A Service Dog gives a person with a disability independence. Never approach, distract or pet a working dog, especially when (s)he is in harness. Never be afraid to ask questions to the handler (parent). 01 Nov 2016 02:59:53pm
re: Belgium imperf
Those look like they are from post cards.
Can't help you with values bit you have a fantastic cancel on your Liege one. Very nice.
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A Service Dog gives a person with a disability independence. Never approach, distract or pet a working dog, especially when (s)he is in harness. Never be afraid to ask questions to the handler (parent). 01 Nov 2016 04:55:02pm
re: Belgium imperf
Your Liege card was posted either April 19th, 1901 or 13th - I can't make out the number clearly on the day. I'd need to be on my computer. You can easily match the post card circulation time with the stamp by going back to the issue days of the matching stamp design in the catalogue.
I don't know if this helps answer your question?
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"Let's find a cure for Still's Disease, Breast Cancer and Canine Addison's Disease. We CAN find a cure and save lives!!"
These tags on stamps (and on postal cards*) read "NE PAS LIVRER LE DIMANCHE" in French, and "NET BESTELLEN OP ZONDAG" in Dutch, translated to the English "Don't deliver on Sunday". Christians who believed the Biblical injunction to avoid working on Sunday could leave the labels on the stamps and the post office would presumably follow those instructions. If the sender didn't care when his letters were delivered could tear the labels off the stamps before sticking them on an envelope, and, I assume, the sender of a postal card could just X out the label.
Bob
* Postcards are commercial items normally illustrated with a picture or text on one side, with room for a stamp, address, and message on the other side. Postal cards are issued by post offices and are considered postal stationery, and don't usually have illustrations of any sort on them. They bear a stamp imprint in the upper-right corner, like your Belgium postal card stamps.
You're welcome, Karen. Ask all of the questions you want. Philately is such a huge field that there is no such thing as a collector who is expert in all fields. I've been collecting stamps for something like 45 years, and learn something new about the hobby almost every day. And it's not all that hard to become an "expert" in something that hardly anyone else knows anything about.
There are some general "truths" that beginning collectors should be aware of:
• Most stamps are common. Just because you haven't seen a particular stamp before doesn't mean that its necessarily rare, or even uncommon. I once had trouble finding a particular stamp for my Canada collection, until I went to a stamp shop where the dealer told me to pick one out of a shoebox he had that was full of copies of that stamp.
• Very few stamps are rare, and most of us can't afford most of them. However, a great many are very hard to find because relatively few of them were printed. The best way to add hard-to-find stamps to your collection is to learn everything you can about the types of stamps that most interest you.
• Collecting stamps is possibly one of the worst investments you can make, assuming you want to add to your wealth. If you ever decide to sell your collection, you'll be fortunate to sell it for more than 20% of its catalogue value.
• Collecting stamps is without question one of the most educational hobbies ever. It can literally take you where no man or woman has gone before. When I mounted my first exhibit, about the wartime economy of Great Britain, a very experienced judge told me that he had never seen an exhibit that approached the war in the way I did. When I started working on the exhibit, I knew almost nothing about the economy of Great Britain during the war. Now I could write a book about it, or teach a class.