I would think that quite a lot of people have the first dollar they earned – by some definition of the term.
My first job (not counting hand-outs from my parents when I was a kid) paid me with a check, which I deposited into a bank account. My account has never gone to zero, therefore the “first” dollar (whatever that means) is still there as a number somewhere.
Jack Benny still has you beat. I remember a routine where a thief takes a $20 bill from a man, and when the fellow asks for it back, the thief asks the fellow to prove it’s his by repeating the serial number. Benny pipes up and starts off “PF 615 . . .” Both the robber and the robbee ask him how he knew that. “I know the numbers on all of them.”
jagedlo over 4 years ago
You probably still have the SECOND dollar you ever earned!
shamino over 4 years ago
I would think that quite a lot of people have the first dollar they earned – by some definition of the term.
My first job (not counting hand-outs from my parents when I was a kid) paid me with a check, which I deposited into a bank account. My account has never gone to zero, therefore the “first” dollar (whatever that means) is still there as a number somewhere.
heathcliff2 over 4 years ago
Nice to know he is aware of his own residential address.
mi_sbs over 4 years ago
wheresgeorge.com
cuzinron47 over 4 years ago
I left mine at the Airman’s Club.
Dani Rice over 4 years ago
Jack Benny still has you beat. I remember a routine where a thief takes a $20 bill from a man, and when the fellow asks for it back, the thief asks the fellow to prove it’s his by repeating the serial number. Benny pipes up and starts off “PF 615 . . .” Both the robber and the robbee ask him how he knew that. “I know the numbers on all of them.”
Sisyphos over 4 years ago
If Gaylord were any tighter, his head would pop off!