Your Questions About Get Money Fast On Club Penguin

Donna asks…

anyone know any cheats for club penguin?

so i can get money fast on it?
thank you

Nagesh answers:

YES AT THIS WEBSITE YOU CAN GET 5000 COINS A DAY!!!!!! TO GET 5000 COINS A DAY AND A LOT OF HINTS GO TO http://www.awesomecpcheats.co.nr

Mark asks…

UMMMM…PLZ tell me:D whats the fastest way to get coins on club penguin? why is inside?

I am getting membership wirh my own money(only 1 month membership) and i wann buy all the puffles and cool stuff in the game before i get it i want loads of money so i can get it all when i have membership(gotta get loads of coins in 1 week)

Nagesh answers:

Twat

Sharon asks…

On club penguin…?

Whats the fastest way I can get money?

Nagesh answers:

There are many ways to get lots of money on Club Penguin. Right now I have over 30,000 coins. The quickest way for me to get coins is Cart Surfer. My strategy to get 300+ coins on that game is to do lots of back flips and 360s. To do a back flip, press the down arrow key, then let go of it and quickly press the space bar. To do a 360, press the right or left arrow key, then the space bar.

John asks…

How can a 15 year old save 1000 bucks fast?

I wanna save 1000 for a macbook for 2 reasons. 1 because i want it and 2 because it is hard to share a computer with my siblings. I am in high school and i get alot of homework that i need the computer for and when i politely ask them to get off so i can do work, they say crap like “you hog the computer” “your just gonna go on facebook”. I am rarely on facebook in the first place. Its just not something i waste my time on. and its not like they need it for work. mainly all they do on the computers is play club penguin. There are 2 computers between me and my 4 siblings and it just isn’t working out. So how could i get the money for my own? and please don’t leave comments like get a job or babysit because i have no one to babysit. I need some ideas that i could actually do at my age.
why did you people delete half the answers??

Nagesh answers:

Please ignore Salma, get a part time job! I got one and i’ve saved up heaps of money from it.

Daniel asks…

Do Oxfam Books charge too much?

For a little while I’ve been volunteering in an Oxfam bookstore. I enjoy spending time there, and it’s a lovely store with friendly customers, nice co-volunteers and lots of interesting stock, but there are a few things that have been bugging me.

One is the price of the stock. Paperback fiction is priced at £2.00 or £2.50, depending on whether its condition is “good” or “very good”/”as new” (anything below “good” is pulped for recycling). Hardback fiction is £2.50 to £3.00, and non-fiction ranges from £2 to £5. If we get something that is considered valuable, it can go for much higher prices. We do have a small bookcase which constitutes the “pound shelf”, where stuff which has been on the shelves for more than 3-4 weeks goes.

The primary purpose of a charity shop is naturally to raise money for charity, and from that point of view one should have no qualms about us getting full whack for our stock. This is especially the case with stuff that genuinely is valuable – selling a book for £50 or £100 makes a dramatic difference to the takings at the end of the day. However, I feel charity shops should act as a social resource, making goods available to people who might not otherwise be able to afford them. From this point of view I wonder whether in recent years many charity shops (not just picking on Oxfam) are letting the community down through their pricing policies. I also notice that some of our books (especially the fiction) seem over-priced in comparison with what you might find in other second-hand shops or on internet sites like Amazon Marketplace and Ebay. Several other volunteers have told me they feel a lot of books are over-priced, and wonder whether the store might actually rake in more money if it lowered the prices, increasing the rate at which books are sold and depleting the stocks of books in the backroom at a faster rate. This leads me to the second thing that’s been bugging me.

An awful lot of books are bundled into black bin liners in the backroom, where they are designated to be pulped at Oxfam’s recycling plant. With many books this strikes me as reasonable. Some people really do seem to use Oxfam as a rubbish bin, sending us books which are missing chunks of pages, falling to pieces, stained with poured drinks, soaking wet etc. – these books we couldn’t reasonably re-sell. However, there are many other categories of books which I find it painful to see thrown away as per policy. These include all book club books, such as those produced by the Book Club Association. The manager told me this is on the grounds that they are cheaply manufactured, the covers and the paper are of “poor quality”, and the books “almost valueless”. Readers Digest fiction gets automatically thrown away as well. The majority of hardback fiction is binned, unless it’s of special value (e.g. signed or a rare first-edition). I’ve become aware of various other categories of books which have to be thrown away as well, including Penguin Popular Classics (too cheaply made) and anything by David Attenborough (!). Is the shop right to be doing this? If we really can’t stock these items, I wish we might at least be able to give them to another charity which could use them. If we really have to do these things, I also wish we could at least make an effort to inform customers what our requirements are so they at least have half-a-chance of donating appropriately; there are no guidelines in the shop about what books we want and don’t want. I dread to think how donors would feel if they knew what happens to some of their donations.

The official line is that Oxfam Bookstore specialises in books, and wants to charge decent prices for decent quality books, therefore having to chuck many of the donations that come in and not being able to charge 50p and less for books (like the good old days I remember!). Some of the aspects of how that translates into practice makes me uneasy, though. Is it just me, or has something gone a bit awry with charity shops (and I suspect it’s not just my store, nor just Oxfam)?

Nagesh answers:

Its not just Oxfam books! It now seems a general trend for charity shops to overprice the goods they have had donated free to them. It is now not unusual to find these charities are charging more than that charged for brand new items in standard high street shops.
When the volunteers in these shops are asked,’why such a high price’? The usual response is its directives from head office. You know the ones who actually get a wage/salary from these charities.
These people seem to have forgot that if they are expecting top price they are going to be competing with well run high street stores and they are also going to lose the sympathy purchases of those who patronise their charity and also the donars of these goods.

They are just getting to greedy, and should remember that three or four items sold for fifty pence earns them more than one sold at one pound!

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Sunday, March 18th, 2012 Money Making Schemes

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