Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for January 30, 2012

  1. W12
    chris_weaver  over 12 years ago

    It’s a Dead Man’s Party…

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    flagfly  over 12 years ago

    I know it’s slang, but the sun doesn’t set…the earth turns away from it. But you knew that.

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    miklin37  over 12 years ago

    When I was in Palermo, it was in Sciliy, not Italy.

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    Puddleglum2  over 12 years ago

    “Sundown” – Gordon Lightfoot

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  5. Naturalhairmecartoon
    Nicole ♫ ⊱✿ ◕‿◕✿⊰♫ Premium Member over 12 years ago

    I would wage a bet that 99% of the shopping carts are “lost” ie: In alleyways, parking lots of other stores, being carted around by the homeless. Though, one could argue that the homeless using them as storage bins have stolen them. So maybe my math is incorrect. It’s more like 75% lost/misplaced and 25% stolen.

    I need coffee.

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    iced tea  over 12 years ago

    I’ve seen people use shopping carts for their laundry outside. That catacombs must be creepy. Red at night, sailors delight.

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    gocomicsmember  over 12 years ago

    Some shopping carts are taken by people without vehicles who want assistance in carrying their purchases home and then are too lazy to return the carts. I have seen them abandoned on street corners just a few blocks away from the store. (The laziness factor is also apparent in parking lots where they are left where the car happened to be rather than pushed back to a cart corral. At least in those cases there is no replacement cost unless they are hit by a vehicle, but it costs wages to have cart pushers rounding them up all the time!) Others are appropriated by people wanting to use them for their own purposes (the so-called "bag ladies, for instance) but usually that is one or two carts per person that continue to be used for years. The abandoned ones, unless someone notifies the store where to find them or does the kind deed of returning them, are lost to the store. At the store where I work it is hard to judge how many of the carts we just got last year are gone, but I know that the stock of hand baskets we had when I was hired has dwindled down to two for the whole store. Given how easily they are carried off, I somehow have my doubts that the store will spend the money to replace them, even though it is an inconvenience for shoppers only wanting to get a couple of items to have to use a full-size cart.

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