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I sent a letter to my mom, 'general delivery' to a certain city in California, and I found out that she never picked it up. I didn't put a return address on it because I didn't want my dad to receive it if it were returned. I mailed it in 1965, late summer. Would the post office still have it? If so how would I claim it? Thanks for any help.

2006-09-20 16:44:14 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Government

3 answers

No, they wouldn't have it, and its been gone a long time. It was probably opened to check for an address but then it went on to its destiny. It was sent to the regional dead letter office and auctioned off

2006-09-21 13:13:45 · answer #1 · answered by MJ 6 · 1 0

Us Post Office General Delivery

2016-10-20 21:26:50 · answer #2 · answered by dupouy 4 · 0 0

i could. To any place of work they occurred to be working for, actual, see you later as they looked as though it may me the main qualified for the placement. I say a similar to a spiritual runner, besides. All that concerns to me is how qualified i believe they are to do the pastime. Crazies like the teabaggers are patently no longer forerunners ;) faith and politics are too heavily entwined for a u . s . that supposedly has separation of church and state. Do what you prefer on your private lives, yet faith has no place in government. To the loopy religious those that purely care if someone is going to church and is a sturdy adequate actor to play off the values they like to work out in public, evaluate that deep down a baby-kisser is barely a baby-kisser and that they are all skeevy in some way.

2016-10-17 09:08:24 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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