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Old Time UPS.
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<blockquote data-quote="Dustyroads" data-source="post: 656760" data-attributes="member: 22610"><p>The old delivery notices were printed with brown ink on white card stock (before the invention of the sticky note), and they had a perforated signature card on the top end.</p><p> </p><p>We used to have ISP cards which were Improper Shipping Practices cards that you could communicate with customer service reps across the country, notifying them that their account was failing to properly pack or label their boxes. </p><p> </p><p>We all carried masonite clipboards for the paper records that had stainless steel "bankers clips" on the ends to hold the paper down on the board. Not as much mass as a diad, but they still would get a dog's undivided attention. </p><p> </p><p>And, of course, we all used to fill out time cards that we carried in our shirt pocket.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dustyroads, post: 656760, member: 22610"] The old delivery notices were printed with brown ink on white card stock (before the invention of the sticky note), and they had a perforated signature card on the top end. We used to have ISP cards which were Improper Shipping Practices cards that you could communicate with customer service reps across the country, notifying them that their account was failing to properly pack or label their boxes. We all carried masonite clipboards for the paper records that had stainless steel "bankers clips" on the ends to hold the paper down on the board. Not as much mass as a diad, but they still would get a dog's undivided attention. And, of course, we all used to fill out time cards that we carried in our shirt pocket. [/QUOTE]
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