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How to Get Silver For PenniesJoin the Silver Snowball Coin of the Month Club. You will receive a self-replicating website to promote the club, and a Brilliant Uncirculated, One Ounce, Silver American Eagle coin (like those above) every month. For every two Silver Eagles purchased from your member website by new members, you will receive a bonus American Silver Eagle coin absolutely FREE. These free bonus coins keep coming to you (month after month) for as long as those members remain members. That's right... The Silver Keeps Coming Month After Month!Many members order 2 or 3 coins per month. Because you receive additional FREE Silver Eagles on all recurring monthly orders, your collection of silver American Eagles grows increasingly larger month after month. With 4 Silver Eagles sold, you get 2 FREE bonus Silver Eagles. With 50 Silver Eagles sold, you get 25 FREE bonus Silver Eagles...month after month for as long as those monthly sales continue. This makes the Silver Snowball the most affordable silver accumulation program in the world. Silver Protects Wealth From Inflation. This is how wealthy people protect their wealth from inflation. Yes, it's true...When the price of silver goes up, you get paid more. Take these two U.S quarters for example: One was minted in 1964 and is made of silver. The other, minted in 1965, looks like the 1964 quarter but it is made from copper and nickel (It has no silver).
To illustrate the difference between the buying power of these two coins: In 1964, a loaf of whole wheat bread cost .25 cents. The 1964 quarter today still buys a loaf of whole wheat bread. However, it takes 10 of the 1965 quarters to buy the same loaf. Why is this? The 1964 quarter is worth about $3.00 for its silver. The 1965 quarter is still worth .25 cents because its value is determined by government policy. The price of silver in the 1964 quarter reflects the free market value of silver and the
Start Your Silver Snowball Rolling
"If you don't trust silver and gold, do you trust the logic of taking a pine tree, worth $4,000-$5,000, cutting it up, turning it into pulp, putting some ink on it and then calling it one billion dollars?" - Kenneth J. Gerbino This Webpage is Copyrighted by LynnGroup Int'l, 2008
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