Face value to $70 depending on condition.
BTW, the seal should be on the bill's front. If it's on the same side as the picture of the U.S. Capitol, then you have a printing error that could be worth several times its face value, but you'd need to have it appraised in person by someone who specializes in error currency.
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The government printed special bills for use by troops in North Africa during WWII. They had different colored seals and bore the date 1934 even though they were made about a decade later. These are the rarest of the $10 series - a bill with a yellow seal but no series letter under the date might sell for $1200.-$5000. at auction in circulated condition. An uncirculated one might go for over $10,000.
There were several different types of $10 bill printed with the 1934 date. Check the bill's seal color (blue, green, brown, etc) and whether there's a small letter next to the date.Auction values as of 07/2009:Green seal Federal Reserve Notes$12 to $20 in circulated condition, regardless of the series letter next to the date.Blue seal Silver CertificatesNo series letter next to the date: $13.-$25.A: $13.-$30.B: $50.-$300.C or D: $20.-$60.Yellow seal Silver Certificates with "North Africa"No series letter next to the date: $1200.-$5000.A: $20.-$60.Brown seal Silver Certificates with "Hawaii"$45.-$75The North Africa and Hawaii notes were printed for use in war zones. If captured by the enemy they could be invalidated quickly, preventing their use for buying supplied or weapons.That motto wasn't added to U.S. $10 bills until the 1960s so its absence on older notes is NOT an error.
They have a silver melt value of a round $5.
The 1825 one cent (penny) is worth about $5000 used condition and if its a uncirculated is worth about $25,000 dollar but to make sure check with ur local coin dealers.
US $500, $1000, $5000 and $10000 bills were last printed in 1945, but all carried the series dates 1934 or 1934-A. You could still get one from a bank up till July, 1969. That year President Nixon issued an executive order suspending further distribution of high-value bills in an effort to combat organized crime. The bills were never demonetized and are still legal to have or spend, but any that are redeemed at a bank are destroyed by the Treasury. They've effectively been out of circulation since the mid-1970s.