There were no $50 silver certificates issued in 1918. However, there were National Currency Notes issued that have a somewhat similar blue seal.
If you do have one of these you will need to have it checked by a currency expert to make sure it is not a counterfeit or reproduction because a genuine bill can be worth in excess of $7000 depending on its condition.
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The bill must be a $1 silver certificate. All $2 bills issued after 1918 are either US Notes or Federal Reserve Notes, and none were dated 1935.
There are no 1918 silver dollars Please see the Related Question for information about 1922 dollars.
A 1918 US $100 bill should be a National Currency Federal Reserve Banknote; the last $100 silver certificates were dated 1891. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1918 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
Despite its blue seal, your bill should say "National Currency" rather than "Silver Certificate" across the top front. Seal colors weren't standardized until 1928 and many different types of bills used blue seals prior to that year. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1918 US 1 dollar bill?" for more information.
If the coin shows so much wear you can't read the date, value is only for the silver about a dollar