
100 pesos each
AnswerAccording to law. To make any alteration in any ones birth certificate, You have to file a motion in a courts of law and the judge has to make an order to Registrar of Birth to alter the name of person concerned in the cage provided for that purpose in the birth certificate by Red ink.
Brown seals were used on bills printed for use in Hawaii, so they could be identified and demonetized if the islands were captured. Red seals were only used on U.S. Notes at that time, but the letters R and S were printed in red ink on some standard blue-seal 1935A certificates. "R" indicates that the bills were printed on regular banknote paper, while the "S" designated experimental bills printed on a different kind of paper. "R" bills have gone for $35.-$125. at auction, while "S" bills have sold for somewhat less.
I think that you see through to the underlying problem. To the best of my knowledge there is nothing special about red ink in signing a tribunal document. There is a special use of red ink in producing liturgical books, and in this case it is called "Rubrics" which are the instructions on what to do while you are pronouncing the words in black. They got their name "Rubric" from the red ink with which they were printed. But this has absolutely nothing to do with tribunal documents.