View allAll Photos Tagged prepaid

We went for a stroll around a local wildflower farm a week or so ago but it was due to close. The flowers which are grown for their seeds and sold along with plants were also mostly finishing. The place has a gentle ambience though so I got a couple of shots including this Vipers-Bugloss which was gently keeling over. A couple of Oxeye Daisy shots later and Merry almost knocked me over. She and Beau had been walked through several fields before Jonathan let them off the lead but she legged it straight back to me..

Taken using a Nikon D850 with a Nikon Nikkor Ais 55mm 2.8 manual only lens.

 

Update

 

We came away to the coast for a few days late this afternoon and I have been almost 2 hours trying hard to catch up. I am only getting 3 bars of 3G mobile data using a prepaid SIM card. No WiFi worthy of the name so I shall have to give up till I have internet at home.

So sorry to those I didn’t manage yet to catch up with and thank you so much everyone for your kind and encouraging comments

Sue X

Last version of an Australian public phonebox since they were made redundant by mobile phones. I used one here, maybe even the very same one, some 30 years ago and paid using a prepaid Telstra card. Nowadays I believe they provide free calls and wifi.

Mural you can see in Avotu street 40.

 

This is considered an advertisement for the company Zelta Zivtiņa.

 

Zelta Zivtiņa is a popular prepaid mobile phone service in Latvia, owned by the company Tele2. It is widely known as a brand for pay-as-you-go SIM cards and eSIMs, offering options for mobile phone service and internet access. Zelta Zivtiņa can be purchased and topped up at numerous locations, such as grocery stores and Tele2 centers.

 

Happy Wall Wednesday!

backstory.

my mom died 37 years ago. when my dad decided to allow her things to be cleared out before he remarried, my sister went through mama's things and decided who should get what. she took all the diamond jewelry and sent me some garnets which I had never seen. I already had an old rocking chair. after my dad died I would get his desk.

 

at the first of this year, I read a story in the New Yorker about a company in NYC that takes old heirloom jewelry which has been lying in jewelry boxes unused and makes pieces more relevant to the times. [spurjewelry.com/pages/faqs-1] I thought of all those garnets. so I emailed the company and scheduled a phone conference. it took over a month just to get the phone appointment. once I talked with the jewelry designer and sent her photos of what I had, I was sent a prepaid insured box in which to send the jewelry. meanwhile the designers were drawing up choices for me. I sent the box off to NYC after I chose which design I wanted.

[picture of my jewelry in comments below. the circle pin is mine, the gold band was my wedding ring from my first marriage. the rest was my mom's. any and all gold could be melted down to put into my ring and I would receive a credit]

 

that was 3 months ago.

today a package came in the mail with my new ring and the leftover stones. lots of leftovers.

btw, the only reason I could afford this ring was a gift of $$ from my elder son and his partner. If I had more money I would use up those stones in another ring, but not for now.

 

I have the ring on tonight and it's beautiful. my mom gave me her diamond earrings before she died. they weren't diamonds, but who cares. the ring has her earrings on the top and is encircled with the garnets.

the designer was wonderful to work with and it was an exciting experience.

happy things.

pardon my wrinkly arthritic hands, they are old working hands, just like my grandma's.

 

view the photo in Large in order to see my wrinkles and my new ring.

  

**NO MORE WARS. NO MORE SHOOTINGS AND KILLINGS.

LET PEACE REIGN.

A rainy day◾ Cancelled a bus tour for today◾ I lost the $ of the prepaid ticket◾ Safe, cozy and warm at home watching the rain fall◾ Autumn foliage will have to wait again◾ No regrets◾

 

I just hope that after the rain the mushrooms 🍄 start coming out again. This is "Toad", a mushroom boy from the Super Mario games. Days ago I took him with me to the park for this photo...just for fun!

 

Thank you very much for your visit and taking the time to comment! Really appreciated!

This is one of the last shots I ever made on film, during a 1-day photo workshop I held in 2006. I had already crossed over to a DSLR, but still had 20 or 30 rolls of prepaid Velvia in the freezer.

 

This widespread native orchid, Calypso bulbosa, always captivates, yet I've rarely been able to get a really pleasing photo of it. It grows low to the ground; that is the major problem. When I found this small cluster at the edge of a forest clearing, where the land drops off sharply to the beach below, on a calm day with perfect soft bright light, I knew it was special. My students therefore got to enjoy seeing me hang my butt out over the great void, tripod legs splayed and planted, my own legs splayed and planted, one arm wrapped around a tree root and one hand on the cable release. It must have been quite a sight.

 

Photographed in East Sooke Regional Park, Vancouver Island, BC (Canada); scanned from the original Fujichrome Velvia slide (ISO 50). The camera was a Nikon F100, the lens a manual focus Nikon 105mm macro with an added extension tube. Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2006 James R. Page - all rights reserved.

* 20 per pak

* 3.5"x 2.625"

* rounded corners

* Pantone 485 red on white vinyl

* silk screen

* $6.00 per pak. Includes shipping w/ in

continental U.S.

* Two maximum.......send an email to

sales@stickyricks.NET to order.

After a less than wonderful breakfast (it was quiet in the hotel and the food had been kept out on a hot plate too long) and a battle with the staff who expected a tip for delivering coffee with the prepaid breakfast we went for another look at the falls.

 

The structure bottom right is accessible from the Visitors Centre. The bottom part was closed owing to ice/snow but it was still worth a visit, including a viewing window from behind the falls themselves

Paper - Macro Mondays

 

This stamp was imprinted on prepaid overseas folded letter form from Northern Ireland.

 

All rights reserved. Please do not use or reproduce this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my permission.

one day this will be an iphone vending machine with prepaid plans...

I got the car washed this week, and there are two things worth mentioning. One, I somehow lost my prepaid-wash card that cost $150. Oops! Two, the hallway leading to the payment area was quite ominous and creepy looking.

 

The scary nature of this hallway matched the scary response I was to receive at home once I confessed to losing the card.

 

On the positive side, I enjoyed using the older tech of an older Olympus Pen camera.

Kuwait Airways B777-300ER 9K-AOM With 65 Years Of Pioneering And NBK Marking

Friendly mobile phone prepaid card promoters.

The now closed ground level ticket office at East Maitland Railway Station. Most travellers now use prepaid cards.

photographs taken with a homemade matchbox pinhole camera and a roll of expired Kodachrome, prepaid processing.

 

Total cost £1 - film returned in 17 days

Most of Portsmouth has permit parking, which means if you live in a residential street with a sign like this you need a prepaid permit. The times vary from area to area and our slot is 4-6pm, which suits us as Tim gets home from work between those times and it means parking is easy for him. Portsmouth is the most densely populated city in the United Kingdom, with a population last recorded at 208,100, with around 37 people living on each football pitch-sized area of land. This means parking is challenging too, hence the parking scheme.

 

Most people have mixed feelings and it's annoying have to pay to park in your own street, but it does cut parking problems down, for us anyway. Most of my friends have been and gone by 4pm during the day so they don't need a scratch card and generally an evening visitor wouldn't come till 6pm.

 

This road is round the corner from us and a regular road for our dog walks. The pigeon on the post caught my eye and I had to get a photo on my phone!!

...through windows ajar and streaming

draft to bear Winter's frost and cold

prepaid for joy of heat in the comfort of cave,

for bliss of warmth according to survive

on shores of Father-Ocean, and fierce of Blizzards,

alike my childhood in bloody past

behind the barber wires in East Siberian

confinement of regime of Marxian's ideals

beneath oppression by iron fist of socialistic's zeal,

o Glorious Almighty! save us and protect

in similarity of Yours to various degree resembling

difference of our tribes, to be alive

without harm - within its happiness

to stay and to exist...

 

Say NO Cash use a PREPAID CARD!

INGERSOLL HOTEL

KETCHIKAN - ALASKA - corner card

 

The Ingersoll Hotel on Front Street opened in October 1924 in Ketchikan, Alaska. The owner was I. G. (Gus) Pruell.

 

Letter posted on the PRINCE RUPERT at Ketchican, Alaska for mailing at Vancouver with 3 cents US postage under Postal Regulation Section 127.

 

Canadian Postal Guide 1940- 1941 - Section 127 - Letters mailed at sea - "Letters etc. mailed on a vessel at sea may be prepaid by means of postage stamps of the country whose flag the ship carries; but letters mailed on a vessel in port must be prepaid by the stamps of the country to which the port belongs."

 

PRINCE RUPERT

 

Rectangular marking 28-RL reads:

 

S.S. PRINCE RUPERT

Jan 22 1941 (in reddish purple ink)

 

- reported dates for 28-RL - earliest - 10 January 1940 - latest - 13 February 1941 - (#204 / RF C).

 

- entered the mail system at - / VANCOUVER / JAN 25 / 7 PM / 1941 / B.C. / - machine cancel.

 

Letter was sent by Bill Diers who was staying at the Ingersoll Hotel in Ketchikan, Alaska.

 

William "Bill" E. Diers

(b. 1910 in Louisville, Cass, Nebraska - d. 1970 at age 60 in Washington, USA) - His father William Diers Sr. had a General Store in Louisville, Nebraska - in 1930 he worked in his fathers General Store.

 

His father - William Fredrick Diers

(b. April 1867 in Iowa, USA - d. 30 August 1932 at age 65 in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, USA) - occupation while living in Alaska - salesman for the U. S. Rubber Company (now Uniroyal).

 

Clipped from - The Omaha Evening Bee-News newspaper -

Omaha, Nebraska - 1 September 1932 - William Fredrick Diers - Funeral services for William F. Diers, 65, general merchant of Louisville, Nebraska, were held at 1:30 p. m. Thursday in Louisville. Mr. Diers died Tuesday morning of acute indigestion while sitting in the Bank of Commerce in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, where he hail gone on business. He was one of the pioneer merchants of Nebraska and was a member of Diers' Brothers, who at one time operated eleven stores throughout the state. He was active in promoting construction of the first bridge in Louisville. He was the brother of the late Fred Diers, prominent merchant here. His widow and two children survive.

 

His mother - Wilhelmina C (nee Hoth) Diers

(b. 1878 in Nebraska, USA - d. 25 February 1947 at age 69 in San Diego, San Diego County, California, USA.)

 

His wife - Alice Irene (nee Lloyd) Diers

(b. 1912 Adams, Washington, USA - d. in Washington, USA) - they were married - October 1939 in Seward, Alaska.

 

Clipped from - Fairbanks Daily News-Miner newspaper - Fairbanks, Alaska - 25 October 1939 - Lloyd-Diers Marriage - Miss Alice Lloyd technician at Seward General hospital and Mr. William (Bill) Diers, salesman of the U. S. Rubber Company, converted a "rehearsal" into the real thing at Seward and became Mr. and. Mrs. Diers, 24 hours ahead of their alleged schedule. The happy bride and groom then disappeared into the evening mists, destination unknown.

 

Addressed to: Mr. Wm. B. Arnold / Louisville, Nebraska, USA (this was most likely a friend as they both grew up in the town of Louisville, Nebraska).

 

William Bryan Arnold

(b. 17 April 1896 in Macedonia, Pottawattamie, Iowa, United States - d. 18 March 1975 at age 78) - i1930's to the 1940's his occupation was - rural mail carrier / US government in Louisville, Nebraska. LINK to his Find a Grave site - www.findagrave.com/memorial/28776439/william-bryan-arnold

 

His wife - Nellie / Nelle Judson (nee Adams) Arnold

b. 25 June 1898 in Owensboro, Daviess, Kentucky, United States – d. 11 April 1955 (aged 56) in Fayetteville, Washington County, Arkansas, USA) - they were married - 27 December 1919 in Washington, Arkansas, United States - they had four children. LINK to her Find a Grave site - www.findagrave.com/memorial/28776459/nelle-judson-arnold

Options at the music store

Prior to Canada Post Office offering air mail service to Great Britain, Canadian letters could receive air mail service in the United States if the U.S. mail rate of 10 cents per half ounce was prepaid in U.S. postage in addition to Canadian surface postage. The letters were flown to ports such as New York City for ship conveyance to Britain. LINK - postalhistorycorner.blogspot.com/p/air-mail-rates-to-unit...

 

Air Mail Service in the United States only - From February 26, 1927 to August 7, 1928, Canadian letters could receive air mail service in the United States if the U.S. mail rate of 10 cents per half ounce was prepaid in U.S. postage in addition to Canadian surface postage.

 

- sent from - / VANCOUVER / 15 / SP 23 / 27 / B.C. / - cds cancel

 

3 cents Canadian postage to Great Britian + 10 cents U.S. air mail fee

 

- via - / New York / - double oval transit cancel - partial strike

 

- sent by - C. J. Biddiss / 1431 Williams Avenue / North Vancouver, B.C.

 

Charles James Biddiss

(b. 1880 in Pancras, Middlesex, England - d. 21 January 1964 at age 84 in Vancouver, British Columbia / Port Coquitlam, British Columbia) - his occupation in 1927 was clerk for the City Police. LINK to his death certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/72...

 

• July 1907 – Sept 1908 Stenographer London employed by Chas H Hayes

• Sept 1908 – April 1909 Stenographer London employed by H C Edwards

• May 1909 – July 1909 Hired Help Ontario Canada employed by AIles (farmer)

• Sept 1909 – Apr 1910 Hired Help Ontario Canada employed by Reuben Parker (farmer)

• May 1910 – Oct 1911 Stenographer and book keeper Toronto Canada employed by E K McLean, purchasing agent

• Oct 1911 – Jan 1912 Stenographer Chicago Illinois employed by C E Seaton

• Feb 1912 – Sept 1912 Stenographer La Porte Indiana employed by Emmet Scott , purchasing agent

- He then arrives in Liverpool from New York on 23 Nov 1914 onboard “Orduna”. He is a book keeper age 34, address is his mothers in Camden Square - he is intending to reside in England. (returned home to enlist in WW1)

- Theatre of war First served in France - starting May 1915. He was awarded several medals - Victory Medal and the 15 Star also the British War Medal.

 

LINK to more information on Charles James Biddiss - www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=866151.0

 

His wife - Carolyn Elizabeth (nee Snow) Moore / Biddiss

(b. 26 February 1876 in Bridgewater, Maine, USA - d. 17 March 1956 at age 80 in New Westminster, British Columbia / Port Coquitlam, British Columbia) - they were married - 27 March 1924 in Vancouver, British Columbia. LINK to their marriage certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/d1... LINK to her death certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/31...

 

Addressed to his sister - Miss Annie Biddiss, / 35 Woodland Gardens, / Muswell Hill, / London, N. 10, / England

 

Annie Elizabeth Biddiss

(b. April 1876 in Pancras, London - d. December 1968 at age 92 in Haringey, Greater London, England)

Found this mailer in the case with an old box camera I purchased.

 

Image ©Philip Krayna, BoxxCarr, all rights reserved. This image is not in the public domain. Please contact me for permission to download, license, reproduce, or otherwise use this image, or to just say "hello". I value your input and comments. See more at www.boxxcarr.com.

 

BIC Camera, the most famous electronic shop in Japan.

When you arrive in a new country, the first gesture is to buy a local operator SIM card …

Preparing the ticket office for drinks at a major musical festival (Ghent, Belgium)

(from - Wrigley's 1918 British Columbia Directory) - JESSICA - a Post Office and station on the Kettle Valley Railway, 14 miles east of Hope, in Yale Provincial Electoral District, no agent, charges must be prepaid. Nearest telegraph office is at Hope. The population in 1918 was 50. Local resources: Shingle mill, lumbering and mining.

 

LINK to a newspaper article - Gold Mining at Jessica, British Columbia - www.newspapers.com/clip/110023177/gold-mining-at-jessica-...

 

The JESSICA Post Office was established - 1 July 1918 and closed - 12 September 1942.

 

LINK to a list of the Postmasters who served at the JESSICA Post Office - central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=posoffposmas&id=2...

 

John Donald Campbell was the Postmaster at JESSICA and served from - 10 August 1921 until his death - 24 March 1931.

 

John Donald Campbell

(b. 4 May 1883 in Victoria County, Ontario - d. 24 March 1931 at age 47 in Tranquille, British Columbia, Canada)

 

Clipped from - The Province newspaper - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada - 24 March 1931 - JOHN D. CAMPBELL - Son of Pioneer Contractor Well-known on Lower Mainland. A well-known figure in the business fraternity of the lower mainland, John Donald Campbell, son of the late D. K. Campbell of the firm of Ironside, Rannie & Campbell, died early this morning at Tranqutlle. He was aged 47, and had been at Tranqullle during the past two years. Since leaving school the deceased had been associated with his father In contracting, logging and numerous other projects In which the latter was interested. At the time of his death the deceased was in partnership with his brother. Angus H. Campbell, in a shingle mill at Jessica, on the Kettle Valley Railway line. Born in Victoria County, Ontario, he came to Vancouver with his parents at the age of 7, and attended school here. After receiving his education he became connected with his father's interests and took an active part In the construction of the B. C. Electric Railway Company's tunnel between Lake Coquitlam and Lake Buntzen, North Arm of Burrard Inlet. Besides his brother, Mr. Campbell is survived by a sister, Mrs. B. R. Dusenbury of 4412 Alexandra avenue. It is expected the funeral will be held In Vancouver.

 

LINK to an article - BIG TUNNEL IS FINISHED AT LAST - www.ralphdrew.ca/articles/Big_Tunnel_is_Finished_at_Last.pdf

 

His brother - Angus Hugh Campbell replaced him as Postmaster at JESSICA and served from - 25 April 1931 to - 5 September 1941.

 

Angus Hugh Campbell

(b. 20 October 1884 in Eldon Township, Victoria County, Ontario - d. 10 February 1968 at age 83 in Vancouver, B.C.) - occupation - Lumberman / Postmaster - LINK to death certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/f3...

 

his wife - Isabella / Isabel / Isobel (nee Gibb) Campbell

(b. 21 September 1894 in Scotland - d. 9 April 1960 at age 65 in Vancouver, B.C.) - they were married - 19 April 1922 in Vancouver, B.C - LINK to their marriage certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/5f... - and the newspaper report on their wedding - www.newspapers.com/clip/109983552/campbell-and-gibb-wedding/ - LINK to her death certificate - search-collections.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/Image/Genealogy/ab...

 

Their father - Donald Kenneth Campbell

(b. abt 1852 - d. 7 June 1925 at age 73 in Vancouver, B.C.) - LINK to his newspaper obituary - www.newspapers.com/clip/110010831/obituary-for-donald-ken...

 

Their mother - Bridget (nee Murphy) Campbell

(b. February 1852 in Township of Georgia, York County, Ontario - d. 1 August 1928 at age 76 in Point Grey, British Columbia)

 

Clipped from - The Province newspaper - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada - 1 August 1928 - MRS. D. K. CAMPBELL, PIONEER PASSES ON - Resident of City for 37 Years Has Passed Away. A resident of Vancouver fer thirty-seven years, Mrs. Bridget Campbell, age 76, widow of the late Donald Kenneth Campbell, who was member cf the firm of Ironside, Rannie & Campbell for many years, passed away this morning at her residence, 4412 Alexandra street, Shaughnessy Heights. She is survived by her daughter, Mrs. B. R. Dusenbury. and two sons, John Donald and Angus Hugh. The deceased was born In the Township of Georgia, York County, Ontario, and spent the early part of her life on a farm owned by her parents there. She came to British Columbia In 1891 with her husband. Mr. Campbell passed away three years ago. The remains are resting at Center & Hanna's chapel. Funeral arrangements will be announced later.

 

LINK to a photo - Ironside, Rannie and Campbell - Contractors clearing logs to extend Hastings Street east of Victoria Road - searcharchives.vancouver.ca/ironside-rannie-and-campbell-...

 

- sent from - / JESSICA / JUL 4 / 39 / B.C. / - split ring cancel - this split ring hammer (A1-1) was proofed - 2 February 1918 - (RF E now is classified as RF E3).

When the gift recipient has a strong interest in one product or brand, but the gift giver is unsure of the precise size, flavor, or edition, then allowing the person to spend the gift card exactly how they wish makes sense. Owing to the prevalence of procrastination among those who receive cards, though, they sometimes erode in value as they near an expiration date, or maybe are forgotten or misplaced if not used promptly. One response to this pattern has been a third-party to provide a brokering service, either swapping unused/unwanted cards for other ones that are available, or perhaps cashing them in at face value, less a handling fee for the service.

 

As a business model, any company that can support a system of gift certificates, vouchers, or cards benefits, since the transaction is made and the business can use it. Then when the gift recipient comes to spend the gift card, its value is honored, sometimes weeks or even years later. In efffect this is a reverse credit system. The business transaction is prepaid and that money is in use. Later the value is redeemed, but in the interim period, that prepaid money works to the advantage of the business, expanding the net value of the operations.

 

This photo shows many kinds of business: hardware, home furnishings, restaurant, coffee shop, clothing store, and so on. It is a cross-section of corporate scaled retail brands currently in business around the USA.

 

Press L for lightbox (large) view; click the image or press Z for full image display.

 

Hover the mouse pointer over the image for pop-up remarks.

Bought a full year of vintage Popular Photography magazines. Going to be scanning in lots of ads...

 

Image ©Philip Krayna, all rights reserved. This image is not in the public domain. Please contact me for permission to download, license, reproduce, or otherwise use this image, or to just say "hello". I value your input and comments.

 

My loyalty remains with Flickr, however you can also see me more often on Instagram. Follow me: @dyslexsyk

 

photographs taken with a homemade matchbox pinhole camera and a roll of expired Kodachrome, prepaid processing.

 

Total cost £1 - film returned in 17 days

Group signing up for what I believe was prepaid phone cards at the Masskara Festival Bacolod City, Philippines

Young lady on her way to a local store, Possibly to buy load for her prepaid phone.

em·bar·rass·ment . /emˈbarəsmənt/ - Noun: A feeling of self-consciousness, shame, or awkwardness.

 

So earlier this week, I was catching the bus to the city - and just as it pulled up, I dropped my Go Card (the prepaid electronic ticket). I bent down to pick it up and the bus' doors opened. So I went to quickly hop on the bus (as I had made the bus wait a little and was worried it would leave) ANNND I stacked it... I tripped through the door, with my body in the bus and my legs hanging out (with only one shoe on). And then I went to pick up my shoe, just as the doors were closing. Thankfully the bus driver opened them again! Phewwfff. It all happened so quickly. I got up, got my shoe as the bus driver asked whether I was okay. The only thing I could say was "oh that was embarrassing".

And honestly, it was in shock and in a bit of pain - I ended up with a badly scraped knee (in my photo), a massive bruise on the top of my other knee, a graze on my shin and elbow, a cut on my hand and a smashed iPhone :(

 

It's funny though, as much as I was shocked and as much as it hurt, the first thing out of my mouth was about how embarrassed I was. As I walked down the bus to get a seat, I didn't make eye contact with anyone, although I could feel them all looking at me *the walk of shame*

Also, I think that being an "adult" and tripping over (or in my case, completely stacking it) is so much more embarrassing.

 

We have been so influenced by society that we are constantly concerned about what others think. So much so, that it has (in a way) become an unconscious thing. I think it is something we need to change, because really, it shouldn't matter what others think.

Like Dr. Seuss said -

“Those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.”

 

Facebook Page | 365 Blog | Personal Creative Blog | Tumblr

Taken with the TS-E 17mm. Vertical panorama - 2 shots stitched.

 

This place is awesome BTW. If you are ever driving though northern NV I highly recommend a visit. The main campground has a nice warm natural spring and showers (prepaid with your tax dollars).

 

EDIT: After processing the next shot it became even more apparent that despite by attempts in PP, this shot still have a very 'cool' feel. The relative lack of clouds and color meant there was very little reflection from the clouds back to the ground.

1928 - 12c airmail rate to USA with 10c air fee prepaid from Canada with US postage as per treaty.

 

A. Air Mail Service in the United States only - From February 26, 1927 to August 7, 1928, Canadian letters could receive air mail service in the United States if the U.S. mail rate of 10 cents per half ounce was prepaid in U.S. postage in addition to Canadian surface postage.

 

Copper Mountain, B.C. to Kankakee, Illinois, USA, 15 May 1928 - 2 cents surface letter rate to the United States + 10 cents U.S. air mail rate for half ounce with U.S. air mail stamp (via Seattle).

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copper Mountain was an important copper-mining company town in the Similkameen Country of the Southern Interior of British Columbia, Canada, just south of the town of Princeton. In 1884 copper ore was discovered by a trapper named James Jameson while out hunting deer. This discovery of copper led to a rush of miners to the area which gave rise to the town of Copper Mountain. The first camps located in the area was "Volacanic" Brown's Camp and E. Voight's Camp. These two camps merged to create the Granby Company's Copper Mountain operation. Copper Mountain mining operation lasted over half a century. The Copper Mountain mining operation was officially closed in 1958. The town of Copper Mountain was abandoned shortly after.

 

COPPER MOUNTAIN - a post office and mining town of the

Canada Copper Corporation, Limited, of Greenwood, in Copper Mountain, which is 5,000 feet high, and 12 miles south of Princeton, in Similkameen Provincial Electoral District, reached by stage until completion of railroad now under construction from Princeton. Local resources: Copper mining. The population in 1918 was 200.

 

The VOIGTS CAMP Post Office was established - 16 December 1912 - it became the COPPER MOUNTAIN Post Office (first opening) - 1 November 1914 and then became the ALLENBY Post Office - 1 December 1918 it closed - 30 September 1961.

 

The COPPER MOUNTAIN Post Office (2) was established (second opening) - 1 July 1919 and closed - 11 July 1957.

 

LINK to a list of the Postmasters who served at the COPPER MOUNTAIN (2) Post Office - www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/postal-heritage-philately/...;

 

- sent from - / COPPER MOUNTAIN / MY 15 / 28 / B.C / - split ring cancel - this split ring hammer (A-1) was not listed in the Proof Book - it was most likely proofed c. 1919 - (RF C). (dia - 19 mm / left arc - 4.0 mm / right arc - 5 mm).

 

Addressed to: Mrs. Harry Reeves / 555 South Poplar Ave / Kankakee, / Illinois / USA (via Seattle)

 

Harry Reeves

Birth - 1879

Death - 1964 (aged 84–85)

Burial - Kankakee Memorial Gardens and Chapel Mausoleum

Kankakee, Kankakee County, Illinois, USA - both of his parents were born in Canada - his occupation was a painter.

 

Susie (nee Gordon) Reeves

Birth - 1885

Death - 1968 (aged 82–83)

Burial - Kankakee Memorial Gardens and Chapel Mausoleum

Kankakee, Kankakee County, Illinois, USA

 

They were married - 19 June 1909 in Chicago, Illinois / USA

 

Kankakee is a city in and the county seat of Kankakee County, Illinois, United States. The city's name is probably derived from the Miami-Illinois word teeyaahkiki, meaning: "Open country exposed land / land in open / land exposed to view", in reference to the area's prior status as a marsh. As of 2019, the city's population was 26,024. Kankakee is a principal city of the Kankakee-Bourbonnais-Bradley Metropolitan Statistical Area. It serves as an anchor city in the rural plains outside Chicago, similar to Aurora and Joliet.

everybody make 15! send them to me by February 8th! flickr mail me if you need my address! (and yes, a little cash or prepaid envie would help IMMENSELY! i just calculated the cost...yikes!)

 

1. jek**RECEIVED

2. glitzy**RECEIVED

3. mercurialmagpie**Had to drop out

4. a clementine**mailing to each person

5. LR Monkeytoes**RECEIVED

6. chantal**RECEIVED

7.Serena**RECEIVED

8. eclaire**RECEIVED

9. tumbletell**RECEIVED

10. kittee**RECEIVED

11. sharna 11**RECEIVED

12. Emilyannamarie**RECEIVED

13. Wonderfully Sew Knit**RECEIVED

14. Summers Love**RECEIVED

15, Whitestone Stitchery**RECEIVED

16. zameander

 

Another take on the cards from Watercolor Artist magazine.

Wearing a list of places around the park that offer small plates for free. (prepaid)

By Express Prepaid

From the Sunny Fields of

Knott's Berry Farm

Buena Park

California

Tuesday morning the Malahat Skywalk was open for prepaid season passholders to pick up their passes. So we did.

It will open to the public on Thursday, July 15, 2021 at 10:00a.m.

Say NO Cash use a PREPAID CARD!

Ethiopia, tribes, Tsemay people, Woito

 

Portrait of Tsemay man in Woito, South Omo Vally

 

Blog: Dietmar Temps, travel photography

Website: Dietmar Temps, photography

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████████ STOP PREPAID CARD ████████

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✦ ✦ ✦ LIMITED TIME OFFER - SAVE 30%! ✦ ✦ ✦

 

▄▀▄▀▄ WHAT IS IT? ▄▀▄▀▄

» Exclusive digital prepaid card for STOP Store

» Pay ONLY 1,050L$ → Get 1,500L$ in credit!

» STRICTLY LIMITED to 50 cards available

 

★・・・・・・・・★ PROMOTIONS ★・・・・・・・・★

⌠ Occasionally: 500L$ cards for JUST 1L$! ⌡

✓ REQUIREMENTS:

- Join STOP Store group for announcements

- Limit 1 promotional card per user

- Regular 1,500L$ cards: unlimited purchases

 

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■■■■■■■■■ HOW TO USE ■■■■■■■■■

 

1. PURCHASE:

- Buy at STOP Store main location

 

2. CHECK BALANCE:

[ HUD displays ]

✓ Serial Number

✓ Current Balance

✓ Transaction updates

 

3. MAKE PURCHASE:

┌ Right-click product

├ Select "Pay with Prepaid Card"

└ Enter your serial number

 

4. BALANCE TRACKING:

✔ Real-time updates when using HUD

✔ 1-minute refresh if HUD not worn

 

⚠️⚠️⚠️ IMPORTANT WARNINGS ⚠️⚠️⚠️

 

✖ NEVER share your serial number!

- Others can spend YOUR credit

- All transactions are FINAL

 

✖ RESTRICTIONS:

- Not valid on weekend sales

- Valid on new releases/events

- Works on numbered series items

 

✦ BALANCE TIPS ✦

» Low balance (10-20L$)? Contact owner to:

- Add extra credit (normal price)

- Upgrade to higher-value card (30% OFF!)

 

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✉ NEED HELP OR SPECIAL REQUESTS?

Contact: [gadielwhite]

Group: [STOP STORE]

Landmark: [maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Royals/100/81/3002]

 

█████████ HAPPY SHOPPING! █████████

The Suica penguin is a symbol of the prepaid e-ticket of the East Japan Rail Way.

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