Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Leggett & Platt (L&P), based in Carthage, Missouri, is an American diversified manufacturer that designs and produces various engineered components and products that can be found in homes and automobiles. The firm was founded in 1883, and consists of 15 business units, 20,000 employee-partners, and 135 manufacturing facilities located in 18 ...
Nov. 13—CARTHAGE, Mo. — Mitch Dolloff has been named the new CEO of Leggett and Platt, effective Jan. 1, according to an announcement made by the company's board of directors. Dolloff ...
Leggett & Platt now anticipates sales will come in at $4.3 billion to $4.4 billion, where previously it was modeling $4.3 billion to $4.5 billion. The new adjusted EPS range is $1.00 to $1.10 ...
Need help? Call us! 800-290-4726 Login / Join. Mail
Leggett (surname) Leggett & Platt, a manufacturing company; Francis H. Leggett, a ship commissioned in 1903; Leggett or Leggett's, a former upscale department store chain with stores in Norfolk, Virginia and other Hampton Roads cities; now part of Belk; in Physics and Quantum Theory Leggett inequality
Calumet Specialty Products Partners (Indianapolis) Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad (Michigan City) CNO Financial Group ; Cummins ; DirectBuy (Merrillville) Do It Best ; Elevance Health (Indianapolis) Eli Lilly and Company (Indianapolis) Elwood Staffing ; Emmis Corporation (Indianapolis) Finish Line, Inc. (Indianapolis)
That means, that the Schukra trademark, patent, whatever is owned by Leggett & Platt. Schukra came up in Germany and Austria about 1970. Cylindrical pearls on a steel rope make a flexible chain that becomes stiff and rigid, if you excert a high pulling force on one end of the rope, and this force stems pushing against the first "pearl".
Automotive Products, commonly abbreviated to AP, was an automotive industry components company set up in 1920 by Edward Boughton, Willie Emmott and Denis Brock, to import and sell American-made components to service the fleet of ex-military trucks left behind in Europe after World War I.