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Hydrogen is difficult to keep, but chicken feathers may solve problem
TIPTON - NASCAR logos soon will be appearing on various New Pig Corp. products and New Pig logos on NASCAR race cars. New Pig and NASCAR recently announced an exclusive agreement, making New Pig the official licensed provider of heavy duty wipers and sorbents for NASCAR. "This allows us to use the NASCAR mark on our products where appropriate," said Andy James, New Pig brand manage.
SUMMER is over and most of the problems that went with it have disappeared on its own. However, some remain or have been replaced by something else.
Acu-Sert(TM) CI-250 rotary Cut-to-Length, self-contained machine automatically feeds up to 9 in. wide material on roll. Photo optic eye system detects registration mark, then machine cuts material at up to 300 inserts/min and take away rollers feed it into package. Mounting on base plate, unit includes roll mounted on separate unwind stand and feed rollers adjustable from horizontal to 45° angle ...
People might be in the dark about buying green.
I used to think multitools were for sissies. I mean, what real man would ever have a screwdriver as little as the ones on those tools? And a man use scissors? No way. Not this man. And it was clear to me what the little files were all about. A real man has rough, dirty fingernails.
Counselor magazine, a publication for the promotional products industry, revealed the top 10 fastest-growing promotional product distributors in its June issue. Lawrence-based company Absorbent Ink. ranked eighth with a growth increase of 63 percent between 2006 and 2008, and earned the Spirit Award from the magazine two consecutive years.
TAMPA, Fla. - Television viewers knew him as the OxiClean guy: the bearded, boisterous pitchman on commercials airing hundreds of times a week nationwide. "Hi. Billy Mays here," he would begin, before showing off his latest cleaning product or gadget.
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Billy Mays, the burly, bearded television pitchman whose boisterous hawking of products such as Orange Glo and OxiClean made him a pop-culture icon, has died. He was 50.
AP Pitchman Billy Mays is shown filming an infomercial for Arm & Hammer baking soda. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Television viewers knew him as the OxiClean guy: the bearded, boisterous pitchman on commercials airing hundreds of times a week nationwide.
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