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Jiffy Steamer's products and/or their components are covered by one or more of the following United States Patents: D421,165; [2] D423,156; [3] D426,924. [4] References
A Jiffy Lube in Durham, North Carolina A Jiffy Lube in Cedar Mill, Oregon. There are about 2,000 Jiffy Lube franchises in North America, all of them independently owned by 252 operators, with about 24 million customers each year as of 2002. [2] The company was ranked first on National Oil and Lube News 2011 Tops in the Fast Lubes Industry ...
Jiffy (convenience store), a convenience store brand in Thailand; Jiffy Packaging, a British packaging manufacturer; Jiffy Steamer, an American manufacturer of clothing steamers; Jiffy mix, a line of baking mixes manufactured by the Chelsea Milling Company
Casey's (); Dubuque Bank and Trust (); Fareway (); Happy Joe's (); Hartig Drug (); HNI Corporation (); Hy-Vee (West Des Moines); Kum & Go (); Lee Enterprises (); Maid ...
Jiffy Pop Popcorn. Top to bottom: uncooked with paper outer covering in place, uncooked with foil inner covering exposed, cooked with foil intact, cooked with foil opened. Jiffy Pop is a popcorn brand of ConAgra Foods. The product consists of popcorn kernels, oil, and flavoring agents contained within a foil-covered, disposable aluminum pan.
Chelsea Milling Co. grain elevators Various Jiffy mix products, date unknown Chelsea Milling Company is a family-operated company [ 1 ] with roots in the flour milling business dating back to 1802. Originally a commercial operation that sold only to other businesses, its first baking mix designed for sale to consumers was created in the spring ...
Perhaps the best selling and best known steam car was the Stanley Steamer, produced from 1896 to 1924. Between 1899 and 1905, Stanley outsold all gasoline-powered cars and was second only to the electric cars of the Columbia Automobile Company in the U.S. [ 10 ] It used a compact fire-tube boiler to power a simple double acting two cylinder engine.
Steamer Company Number 5 is a former Richmond fire station located at 200 West Marshall Street in Richmond, Virginia. Designed by Richmond City Engineer Wilfred Emory Cutshaw , the building has a triangular plan to conform to the shape of its lot at the intersection of Brook Road and Marshall Street.