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06-10-13, 07:39 AM | |
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
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Lol. Thanks for the laugh Joni. You have such a way with words!
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Tracey What I want to do doesn't matter. What I actually do does. I want to eat donuts for breakfast every morning but I'm not going to. I may not want to work out today but I'm going to. 2014 Goal- Be consistent! Embrace yoga! |
06-10-13, 08:37 AM | ||
Join Date: Jan 2004
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Quote:
Cynthia |
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06-10-13, 09:17 AM | |
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Santa Cruz Mtns, CA
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You can refuse delivery on an article of mail after it's left the carrier's hands.
1.1.3 Refusal After Delivery After delivery, an addressee may mark a mailpiece “Refused” and return it within a reasonable time, if the piece or any attachment is not opened. I found that here: http://pe.usps.com/text/dmm300/508.htm I think your first line of attack on this question is to contact your PO and see what they might have done with the package. I was given the option of refusing delivery by Amazon customer service when I tried to cancel an order before it was logged as being shipped. It was too far into the process to stop shipping, so I was told I should refuse delivery. Turns out I changed my mind again and kept it. And to keep this on-topic, it was for the PowerStrike 6 DVD - and I'm glad I kept it!
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~~Diane~~ |
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