I was gonna say I was just goofing around, but now you people are 
ACTUALLY making me want to try this.  Too bad I don't get any free 
labels.  Well, I guess I wouldn't need labels, I could just write it 
in.  Good god this chat is making me stupider!  Stop me before I 
give to the DNC.

--- In [email protected], "Ellen" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> you would have to put the creditor as the return address--electric 
> bill, cable bill, etc.  What would you do, get return address 
labels 
> for all of them?  Don't forget, you're getting these free ones 
based 
> on your address.  You can't choose which address you want to use. 
I 
> think James just meant if your friends wanted to send you a letter 
> you could give them your labels, they put them as the return 
address, 
> no outgoing address, and it would eventually get returned to you.  
At 
> least I think that's what he meant. 
> 
> 
> --- In [email protected], "Aaron Weintraub" 
> <aaron.weintraub@> wrote:
> >
> > On 11/29/06, Ellen <ellengoodman6@> wrote:
> > >
> > > understand, but the rest, no.  You mean if your friends put 
your
> > >
> > return address on a letter they are sending w/no postage, it
> > > eventually will come back to you?  Do they put the same 
address on
> > > the outgoing part?  That's brilliant!
> > >
> > 
> > It may work, but I wouldn't pay my bills this way.  If they 
catch 
> on, they
> > will 'dispose' of the piece or hold it postage due.  They've 
been 
> doing this
> > a lot longer than you have and know what to look for.
> > 
> > Interesting fact learned while attempting to find a cite for the 
> above
> > (which I failed to do):
> > 
> > Apparently businesses are now allowed to affix post-it notes to 
the 
> outside
> > of letters.  These are called 'RPN's or 'Repositionable Notes' 
by 
> the USPS:
> > 
> > http://www.usps.com/communications/news/press/2005/pr05_028.htm
> > 
> > aw
> >
>


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