Legally you are not allowed to put anything in or on a mailbox unless you are an authorized U.S. Postal Carrier.
From straightdope.com, "[An] example of the federal interest in your mailbox is the limitation placed on its use. DMM 508 section 3.1.3 says a mailbox "may be used only for matter bearing postage." It's a federal crime to deposit mailable matter without postage into a letterbox, and many items are officially nonmailable. So, Stan, the answer to your question is yes - you can't put anything in a mailbox that doesn't have postage on it. For better or worse, neither can all those guys coming around with advertising flyers, which is why you get stuff rubber-banded to your doorknob or scattered on the lawn.
The idea behind these rules is to give the postal service a monopoly on mail, a privilege formally conferred by the Private Express Statutes. According to DMM 608, the statutes prohibit transmitting letters or packets by non-U.S. mail means without paying postage. There are exceptions, of course. The one that gets the express delivery services off the hook permits private delivery of "extremely urgent" letters. Quality Service Guide 608 spells out what qualifies as "extremely urgent" (letters sent from less than 50 miles and before noon have to be delivered by the end of the business day, for example), but there's an easier way: "It will be conclusively presumed that a letter is extremely urgent … if the amount paid for private carriage of the letter is at least three dollars or twice the applicable U.S. postage for First-Class Mail (including priority mail) whichever is the greater," says 39 USC 320.6. In other words, if the express delivery service charges you enough, the postal service will assume your letter or package really did have to get there overnight. On the other hand, if the item fits the statutory definition of mail and isn't covered by one of the exceptions, it can't be delivered. In Associated Third Class Mail Users v. USPS, the Court of Appeals ruled that a group of advertisers couldn't develop a private system to deliver generic advertisements - it had to send them through the USPS."
No it is not necessary to have a business permit or license to sell merchandise at any kind of convention.
There are many licenses which are needed while starting a business and they are: Fire Department Permit, Air and Water Pollution Control Permit, Sign Permit, County Permits, State Licenses, Federal Licenses, Sales Tax License, Health Department Permits.
What you need is a resale permit (also called a tax license, tax permit, etc.) To apply, get in touch with your state Department of Revenue office. Some states require you pay a refundable deposit, some don't. To be sure, call and ask.
Yes. With first class, the cost is 44 cents per postcard. With bulk mail it is about 25 cents per postcard. The only drawback is you need to buy a permit for $190 per year. But if you're mailing more than a couple thousand postcards each year, it's well worth it.
yes, you need to apply for a separate business permit because you have a new line of business.
yes
If you as an individual or small group want to protest or distribute flyers, have a demonstration or rally on a public sidewalk, and do not intend to use amplified sound, you do not need any permit.
No it's not necessary to have a special permit to visit in kashmir. wowrooms.co.in
No. You need a special permit.
No unless you have a special permit.
Only by special permit.
You can get a special permit at 16.
It means that you have a special permit to drive with a licensed driver in the vehicle before you get your actual drivers licence
No, they are illegal without a special permit.
You buy the permit from the cash shop then double click on it in the FM where you want it. The permit is around 1800 NXCash, the special permit is around 3600 NXCash.
Different jurisdictions might have special bylaws but generally you only need a permit to completely remove a tree.
As freight, no special permit is required. If you want to carry any alcoholic beverage in the cab of the vehicle, there is no such permit - you may not have alcoholic beverages in a CMV, period, unless they're in the cargo area as freight and listed as such on the bill of lading.