Tub Book
Posted by admin on Feb 27, 2011 in Uncategorized | Comments Off
Tub Book
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![]() Leisure Time Spa Hot Tub Water Chemistry Guide Book $1.00 Time Remaining: 21d 5h 18m Buy It Now for only: $1.00 |
![]() SPA HOT TUB BOOK DO IT YOURSELF $24.99 Time Remaining: 11d 16h 21m Buy It Now for only: $24.99 |
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Crock-Pot SCV700SS 7-Quart Oval Manual Slow Cooker, Stainless Steel
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Description7-QT CAPACITYREMOVABLE OVAL STONEWARECONVENIENT WARM SETTINGDISHWASHER SAFE STONEWARE & LIDSTAINLESS STEALUPC : 048894034954Shipping Dimensions : 14.40in X 14.40in X 9.50inEstimated Shipping Weight : 13.25 Features
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Cooper Cooler Rapid Beverage Chiller, Brushed-Silver
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DescriptionGuests arriving unexpectedly? Chill up to six cans or one bottle of wine in just minutes with this rapid cooler. All that's required is a tray or two of ice cubes, some water, the beverage containers, and a push of a button. A can of pop or beer chills from room temperature to 43 degree F in just one minute; the extra-chill setting takes it right down to 34 degrees F. A bottle of wine (the machine lid removes for extra-long bottles) chills in just six minutes. Beverage containers rotate horizontally while being bathed by a jet of ice water, a process that is 40 times faster than chilling beverages in a freezer, and carbonated drinks won't explode or fizz upon opening. To warm drinks, such as a bottle of baby formula, simply add hot water instead of ice. The Cooper Cooler, invented by a chemical engineering student, includes other handy features such as preset time buttons on the touchpad, a no-spin option, add-ice indicator light, and automatic-off when done. Non-slip feet keep the machine firmly in place. Measuring approximately 16 by 10-1/2 by 8 inches, this model comes in a contemporary brushed-chrome finish, plugs into any 120v outlet, and is covered by a one-year warranty against defects. Editor's Note: This item does not include an adapter.--Ann Bieri 09-21-2007 - Brand New Item. Description - COOPER COOLER HC01.C RAPID BEVERAGE & WINE CHILLER (SILVER) Features
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AquaReader Floating Book Holder
Sale Price: $49.95 |
DescriptionThe AquaReader Floating Book Holder is a balanced and bouyant device that holds books, magazines, or newsprint at an angle and hieght optimal for viewing while lounging in the pool, spa, or bath tub. It is light, portable, and easy to store indoors or out. Using the unique book retainer design, reading material is securly fastened onto the device while remaining easy to read and turn pages. No other bath caddy offers the avid reader the function and convenience of AquaReader. The typical bath caddy is a rigid, heavy, difficult to move and position, and far to elevated for comfortable reading. Try an AquaReader today! No risk 30-day money back guarantee. Features
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Danze D112000BT Single Control Pressure Balance Mixing Valve with Screwdriver Stops
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DescriptionFinish:No Finish, Screwdriver Stops:With Screwdriver Stops Includes temperature limit adjustment Ceramic disc valve Combination ' copper sweat/ IPS 4-port hook up Back-to back installation feature Mounting bracket & plaster guard included. Meets requirements ASSE 1016 Flow rates: Shower Max 2.2 GPM @ 60PSI w/ high temperature limit adjustment Features
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My Own Shower - Kids Adjustable Size Showerhead
Sale Price: $14.98 |
DescriptionSold as each. 3 foot detachable hose with children's showerhead. Finally a showerhead that's not to high and water flow that's not too hard. One time install of patented connector on existing "adult" showerhead. Adjustable suction cups accommodate different height children. Detachable hose for easy removal and storage for child's safety. Manufacturer's number: 4210. Country of origin: China. Distributed by Ace Trading. Features
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Turbo Snake - Original - 2 Packages Included! - As Seen on TV
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DescriptionIntroducing Turbo SnakeTM - the quick & easy way to clear slow-moving or clogged drains! Simply glide Turbo SnakeTM down the drain, twirl, then pull out - Turbo Snake'sTM specially designed head grabs & locks onto hair clogs to remove and free the drain instantly! It's that easy! What's best, its flexible design easily maneuvers down the drain to seek out clogs without having to remove the drain stopper. For bathroom sinks, showers & tubs. Features
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Land O'Lakes Mini Moo's Half & Half - 192 ct.
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DescriptionConvenient Mini Moo's are ideal for on the go, providing a simple, real dairy way to a perfect cup of coffee, anywhere. Easy to serve and store, Mini Moo's Half & Half offer the fresh taste of true half & half without refrigeration. Ingredients: Half & half, sodium citrate, datem, tetra sodium pyrophosphate, carrageenan. Contains: Milk. Features
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Red Vines Red Original Licorice Twists, 64-Ounce Tub
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DescriptionThe classic chewy, soft candy goodness we all know and love. Take this massive jar of delicious ropes to a party or a picnic and let your friends enjoy them too. Features
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Red Vines Black Licorice Twists, 64-Ounce Tub
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DescriptionThe makers of America's favorite Red Vines serve up a traditional treat with these black licorice twists. Red Vines black licorice twists are an old time licorice, with a rich smooth taste and a chewy texture, perfect for those who like black licorice. Many customers prefer red vines licorice over twizzler licorice as it has a sweeter smooth taste. The American Licorice Company, they have been making quality candy since 1914. Red vines black licorice twists are fat free, have no preservatives and are very low in sodium. Red Vines are also available in red licorice twists. The tub is air tight to keep your licorice whips fresh. Features
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The Godfather Collection (The Godfather / The Godfather: Part II / The Godfather: Part III)
Sale Price: $69.50 |
DescriptionThroughout his long, wandering, often distinguished career Francis Ford Coppola has made many films that are good and fine, many more that are flawed but undeniably interesting, and a handful of duds that are worth viewing if only because his personality is so flagrantly absent. Yet he is and always shall be known as the man who directed the Godfather films, a series that has dominated and defined their creator in a way perhaps no other director can understand. Coppola has never been able to leave them alone, whether returning after 15 years to make a trilogy of the diptych, or re-editing the first two films into chronological order for a separate video release as The Godfather Saga. The films are our very own Shakespearean cycle: they tell a tale of a vicious mobster and his extended personal and professional families (once the stuff of righteous moral comeuppance), and they dared to present themselves with an epic sweep and an unapologetically tragic tone. Murder, it turned out, was a serious business. The first film remains a towering achievement, brilliantly cast and conceived. The entry of Michael Corleone into the family business, the transition of power from his father, the ruthless dispatch of his enemies--all this is told with an assurance that is breathtaking to behold. And it turned out to be merely prologue; two years later The Godfather, Part II balanced Michael's ever-greater acquisition of power and influence during the fall of Cuba with the story of his father's own youthful rise from immigrant slums. The stakes were higher, the story's construction more elaborate, and the isolated despair at the end wholly earned. (Has there ever been a cinematic performance greater than Al Pacino's Michael, so smart and ambitious, marching through the years into what he knows is his own doom with eyes open and hungry?) The Godfather, Part III was mostly written off as an attempted cash-in, but it is a wholly worthy conclusion, less slow than autumnally patient and almost merciless in the way it brings Michael's past sins crashing down around him even as he tries to redeem himself. --Bruce ReidOn the DVDPeople used to say this was Frank Sinatra's world, and the rest of us just lived in it. After watching the multiple special features in the box set The Godfather: Coppola Restoration, one might conclude it's actually time for a cultural and historical revision: This is the Corleone family's world. The rest of us better tread lightly. Actually, the point of the half-dozen or so features crammed onto a disc accompanying the beautifully restored The Godfather, The Godfather II and The Godfather III, is that The Godfather movies have penetrated popular culture in such a deep and meaningful way that they are second-nature to everything. David Chase, creator of and writer on The Sopranos, for example, describes in the featurette "Godfather World" that his hit HBO series was intended to be the story of the first generation of mobsters actually influenced by Francis Ford Coppola's hit trilogy. Joe Mantegna calls the three films "the Italian Star Wars." (Mantegna co-stars in The Godfather III.) Alec Baldwin says no matter what one is doing, one is compelled to stop and watch the films if they're on television. Richard Belzer calls the films "a religion." And so on. A number of people similarly testify in "Godfather World" to the importance and ubiquitousness of The Godfather and its sequels in American life. There's no point in arguing, so its best to move on to the other featurettes, including "The Masterpiece That Almost Wasn't," reviewing in detail much of what has been said about Paramount's mistreatment of Coppola, about casting fights (Steve McQueen as Michael?), about the studio's assumption they were getting a quick-and-dirty B-movie, and about producer Robert Evans' determination to keep his choice of director and unlikely actors under his wing. Fresh information within the special features, however, begins with "⦠When the Shooting Stopped," a fine study of post-production on The Godfather, with several surprising and fascinating facts. Among emerging details is an explanation of why Michael Corleone's scream toward the end of The Godfather III is silenced out. (Hint: it was meant to be the inverse of a sound effect in the first movie.) "Emulsional Rescue: Revealing The Godfather" talks about the painstaking work of restoring the first two films, beginning with a phone call from Coppola to Steven Spielberg (after the latter's DreamWorks studio became part of the Viacom family) asking if he'd request money from Paramount for restoration work. "The Godfather On the Red Carpet is a negligible series of fawning statements about the movie from hot young actors, while "Four Short Films" are brief and enjoyable takes on different aspects of The Godfather's impact on modern living. --Tom Keogh Stills from The Godfather - The Coppola Restoration Giftset (Click for larger image) People used to say this was Frank Sinatra's world, and the rest of us just lived in it. After watching the multiple special features in the box set The Godfather - Coppola Restoration, one might conclude it's actually time for a cultural and historical revision: This is the Corleone family's world. The rest of us better tread lightly. Actually, the point of the half-dozen or so features crammed onto a disc accompanying the beautifully restored The Godfather, The Godfather II and The Godfather III, is that The Godfather movies have penetrated popular culture in such a deep and meaningful way that they are second-nature to everything. David Chase, creator of and writer on The Sopranos, for example, describes in the featurette "Godfather World" that his hit HBO series was intended to be the story of the first generation of mobsters actually influenced by Francis Ford Coppola's hit trilogy. Joe Mantegna calls the three films "the Italian Star Wars." (Mantegna co-stars in The Godfather III.) Alec Baldwin says no matter what one is doing, one is compelled to stop and watch the films if they're on television. Richard Belzer calls the films "a religion." And so on. A number of people similarly testify in "Godfather World" to the importance and ubiquitousness of The Godfather and its sequels in American life. There's no point in arguing, so its best to move on to the other featurettes, including "The Masterpiece That Almost Wasn't," reviewing in detail much of what has been said about Paramount's mistreatment of Coppola, about casting fights (Steve McQueen as Michael?), about the studio's assumption they were getting a quick-and-dirty B-movie, and about producer Robert Evans' determination to keep his choice of director and unlikely actors under his wing. Fresh information within the special features, however, begins with "⦠When the Shooting Stopped," a fine study of post-production on The Godfather, with several surprising and fascinating facts. Among emerging details is an explanation of why Michael Corleone's scream toward the end of The Godfather III is silenced out. (Hint: it was meant to be the inverse of a sound effect in the first movie.) "Emulsional Rescue: Revealing The Godfather" talks about the painstaking work of restoring the first two films, beginning with a phone call from Coppola to Steven Spielberg (after the latter's DreamWorks studio became part of the Viacom family) asking if he'd request money from Paramount for restoration work. "The Godfather On the Red Carpet is a negligible series of fawning statements about the movie from hot young actors, while "Four Short Films" are brief and enjoyable takes on different aspects of The Godfather's impact on modern living. --Tom Keogh Stills from The Godfather - The Coppola Restoration Giftset (Click for larger image) Product Details Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 |
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