Why Charlton Heston Owns Gold
Join Me And Own A Superior Profit Opportunity for the New Millennium:
Has 20th Century America had a more dashing President than Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt?
Teddy’s powerful personality propelled him into the
White House and put him in a position to influence nation’s
history and the designs of our nation’s coinage.
Teddy Roosevelt’s interest in the nation’s
coinage led to America’s most beautiful circulating
gold coins. His cousin, Franklin Roosevelt, ordered the
nearly complete destruction of these artistic coins and
all of the nation’s circulating gold coins.
Within this tale lies a beautiful, mostly unknown story.
And a fabulous opportunity for forward-looking investors
and collectors.
It’s an opportunity to own a coin steeped in history,
created by a legend in the world of sculpting and offering
the potential for substantial long-term growth in value.
If you’re interested in preserving or growing your
savings...
If you’re searching for an asset with superior long
term potential...
If you’re a saver concerned about your retirement
or your children’s inheritance...
...read this story and consider how two or three limited
mintage 1908 $20 gold coins could help you achieve your
financial goals. And act quickly to call-in your reservation
when you decide to add them to your holdings. They are likely
to sell out rapidly!
Charlton Heston
Charlton Heston was born in Evanston, Illinois in 1923.
After studying at Northwestern University and serving in
the Air Force during World War II, he performed on Broadway
and TV. Heston made his Hollywood debut in 1950, earning
an Academy Award for his work in the title role of 1959’s
Ben Hur. He later starred in The Ten Commandments and dozens
of other big screen films. Heston has also been the six
term president of the Screen Actor’s Guild and the
president of the National Rifle Association. Charlton Heston
is a staunch defender of personal rights, including Americans’
right to diversify and protect their savings with museum-quality
gold coins.
Americans Depend On Gold
With paper money outlawed by the Constitution, the United
States struck its first circulating gold coins in 1795.
Coins with face values of $2.50, $5 and $10 filled the nation’s
cash registers and lubricated the pathways of commerce.
In 1849, after the rich California gold fields began producing,
Congress directed the Mint to strike the massive $20 gold
coin for circulation. Like its smaller cousins, the nearly
one ounce $20 gold coins featured the head of Liberty as
the major design.
Enter Teddy Roosevelt, the Rough Rider hero of San Juan
Hill, who was sworn in as President in 1901. Teddy disliked
the nation’s gold coins featuring Liberty’s
head, believing them to be too plain. He favored the beautiful
gold coins struck in Ancient Greece.
Teddy asked the Mint: why does our great nation have these
plain, unattractive coins instead of beautiful ones? Unsatisfied
with the answer, he started the process of creating the
most beautiful coins of all time!
Teddy was good friends with America’s most famous
sculptor, the legendary Augustus Saint-Gaudens. In 1906
Teddy asked his artist friend to re-design all of the nation’s
circulating coinage, to make them to look more like the
beautiful Ancient coins.
Saint-Gaudens started working on the new, richer designs
with the nation’s two largest gold coins, the $20
and $10 denominations.
Saint-Gaudens died before he could see his designs become
coins. But they were proclaimed as America’s most
beautiful coins as soon as they entered circulation. Roosevelt
was elated.
Does God Belong On Our Coins?
The new Saint-Gaudens design for our circulating $20 gold
coins did not have an important inscription. The motto "In
God We Trust" was missing. It had first appeared on
our coinage during the Civil War and was included on most
every Liberty Head gold coin minted from 1867 to 1907. But
the new Saint-Gaudens design, the one personally requested
by President Teddy Roosevelt, did NOT have the motto "In
God We Trust."
Here’s why:
Roosevelt didn’t believe the Lord’s name should
be brought into saloons, gambling halls and brothels. And
he certainly didn’t want the Lord’s name touched
by thousands of dirty hands.
Congress had a different way of thinking. It wanted to
boldly state that our nation believed in God and trusted
in God. And Congress wanted those beliefs proclaimed on
our coins, especially our largest gold coins!
At first, President Roosevelt’s wishes were followed
on the new $20 gold coins. None of the 1907-dated Saint-Gaudens
$20 gold coins have the motto. And a portion of the 1908-dated
Saint-Gaudens $20 gold coins were struck without the motto
as well.
During 1908, Congress prevailed and the Mint added "In
God We Trust" to the design of the nearly one ounce
$20 gold coins. From late 1908 until the government stopped
striking gold coins for circulation in 1933, all $20 gold
coins had the motto "In God We Trust."
That means "In God We Trust" does NOT appear
on the $20 gold coins struck in 1907 and part of 1908.
In contrast to that short two year minting period, $20
gold coins WITH "In God We Trust" were struck
in part of 1908 and during every year the gold coins were
minted from 1909 to 1933!
Collectors know the 1908 "No Motto" coins were
struck for only part of one year, while the "With Motto"
coins were struck for 24 years! And they know that rarity
counts!
Looking at the actual number of coins struck, only 5.2
million of the "No Motto" coins were originally
minted. In contrast, more than 65.8 million $20 gold coins
were struck with the motto "In God We Trust."
That’s a 12 to 1 ratio of comparative scarcity. That
tremendous difference in original mintage jumps right up
and screams "Undervalued Investment Opportunity."
Despite this great disparity in original mintage, Goldline
will help you take advantage of this unique market opportunity:
Until our current limited supplies are exhausted, you can
acquire a high quality 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold
coin at the same price as a much more common "With
Motto" date. Call to reserve your 1908 "No Motto"
$20 gold coins today and you’ll get a scarce coin
at the same price as one that’s 12 times more plentiful!
It’s a great value and great opportunity! It’s
an opportunity you’ll want to take advantage of for
yourself, your retirement assets and your children.
That’s why you should call Goldline today and reserve
your museum-quality 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins.
And when you call, be sure to ask about the special FREE
gifts for serious collectors and investors. The toll free
number is 1-800-827-4653. Call to reserve your museum-quality
1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins today.
What Happened in 1933?
In 1928 and 1929 the stock market skyrocketed into an emotional
frenzy. In 1929, the frenzy stopped, stocks crashed and
the Great Depression unfolded.
By 1933, the demoralized nation looked to Washington, D.C.
for salvation. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a cousin
of Teddy Roosevelt’s, confiscated all circulating
gold coins owned by Americans. Then F.D.R. took the nation
off the Gold Standard.
Americans, with one large exception, were required to turn
in their gold coins at face value or face large fines and/or
jail sentences. As soon as the government had confiscated
all the gold, it raised its value by nearly 75%.
Q. What group of Americans was exempted from the government’s
gold coin confiscation?
A. Collectors of coins.
Q. What happened to the huge number of gold coins the government
confiscated?
A. They were melted into gold bricks and stored in Fort
Knox, Kentucky.
Q. Who benefited from this enforced confiscation and 75%
revaluation?
A. The primary beneficiary was the government. The second
largest beneficiary: collectors of gold coins.
During the difficult 1930s, collectors of gold coins actually
profited from the confiscation, melting and revaluation
in two very valuable ways:
Collectors benefited from the nearly 75% increase in the
gold bullion value of their coins (a $20 gold coin contains
nearly 1 full ounce of pure gold!), and
Collectors benefited from the massive official melting of
the confiscated gold coins - making the limited number of
surviving coins in collections MUCH RARER and MUCH MORE
VALUABLE!
The confiscation, melting and nearly 75% revaluation helped
F.D.R. and the Congress inflate the U.S. economy during
the mid- and late-1930s. More importantly, it led to a loss
of a number of important freedoms for the American people.
Americans lost their freedom from...
... long term inflation
... expanding government
... gold confiscation (except collectors)
... government intrusion into their private financial matters.
Most importantly, American citizens lost the substantial
benefits of having a dollar that was as good as gold.
Owning gold coins has protected savers from inflation,
devaluation and intrusive government for thousands of years.
The events of the 1930s (and the decades that followed)
prove how important owning scarce and desirable gold coins
really is!
For protection and for potential profits, wise Americans
- including many of the nation’s leading families
- keep a portion of their long term savings in the form
of scarce and desirable coins.
How Bright is Their Future?
Gold has a bright future. museum-quality 1908 "No
Motto" $20 gold coins have an even brighter future.
Both gold bullion and collectable coins like the 1908 "No
Motto" $20 gold coins will likely rise in value in
the decades ahead as…
(put a block here) The Federal Reserve increases our nation’s
money supply
The value of our savings melts away as inflation rises
Asian incomes rise and demand for gold grows, especially
in China
Investors diversify their holdings with real gold assets
Savers act to protect themselves and their retirement years
with a gold diversification
Parents acquire gold assets to assure their children’s
inheritances
Confidence in national governments and their paper currencies
plunges
Scarcity is the reason museum-quality 1908 "No Motto"
$20 gold coins will likely outperform gold bullion. No matter
how high demand soars, there can never be even one more
1908 $20 gold coin struck.
It’s a fact: museum-quality 1908 "No Motto"
$20 gold coins have outperformed gold bullion in the past.
A lengthy and powerful history suggests this trend will
continue.
This supercharged performance has been exceptionally profitable
for owners of scarce and desirable gold coins. It could
be good news for you and your financial future when you
add a few museum-quality 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold
coins to your holdings, especially at today’s undervalued
market level.
What About Gold’s Cycles?
In the 1970s gold broke out of the government’s control
and rose far higher than anyone dared dream - from $35 an
ounce to over $850 an ounce. Then, in 1999, it corrected
to around $250 and started rising again.
Ask yourself: Is gold closer to its $850 market cycle high
or closer to its recent low? At today’s level, gold
bullion is much closer to its long term low than its all-time
high. This is good news because...
1. Today’s collectors and investors are acquiring
desirable gold coins at a low risk point in the cycle. Forbes
says risk is 10% while the upside potential is unlimited!
2. It leaves lots of room on the upside for owners of museum-quality
scarce gold coins to benefit when gold resumes its powerful
long-term uptrend.
Q. Do you prefer to acquire your long-term assets at the
top of their market cycles or near the bottom of their cycles?
A.If you prefer acquiring your assets when they’re
"on sale," call Goldline toll-free and reserve
your museum-quality 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins
Auction Action Proves Markets Heating Up
Did you hear about the excitement at an auction offering
dresses worn by Marilyn Monroe? One auctioned dress set
a new record at $1.2 million.
Two wealthy collectors at another auction fought over a
1932 Picasso portrait. The winner paid $45.1 million, well
above the pre-sale estimate.
Several collectors at a third auction dueled for the honor
of owning a rare 1804 silver dollar of superior quality.
When the auctioneer’s hammer fell, coin collectors
had a new record for any coin: $4.1 million. (The coin has
a silver bullion value of about $4.)
Around the world demand is sharply rising for objects of
beauty, rarity and proven value. Wealthy investors seek
and acquire a famous dress or Picasso painting.
Historic gold coins like 1908 "No Motto" $20
gold coins offer many of the same benefits and are far more
affordable. Call Goldline today at 1-800-827-4653 to reserve
your museum-quality, limited mintage gold coins. Quantities
are limited, call today.
Supply and Demand: the Basis for
Rising Value
Like all kinds of fine art, market values for museum-quality
U.S. gold coins are set by the interaction between supply
and demand.
Long term demand for all forms of fine art has expanded
decade after decade. Yet supplies cannot expand. Period.
Here’s how supply and demand applies to museum-quality
1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins...
The supply of museum-quality 1908 "No Motto"
$20 gold coins began with the government’s original
mintage 92 years ago. That number was greatly reduced when
the vast majority of the coins were sent into circulation.
The limited number of Museum-quality 1908 $20 gold coins
was further reduced by massive official melting during the
Depression.
Informed estimates suggest that more than 90% of all U.S.
gold coins were officially melted by the government in the
1930s.
The bottom line for supply: Only a limited number of museum-quality
1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins survived. A limited
number of coins that can NEVER be increased.
You might think of 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins
like the popular 1955 Thunderbird cars. Ford’s factories
made only so many T-birds. Nearly all of these attractive
cars were driven off the showroom floor and onto America’s
streets and roads.
Today only a tiny number of Thunderbirds exist in original,
showroom condition. They are VERY desirable and valuable.
Demand for all 1955 Thunderbird cars is strong. Demand for
museum-quality T-birds is astounding.
A museum-quality 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coin
is a lot like a new condition 1955 Thunderbird. Supplies
are limited and demand is rising. The future is extremely
bright for owners of the historic 1908 "No Motto"
$20 gold coins.
Why Demand is Rising
Demand for 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins comes
from a large and growing group of investors, collectors,
accumulators and speculators.
Additional demand can be traced to people who want to increase
their privacy assets, protect their savings and diversify
their holdings.
Long term demand for $20 gold coins, both here and abroad,
has been growing. At the same time, supplies have been shrinking
as informed people acquire and hold them as a long term,
multi-generation asset.
That’s why long term market values for museum-quality
1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins have been rising.
That’s why experienced collectors and investors acquire
these historic coins every time they appear!
Higher Quality, Greater Growth
Which do you think has grown more in value during the last
four decades: a 1955 Thunderbird with 97,000 original miles
or a 1955 Thunderbird with 275 original miles on it?
Logic suggests that the car with 275 miles will be more
valuable. Because it’s closer to being in perfect,
original condition, just like it rolled off the showroom
floor.
Being scarcer and more desirable makes them more valuable.
The same is true for gold coin collectors and investors.
Higher quality coins typically rise in value much faster
than lower value coins. It’s the law of supply and
demand at work.
The 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coin is exceptionally
affordable in MS62. But if you can afford the very best,
a museum-quality MS67 may be the perfect heirloom for generations
to come.
Consider the long-term history of the 1908 "No Motto"
$20 gold coin. A coin in nearly perfect condition (Mint
State-67 grade) today commands $10,000 or more. A Mint condition
coin with a few more imperfections (Mint State-66 grade)
commands $3,360.
A forward-looking collector or investor who carefully acquired
only nearly perfect examples (Mint State-67 grade) owns
assets worth nearly 3 times as much as coins with a few
more imperfections.
It’s as true for 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold
coins as for 1955 Thunderbird cars: Superior quality generally
leads to significant financial rewards for its owner.
That’s why you should acquire a few museum-quality
1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins for your long term
holdings. They may return significant rewards in the decades
ahead.
You Are Completely Protected By Goldline’s Special
Money Back Guarantee
As a Goldline client, you are protected in many ways. Goldline
is America’s leading rare coin and precious metal
firm, having served investors and collectors for more than
40 years. The rare coins we offer are always 100% guaranteed
for authenticity and for quality. The gold coins offered
in this brochure are additionally covered by a special 7-day
unconditional money back guarantee. For more information,
please read Coin Facts for Investors to Consider. We offer
the option of prompt delivery or the more convenient Goldline
Storage Account. And your privacy is protected because Goldline
NEVER rents or trades its clients’ names.
Goldline clients enjoy the added protection of independent
third-party expert examination and certification of all
high-quality coins. Their expertise and multi-million dollar
insurance policy stand behind every certified coin’s
condition, authenticity, etc.
Third-party independent certification enhances market liquidity
as well as confidence, two additional reasons the future
is bright for owners of high quality 1908 "No Motto"
$20 gold coins.
Today’s Best News
Now for the best news of all: Goldline International, Inc.,
one of the largest and most highly capitalized precious
metal and rare coin companies in the world has used its
tremendous leverage to locate and acquire a limited number
of museum-quality 1908 “No Motto” $20 gold coins.
For a limited time only, Goldline will make them available
at a price comparable to the much more available "With
Motto" coins.
That means you’ll get coins with a design that was
produced for less than 2 years at the same price level of
a design that was minted in the 25 years between 1908 and
1933!
It’s like getting a low mintage gold coin at no premium
over a much higher mintage coin!
And remember, this may be your only chance to acquire these
desirable gold coins at today’s market level. Groups
of coins like these rarely appear, and they generate quite
a bit of market excitement when they do!
All by itself, the news of their appearance, availability
and museum-quality could jolt this market to higher levels!
Add-in the excitement generated by news of this special
group of coins to what appears to be a solidly rising market
trend for gold bullion. Now you can better understand why
smart collectors and investors are sure to rapidly snap-up
these coins!
The limited number of coins now available from Goldline
International, Inc. could completely and totally disappear
in a very short time. It’s another solid reason to
reserve your museum-quality 1908 "No Motto" $20
gold coins right now!
How To Acquire Yours Today
Somehow they survived the year-after-year melting by the
U.S. Mint from 1909 to 1929 and the massive Treasury melts
in the 1930s. A small number of museum-quality limited mintage
1908 "No Motto" $20 gold coins are now available
from Goldline International, Inc at special values.
Now is the time to examine your assets, your retirement
needs and your desire to build your children’s inheritance.
Now is the time to carefully consider the many advantages
of owning museum-quality 1908 "No Motto" $20 gold
coins: their scarcity, desirability, liquidity and undervalued
profit potential.
Call Goldline and reserve your museum-quality 1908 "No
Motto" $20 gold coins. Act today.
Call Goldline toll-free: 1-800-827-4653
The American Advisor
Publisher:
Goldline International, Inc.
1601 Cloverfield Boulevard
100 South Tower
Santa Monica, CA 90404
1-800-827-4653
The American Advisor, a publication of Goldline International,
Inc., is published for the exclusive use of our clients
and subscribers. For review purposes, permission to quote
brief passages is granted, provided full credit and mailing
address are given. All other reproductions are prohibited.
This newsletter contains the thoughts, opinions and analysis
of its authors, and may not reflect the recommendations,
positions or opinions of Goldline International, Inc.
All information is derived form sources believed to be
accurate, although accuracy cannot be guaranteed. We believe
in our recommendations, and often maintain positions in
them.
We cannot guarantee the profitability of any investment.
Recommendations are made subject to the reader’s own
prudence, research and judgment.
Before investing read "Coin Facts for Investors to
Consider," a risk disclosure booklet. Coins should
be considered a long-term investment and are suitable for
5% to 20% of your liquid portfolio. Transaction costs vary
from 4% in bullion to 30% for rare coins, past performance
does not guarantee future results.