Beware World Reserve Monetary Exchange Pres. Dollar Ads

Tell your non numismatist friends to watch out for these two page color ads running in Sunday newspapers today.
They offer rolls of 50 "presedential dollars" for a "special fee" of just $88 plus shipping.
They package the 50 coins in a clear plastic roll and put the roll in a long box that looks like a gold brick and has a total gram weight on the ouside.
They give a deadline of 72 hours to call a toll-free number beginning at "8:30 am today" (no date or time zone, ha ha).
Anyway, this takes the cake for hype. It's fun just to read the ad. Anyone else seen this yet?
They offer rolls of 50 "presedential dollars" for a "special fee" of just $88 plus shipping.
They package the 50 coins in a clear plastic roll and put the roll in a long box that looks like a gold brick and has a total gram weight on the ouside.
They give a deadline of 72 hours to call a toll-free number beginning at "8:30 am today" (no date or time zone, ha ha).
Anyway, this takes the cake for hype. It's fun just to read the ad. Anyone else seen this yet?
Anyone can make a difference, but most people probably shouldn't. -- Marge Simpson
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Comments
I hope my mother didn't see it, she might order it for me for my birthday or Christmas. She is not dumb but she doesn't know a lot about coins but likes to get me coins for special occasions.
Jonathan
<< <i>They offer rolls of 50 "presedential dollars" for a "special fee" of just $88 plus shipping >>
Interestingly, in the Muncie IN Star Press the special "Vault release fee" was $88, but in the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, same ad, the special "vault release fee" was $99. I guess they feel the people in Fort Wayne must be even dumber than the people in Muncie.
What would be really bad, is if a company started promoting these as "Golden Presidental Dollars" to make the unsuspecting public think they are actually gold coins; and then charge something like $299 for 50 coins. I actually thought I would see that already, as I saw some ads back when the Sacagawea coins came out from some sleezy companies in which the wording in their ads made it appear that the coins were made out of gold. Some people got taken for a lot of money with that scam.
Russ, NCNE
genius. pure genius.
hi, i'm tom.
i do not doctor coins like some who post in here.