Inkstainedwretch
One Too Many
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The mawkish "prayer of St. Francis" just before a tv station's sign-off. It's one thing I really don't miss about the era.
The price went down due to a temporary increase granted to help pay for the P.O. having to prepay for long term (75 years) of employee retirement benefits required by congress expiring . This time temporary actually was temporary.Shows the power of competition - no email / texting / scanning / etc., no two-cent reduction. That said, I was still amazed. I effectively just lost money on my small sleeve of forever stamps. The Post Office beat me on that purchase and kudos to it, I took the risk and lost - all's fair...
The price went down due to a temporary increase granted to help pay for the P.O. having to prepay for long term (75 years) of employee retirement benefits required by congress expiring . This time temporary actually was temporary.
Tom D.
I stand corrected. And good point - amazing that a "temporary" increase actually was. Big picture though, no email, etc., as competition and I'd bet physical mail prices would be higher as they definitely responded to declines in physical mail by slowing the rate of increases versus when they had more of a monopoly.
Interesting that many of my on line purchases show shipping with ups but then get transferred to usps for final leg. I speculate that the forever stamps are more cost effective for the po than printing and handling 2 centers. I know they are a lot less confusing. Have a safe holiday brother and lets keep in mind its meaning.
Tom D.
A crummy lawn chair, for example would last 5 - 10 years instead of one or two.
Kitchen match dispensers.
I was just out lighting my barbecue and it caused me to remember the kitchen match dispensers that used to hang on the wall of nearly every kitchen, next to the stove. People used the matches to light their stoves, whether wood-burning or gas, with the big wooden matches, hence the "kitchen" designation. It was an open-topped tin box with an open trough at the bottom. You opened a box of matches about an inch and slid it down into the dispenser. Some of the matches would roll out into the trough and you took them from there until the box was empty. I probably haven't thought of them for 50 years.
I've got my grandmother's kitchen match dispenser hanging on my kitchen wall, even though I've got an electric stove. The matches come in handy -- among other things they're just the right thickness for pushing into stripped-out screw holes from door hinges.
Kitchen match dispensers.
I was just out lighting my barbecue and it caused me to remember the kitchen match dispensers that used to hang on the wall of nearly every kitchen, next to the stove. People used the matches to light their stoves, whether wood-burning or gas, with the big wooden matches, hence the "kitchen" designation. It was an open-topped tin box with an open trough at the bottom. You opened a box of matches about an inch and slid it down into the dispenser. Some of the matches would roll out into the trough and you took them from there until the box was empty. I probably haven't thought of them for 50 years.
I grew up with a kerosene stove, which I wish I still had.
I've got my grandmother's kitchen match dispenser hanging on my kitchen wall, even though I've got an electric stove. The matches come in handy -- among other things they're just the right thickness for pushing into stripped-out screw holes from door hinges.