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Postcard arrives 53 years late
Missouri - "He's
gone. He's dead," was the first thought church secretary Marie
Taylor had as she held the postcard addressed to the late Rev. Jack
Stanton.
Then she took a closer look and read
the postmark -- 9:30 p.m., October 20, 1949.
The card, relayed by the Postal
Service, finally reached its destination last week at the Carpenter
Street Baptist Church, where Stanton was pastor from 1947 to 1951. He
died last year.
The card, with a correct one-cent
stamp, featured a picture of a St. Louis evangelist, Del Fehsenfeld,
who was planning a revival in Burbank, California, in 1949.
Promised topics included "Are
you ready to meet God?" and "Will the atomic-bomb end
all?"
Taylor used the Internet to track
down the 90-year-old Fehsenfeld in Greenville, South Carolina. He
recalled passing through Missouri many times and said he'd like to
visit again, Taylor said.
Postal officials had their theories
about how the card went missing for more than half a century.
It could have been stuck in a machine
or a piece of furniture in a Burbank post office and didn't get found
until a recent renovation, said Rich Skaggs, the Moberly postmaster.
But Terri Bouffiou, spokeswoman for
the U.S. Postal Service in Southern California, said there wasn't any
renovation or move lately at any Burbank post office.
What would the late pastor think
about his never-received mail?
"He would get a kick out of
it," said current pastor Brian Wilson. -- CNN News
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