Clean Up On Aisle 9!
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I am not sure how much mess has accumulated in your days, life, and hearts, but I know that we have all been overwhelmed with moments that take our breath away. The mess of life will surely come, so what can we make of the clean up process
I know. I used to beg to vacuum the stairs when I was a kid. Mainly because I could escape being around everyone else but I still love it today. And as we both know, there are worse habits to have than a love for cleaning!
It's not easy living with a cat whose name is synonymous with power. Bucky Katt is a mastermind of destruction, a self-proclaimed humble, misunderstood genius with a doctorate for snacks. But Bucky's plan to control the world through secrecy and cunning may have a flaw - stupidity. Can clueless, yet devoted dog Satchel and so-called owner Rob keep this cat under wraps Or will they have a mess the size of Bucky's ego to clean up
At the trial of an action of tort by a woman against the proprietor of astore for personal injuries sustained when the plaintiff, a customerin the store, slipped on a piece of candy on the floor of the store, therewas evidence that, when the plaintiff got up, she picked a piece ofcandy off the heel of her shoe; that where she fell there was a pieceof candy on the floor, \"all heel marks,\" \"all dirty and grimy,\" \"aboutthe size of the palm of her hand,\" \"all flattened out,\" \"a number ofheel marks in it\"; that there was a \"skid mark\" on the floor abouttwo feet long, extending from the piece of candy on the floor to theplace where she fell; that a floor-walker picked up this piece of candy,but had to scrape it off the floor where it was stuck; that the floorunder the candy was clean, but around it was dirty; that the candywas of a kind sold in the store at the time; that the defendant's rulesfor the government of its employees with reference to the safety ofcustomers were that the \"floor must be kept clean at all times by ajanitor whose duty it was to keep the floor clean by sweeping\" andthat \"if there was anything on the floor, it should be cleaned upimmediately\"; that the floor had been swept about an hour and .ahalf before the accident; and that many customers were in the storeat and before the time of the accident. There was no evidence thatthe candy had been seen on the floor by any one previous to theplaintiff's fall. Held, that there was evidence that the candy whichcaused the plaintiff's fall had been on the floor such a period of timethat, in the exercise of reasonable care to keep the premises in safecondition for use by customers, the defendant should have found andremoved it; and that a verdict for the plaintiff was warranted.
The jury were warranted in finding the following facts: The plaintiff entered the defendant's store at its invitation, on a Saturday evening about eight o'clock, to make a purchase. While walking in an aisle toward the counter where she intended to make her purchase and while opposite or near the candy counter, she slipped, fell, and was hurt. As she got up, she picked a piece of candy off the heel of her shoe. Where she fell, there was a piece of candy on the floor, \"all heel marks,\" \"all dirty and grimy,\" \"about the size of the palm of her hand,\" \"all flattened out,\" \"a number of heel marks in it.\" There was a \"skid mark\" on the floor about two feet long, extending from the piece of candy on the floor to the place where she fell. A floor-walker picked up this piece of candy, but had to scrape it off the floor where it was stuck. The floor under the candy was clean, but around it was dirty. The candy was an \"orange slice\" of a kind sold in the store at the time. The defendant's rules for the government of its employees with reference to the safety of customers were that the \"floor must be kept clean at all times by a janitor whose duty it was to keep the floor clean by sweeping\" and that \"if there was anything on the floor, it should be cleaned up immediately.\" The floor had been swept about an hour and a half before the accident. Many customers were in the store that evening at and before the time of the accident. There was no evidence that the candy had been seen on the floor by any one prior to the plaintiff's fall.
On the heels of the summit comes a national \"Day of Action\" Sept. 27. Local organizers have planned more than 1,500 events, including a \"Graffiti Wipeout\" in Gresham, Ore., and cleanup of a pelican habitat in Miami (see events.servicenation.org). 1e1e36bf2d