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For broadcast on CBS Radio Network stations October 22-23, 2005:
Flying High
The Stamp Collecting Report, I'm Lloyd de Vries.
Usually, products made incorrectly are worthless, but in stamps they can be priceless.
<"I think everybody knows about this stamp.">
RUNS :02
And recently, Scott Trepel of Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries sold one of the best
examples of the Inverted Jenny, for nearly three million dollars.
"Even a little kid starting to collect stamps knows about the upside-down airplane stamp."
RUNS :06
Only one hundred of these errors ever reached the public, a single sheet sold over the
post office counter for twenty-four dollars in Nineteen-Eighteen.
A week later, they were purchased for fifteen THOUSAND dollars by Col. Edward Green. One
of the copies was encased in a locket, and given by the eccentric millionaire to his
mistress.
"I think we'd call her an exotic dancer now."
RUNS :02
The owner of THIS block is a serious collector, we're told.
A single stamp also was sold this time to a real estate entrepreneur, who says he's not
really a dedicated collector.
Three hundred thousand dollars sounds pretty dedicated to me!
And that's Stamp Collecting this week.
I'm Lloyd de Vries, CBS News.
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