What costs more than riches ...
[4573] What costs more than riches ... - What costs more than riches but doesn't cost a penny; that's also hard to find yet easy to lose? - #brainteasers #riddles - Correct Answers: 27 - The first user who solved this task is Fazil Hashim
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What costs more than riches ...

What costs more than riches but doesn't cost a penny; that's also hard to find yet easy to lose?
Correct answers: 27
The first user who solved this task is Fazil Hashim.
#brainteasers #riddles
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Some short Labor Day Jokes

First Monday in September is Labor Day, enjoy Monday Off.

I had a joke about Labor Day...
unfortunately it didn’t work out

Did you hear the joke about Labor Day?
It really doesn’t work for me.

What’s a laborer’s favorite exercise?
“Work-outs!”

Have some jokes during 3 day weekend and check out some older Older Labor day jokes Read more on page:

Why do locksmiths work on Labor Day?
Because they are key workers.

Why is it cheap to have zombie employees?
Because they don’t need a living wage.

What did the employee say at the end of the long weekend?
I guess it’s back to the grind!

What do you usually do on Labour Day?
As little as possible, just like every day!

Jokes of the day - Daily updated jokes. New jokes every day.
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Leopold Gmelin

Died 13 Apr 1853 at age 64 (born 2 Aug 1788).German chemist who discovered potassium ferrocyanide (1822), devised Gmelin's test for bile pigments and researched the chemistry of digestion. He published the notable Handbook of Chemistry to comprehensively survey the subject. This was the first thorough update since the era of Lavoisier's influence. Organic chemistry was one of the first edition's three volumes (1817). Gmelin thus reinforced the distinction from inorganic compounds, as had Berzelius, who coined the name organic, only a decade earlier, for substances found in living, or once-living tissues. By the fourth edition (1843), Gmelin's work had expanded to nine volumes, of which six were on organic chemistry. Gmelin coined the names ester, ketone and racemic acid. Johann Georg Gmelin was his great-uncle.«
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