I think what Lloyd is saying is it may be worth your time to go through your wiring harness and clean up the connectors so that any resistance due to corrosion is reduced. Repack the connection with dielectric grease to slow the corrosion process such that your grandkids will be the next to clean the contacts.
The biggest load on the electrical system are coils and lighting. Check your headlight, tail light, brake light and turn signal bulbs to make sure they are stock parts. An uninformed repair tech can easily substitute a higher wattage bulb by mistake.
To check your coils, open up your points cover (points, right? you did say bone stock settup). With the key off, slip a piece of electrical tape or plastic between the points to make sure they aren't making contact. Now, with your ohm meter, measure the resistance between the blue wire and ground. Then measure the resistance between the yellow wire and ground. Do you get close to 5 ohms? If you get less, then your coils aren't stock or they may have some internal damage dropping their resistance and efficiency.