There is a good chance the post office will deliver it. However, it may come back postage due.
No. You have to add a 1-cent stamp for a first-class letter because the postage is now 42 cents.
yes, indeed -- there are called "forever" because they will still be valid for postage even if rates go up.
According to the US Post Office postage calculator (link attached to this answer) the current cost for the most basic postage, first class letter to from the US to the UK, is 94 cents. If you don't want to go to the post office to get the exact postage you need, three first class stamps would do it. You'd be overpaying, though. International Postal Union treaties used to require that postage have the cost printed on it to be honored for international mail. If this were still true, the "Forever" Stamp wouldn't be honored for international mail. However, the US Post Office stated in an online press release that the Forever Stamp is fine for international postage. You do, however, still need to add additional postage equal to the difference between the current US First Class letter rate and the higher International rate.
No the current rate is 44 cents.
Regardless of where you send a letter, you need to put the return address. Without it, the post office has the right to not deliver it and put it the dead letter bin.
You can still use the stamp. However, you need to add additional value to the stamp with smaller values to equal the 44 cent cost of mailing a letter.
No. You have to add a 1-cent stamp for a first-class letter because the postage is now 42 cents.
The H series First Class Stamp is still valid for 33 cents worth of postage. So you would have to add 12 cents to it to mail a letter in 2012.
There were 105 types of this plaid stamp manufactured, they are worth around $50 a piece now. The best way to find out this answer though, is to inquire the intelligence of a stamp collector.
Yup. Your rates are going to go way up though.
Obviously, you can't keep the letter as it would explode. This does not matter because you still get the stamp for it.
You still only need a 42 cent stamp as long as the letter is under half an ounce.
Yes, this stamp can still be used for four cents of postage. It was issued in 1991.
Yes, you can still use the G rate dove stamp. The make up rate stamp can still be used for 3 cents of postage.
Not if the stamp says 42 cents on it. If it says forever on the stamp, yes, you can.
You can still report the accident to the insurance company and collect for damages. The Police will most likely not take a report. You would have to call them to verify that though.
More than likely, the post office will stamp "Insufficient Postage" on it and return it to you. Not only will you lose out on your 39-cent stamp, but you will also lose the time of delivery. It would be better to buy a 2-cent stamp and add it to the envelope than to lose 39 cents and delivery time.