Prices are subject to change in response to market conditions and availability is not guaranteed. Please read important
customer disclosures on our website or that accompany products purchased, including arbitration agreement.
Gold Basis: $1,330 • Silver Basis $14.75 - Images for representation only and are not to scale. NO DEALERS PLEASE
Follow us
on Facebook
Beaumont, TX
The Exclusive Precious Metals &
Rare Coin Expert of NRA Publications
Proud Sponsor: Eddie Eagle
GunSafe® Program
- 8700
Vault Verification: NAMHUGS0819W
Offer Expires: 08/20/
LARGER QUANTITIES AVAILABLE! Call for bulk shipping terms.
Money Order or Check
Call 24/
4 7 Time Numismatic Literary Guild
Award-Winning Best Dealer Publications
4 1st Place Best Brochure
& Best Electronic Newsletter
Press Club of Southeast Texas
America’s Gold Expert®
AUTHORED BY
DR. MIKE
Two Major Banks Predict
Gold & Silver will Soar!
Commerzbank Predicts $1,500 Gold and $20 Silver in 2019 &
Goldman Sachs Now Sees $1,450 Gold by Year’s End.
Don’t
Miss Out
CALL NOW 1.800.321.
“Like George Washington I believe
the three precious metals of
freedom are gold, silver and lead.”
FREE Kit
Shipping
Limit 1 per
household
check / wire price • limit 1 per household check / wire price • limit 6 per household
Only
As low as $
139
00
each Only
As low as $
16
50
each
2019 $5 American Gold Eagle
1/10oz Gold • Brilliant Uncirculated
2019 $1 American Silver Eagle
1 oz .999 Fine Silver • Brilliant Uncirculated
PHONE ORDERS ONLY • FREE SHIPPING On advertised offers $99 & above^ (add $8 on orders under $99)
Special Introductory Below Cost Offer on the Most Popular
IRA Eligible Gold & Silver Bullion Coins in the World
IRA
APPROVED
IRA
APPROVED
Record
2019
Sales
- GOLD GUIDE 3. GOLD IRA KIT
New
We make setting up a gold
IRA easy for you.
1st Place
Best Electronic Newsletter
1st Place
Best Dealer Publication
2020 SILVER
- SECRETS REPORT
Award-Winning
Silver, Gold & IRA Kit!
FREE
A Dollar of No Real Value?
Shortly after the Battle of Bunker (Breed’s) Hill on
June 17, 1775 – two months after Lexington and
Concord – the Continental Congress was already
running short of money, so on June 22, Congress
printed the first run ($2 million) of Continentals, a
piece of paper backed by faith alone.
Since these tiny new pasteboards were not backed
by gold, merchants demanded more Continentals
for the same amount of goods. Before long, General
Washington complained that “a wagon load of
currency will hardly purchase a wagon load of
provisions.”
By the end of the Revolutionary War in 1781, the
Continental was virtually worthless. Because of this
experience, the phrase “not worth a Continental”
became a common way to describe anything of no
real value.