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John Smith
 
Posts: n/a
Default What anchor should I buy?

The people paid $30 originally, with the $5 taken from the till that makes
the actual cost $25. The people paid $27 less the $2 the clerk took, it
becomes $25.


"Calif Bill" wrote in message
nk.net...
The tax man clerk. They actually paid $30 with a $5 rebate for the
rope/line/twine. Then the Federal government trained clerk took the

rebate
and charged a 40% handling charge to administer the rebate. About like

the
rest of the Federal Government on giving back the taxes they extracted

from
the states, to give back to the states. But if the clerk was really
government material, he would have added some extra requirements to the

60%
of the rebate he let the payers have.
Bill

"Gould 0738" wrote in message
...
The acutal solution:

The rec.boats posters went into Big Box Marine.

Calif Bill bought ten feet of anchor line
Gould bought ten feet of rope to use for an anchor rode
Jax bought ten feet of rope to use for an anchor rope.

The young clerk on duty got rather confused by it all, and forgot what

the
cordage was supposed to sell for.
The clerk charged all three rec.boats posters $10 @.

Before the posters could relocate their argument to the parking lot, the
manager of Big Box Marine asked the clerk about the sale. The clerk

said,
"I
didn't know what to charge, so they each paid $10."

"That's too much said the manager of Big Box Marine, " {{OK OKIt's a

fable
already so give me a break}} "Take $5 out of the till and give it back

to
them."

The clerk didn't know how to divide $5 by three, so he took a $2 "tip"

and
gave
eachof the rec.boaters a $1 refund. Since the cordage originally cost

each
poster $10 and they received $1 back, the net cost per poster could be

said to
be $9.

Since 9X3 = 27, and the clerk absoconded with $2....what happened to the

extra
buck? ($27 + 2 = $29)

Who will be the first "unstumped" by this one? :-)