All old U.S. currency is still legal tender at face value.
Huge numbers of Series 1976 $2 bills were printed, so any you might get in change have no real added value. Even a top-quality uncirculated one may sell for only $5 or so. The same is true for later-date bills as well, so feel free to spend any that you might get in change or from a bank.
1928 A and 1928 B are the only small-size $2 bills that carry a significant premium. Circulated bills with an "A" series letter might bring $50 to $80 at retail depending on their condition, while "B" bills retail for $70 to $175. By contrast, nearly all pre-1928, large-size $2 bills sell for significant premiums. Values range from $50-$75 for a 1917 $2 US Note up to $550-$2500 for an 1890 Treasury Note. Uncirculated specimens can be worth even more.
There were no Federally-issued $5 bills dated 1905. However at that time bills were also printed by private banks. Please post a new, separate question with more information that might help ID the bill, such as the name of the bank that issued it.
Despite its age these bills are not especially valuable. As of 09/2010 a circulated one might retail for $23-$25, while a nice uncirculated one might bring $35 or so. In 1950, several different series of 20 dollar bills were in circulation. A series B 20 dollar bill is worth around 30 to 50 dollars.
Laws
you can't unley bill can become a pokemon. p.s. there might be a acion replay code for it. p.s.s that change is silm
Most bills before Congress
sign bills to become laws to veto bills create army
Comgress
The Legislative branch of the government introduces bills to become law.
batty
They die in committee
If most bills are handled by joint committees, how might the purpose and structure of Congress be affected??
Answer The person who signs bills to become laws is the president.He will either sign or he will veto(reject).
The Committee of the Whole functions differently from a general meeting of the House because the Committee of the Whole has a designated purpose. The Committee of the Whole discusses specific bills that might become law. A general meeting of the House is where the votes are cast for the bills.
Both the Senate and the House