Discussion:
US rate question...
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unknown
2006-11-10 02:02:13 UTC
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I am trying to figure out the rate on a cover I have. It was sent from
Missouri to Tennessee in 1896. It is franked with 14c in postage and has a
manuscript "No. 4" penned on the front. I assume it is a registration mark.
Cover likely contained payment for an order (address is a commercial enterprise
- preprinted return envelope). Is 14c a valid rate for a multi-ounce, domestic
registered letter of this vintage???

Thanks!

Mike
John Tollan
2006-11-10 02:39:42 UTC
Permalink
Post by unknown
I am trying to figure out the rate on a cover I have. It was sent from
Missouri to Tennessee in 1896. It is franked with 14c in postage and has a
manuscript "No. 4" penned on the front. I assume it is a registration mark.
Cover likely contained payment for an order (address is a commercial enterprise
- preprinted return envelope). Is 14c a valid rate for a multi-ounce, domestic
registered letter of this vintage???
Thanks!
Mike
Mike:
I don't have the answer, but a posting to
http://www.kbnet.com/book/html/frajola.html
should bring an answer. Lot's of rate experts on Richard Frajola's Board.
John Taormina - The MIDDLE-AGED one
Mike
2006-11-11 03:40:01 UTC
Permalink
John - Thanks for the info. I posted there a few moments ago. Tried
to respond to your post earlier, but my vintage 1999 copy of WinVN was
no longer up to the task. Dl'd a copy of Free Agent, and I'm up and
running again!

Mike

On Fri, 10 Nov 2006 02:39:42 GMT, John Tollan
Post by John Tollan
Post by unknown
I am trying to figure out the rate on a cover I have. It was sent from
Missouri to Tennessee in 1896. It is franked with 14c in postage and has a
manuscript "No. 4" penned on the front. I assume it is a registration mark.
Cover likely contained payment for an order (address is a commercial enterprise
- preprinted return envelope). Is 14c a valid rate for a multi-ounce, domestic
registered letter of this vintage???
Thanks!
Mike
I don't have the answer, but a posting to
http://www.kbnet.com/book/html/frajola.html
should bring an answer. Lot's of rate experts on Richard Frajola's Board.
John Taormina - The MIDDLE-AGED one
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