Photos: Baseball Card Sells for $2M
A very rare 1909 Honus Wagner baseball card is shown. The T206 card, originally released by the American Tobacco Co., sold for $2,105,770.50 in an online sale, Goldin Auctions, April 6, 2013. While the company said the price was a record for a baseball card sold at auction, a similar Wagner card in mint condition was purchased for $2.8 million in a private sale in 2007.
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1909 Honus Wagner baseball card sells for $2.1 million
A rare 1909 baseball card, known as the "Holy Grail" of baseball cards, has sold for a record $2.1 million, the auction house that conducted the sale said Saturday.
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CNN Money
Photos: 'Silver Nickel' Sells for $1.4M
A 1792 "silver nickel" sold for $1.41 million at an auction in Orlando on Jan. 10. The coin is known as The Floyd Starr Example and is thought to have been made from Martha Washington's silverware at George Washington's request. Heritage Auctions said the coins were the very first American coins struck in December 1792 after the Mint Act was passed.
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Abc News
Photos: Rare Honus Wagner Baseball Card on Sale
A rare 1909 baseball card of Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Honus Wagner will be auctioned in Feb. 2013 by Goldin Auctions, the card's current owner. With fewer than 60 existing authenticated cards, this could fetch as much as $2.8 million, according to Ken Goldin of the auction house. In 2007, Arizona Diamondbacks owner Ken Kendrick bought a version of the same card for $2.8 million. It's called "Jumbo Wagner" because it is larger than other cards of Wagner, who was part of the inaugural 1936 class of the National Baseball Hall of Fame of Cooperstown, N.Y.
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PODCAST: Bank of America shells out, Nickelodean half-shells out and there are no clams for the junk-store Renoir
Friday, September 28, 2012 - 10:34 Spencer Platt/Getty Images People walk by a Bank of America branch in Times Square on September 20, 2012 in New York City. Bank of America will pay $2.4 billion to shareholders as part of a settlement announced this morning. The bank admits no wrongdoing, but the settlement is compensation for maybe not telling shareholders the whole story when BofA bought the struggling brokerage Merrill Lynch back in 2008. And Apple takes time out of its morning to tell us "I'm sorry." CEO Tim Cook posted an online letter to iPhone customers, saying that with its Apple Maps application the company fell short of its commitment to making best-in-class products. People who bought the new iPhone5 or upgraded the software on their old iPhones have been forced to use Apple Maps instead of Google Maps, which used to be the standard. Cook says Apple will be working non-stop until Apple Maps is up to snuff. That's not the only Apple product dying on the vine -- users of Apple's ...
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