> From: Julia Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> "J. van Baardwijk" wrote:
> > 
> > At 15:25 26-09-2002 -0500, The Fool wrote:
> > 
> > >But the marketplace demonstrates you can compete with free.
Purveyors of
> > >bottled water do it.
> > 
> > They do? How? Do you own a fresh water well? Is tapwater free in the
US?
> > 
> > Jeroen "Ban dihydrogenmonoxide!" van Baardwijk
> 
> 
> 4)  If you're hanging around some place with a public water fountain,
> that's free.  But water varies from place to place, and even building
to
> building.  For example, when I was pregnant and we went to College
> Station for AggieCon, I ended up buying 2 1-liter bottles of water each
> day to make sure I was drinking enough, because the free water fountain
> had water that didn't taste like the water I was accustomed to
drinking,
> and it was worth the money to me to get water that I wasn't gagging on
> every 100ccs or so.  So, for all intents and purposes, I was paying for
> what would have otherwise been free, but wasn't palatable.

Get distilled water.  It's cheaper than the other types of bottled water,
purer, tastes better.

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