Ill Coffee
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Hazelnut Coffee $8.49 Our 100% Arabica gourmet coffee is infused with the smooth and nutty tasted of fresh hazelnut. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Decaffeinated Coffee $6.49 A distinctive and balanced flavor for those who love the richness of a darker roast and the smooth flavor of a lighter roast coffee. Ground 13 oz. |
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Crescent City Blend® Coffee $8.49 A tribute to the rich, bold coffee served in New Orleans. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Dark Roast Coffee $6.49 The rich aroma of our original coffee blend will awaken your senses. Ground 16 oz. |
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Brazil Santos Bourbon Coffee $8.49 This delectable gourmet coffee yields an enticingly smooth cup with a rich aroma and mild acidity. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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French Vanilla Coffee $8.49 A truly delectable and luxuriously sweet French Vanilla coffee you are sure to enjoy. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Pecan Praline Coffee $8.49 Our Pecan Praline flavored coffee is a truly delightful Southern treat. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Fresh-O-Lator® Coffee Canister $29.95 Our airtight canister will preserve the freshness of your favorite coffee. |
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Kenya Coffee $8.49 Bright acidity and fruity flavors combine for a wonderfully aromatic cup with a taste that maintains a refined winey character. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Around the World Gourmet Coffee Sampler $34.95 Explore four specialty coffees from distinctive coffee-growing regions around the world. Whole Bean Four 12 oz. packages. |
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Medium Roast Coffee $6.49 This extraordinarily aromatic and light-roasted blend produces a fragrant and mellow cup. Ground 16 oz. |
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Kona Blend Coffee $8.49 Our Kona Blend is light-medium roasted and produces a sweet and mellow floral tone. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Café Special® Coffee $5.99 Roasted medium-dark to a rich brown color for a distinctive café taste and aroma. Ground 12 oz. |
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Breakfast Blend Coffee $8.49 Ease into the day as we do down in New Orleans with the smooth and mellow flavor of our Breakfast Blend. Ground 12 oz. |
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New Orleans Blend® Coffee and Chicory $5.49 Indulge in a delicate combination of fine Arabica beans and high quality chicory that is steeped in the traditions of New Orleans. Ground 16 oz. |
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Louisiana Blend™ Medium-Dark Coffee $8.49 This blend of gourmet Latin American coffees embodies the distinctive flavor of Louisiana. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Coffee Candy Chews Bag 13.2 Ounces (376 Grams) $9.95 Between cups of brewed gourmet coffee, you can enjoy the essence of our premium beans with our coffee candy chews. While the majority of coffee candies are artificially flavored, we use only the |
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Dark Chocolate Covered Coffee Beans Bag 6 Ounces (170 Grams) $9.95 Both coffee and cacao beans have a long history in Costa Rica. Hundreds of years ago cacao beans were first used as currency by indigenous tribes. Before the introduction of coffee in the early 1700s, |
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Dark Chocolate Covered Coffee Beans Canister 7 Ounces (200 Grams) $9.95 Both coffee and cacao beans have a long history in Costa Rica. Hundreds of years ago cacao beans were first used as currency by indigenous tribes. Before the introduction of coffee in the early 1700s, |
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French Coffee Press 3 Cup French Press Chrome $16.99 Like many of the best inventions, the French Coffee Press seems to have resulted from an accident. Legend has it that around the mid 1800s, the serendipitous incident happened on a hillside when |
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French Coffee Press 6 Cup French Press Chrome $24.99 Like many of the best inventions, the French Coffee Press seems to have resulted from an accident. Legend has it that around the mid 1800s, the serendipitous incident happened on a hillside when |
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French Coffee Press 6 Cup French Press Gold $28.99 Like many of the best inventions, the French Coffee Press seems to have resulted from an accident. Legend has it that around the mid 1800s, the serendipitous incident happened on a hillside when |
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French Coffee Press 3 Cup French Press Gold $19.99 Like many of the best inventions, the French Coffee Press seems to have resulted from an accident. Legend has it that around the mid 1800s, the serendipitous incident happened on a hillside when |
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A Description Of The Royal Gardens At Richmond In Surry, The Village, And Places Adjacent. With Some Account Of Its Antiquity, … Illustrated With Copper Plates Of A Plan Of The Gardens, … $10.77 The 18th century was a wealth of knowledge, exploration and rapidly growing technology and expanding record-keeping made possible by advances in the printing press. In its determination to preserve the century of revolution, Gale initiated a revolution of its own: digitization of epic proportions to preserve these invaluable works in the largest archive of its kind. Now for the first time these high-quality digital copies of original 18th century manuscripts are available in print, making them highly accessible to libraries, undergraduate students, and independent scholars.Rich in titles on English life and social history, this collection spans the world as it was known to eighteenth-century historians and explorers. Titles include a wealth of travel accounts and diaries, histories of nations from throughout the world, and maps and charts of a world that was still being discovered. Students of the War of American Independence will find fascinating accounts from the British side of conflict. ++++The below data was compiled from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure edition identification:++++British LibraryT117502Not before 1735; not after 1737.[London] : To be sold at the several taverns in Richmond; at the Sword-Blade Coffee-House; St. Dunstan’s Coffee-House; and at Fisher’s Coffee-House in New Burlington Street, St. James’s, [1736?] 32p.,plate : ill.,map ; 8° |
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A Suburban Pastoral, And Other Tales $24.86 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:HI. A COMEDY OF ERRORS. A COMEDY OF ERRORS. J1R. WILLIAM MERRIMAN, JR., described by his friends as a rising young lawyer, came uptown one evening in December about an hour later than usual. It was his habit to stop somewhere on the way up and dine in a leisurely way, and then to get to his room at half-past seven or thereabouts. On this particular evening, however, he had lingered over his coffee and newspaper, and now, as he reached the door of his apartment, he was made aware of the lateness of the hour by the roar of the grate inside. The chambermaid had been instructed to leave the blower up when she kindled the fire, by which means the reluctant draught was coaxed into efficiency just at the time of his customary arrival. It had now an hour’s extra headway, but the faithful domestic, with the unreasoning obedience of a Casabianca, stuck to the letter of her instructions. Accordingly, when Merriman entered the room he found things booming. A loud smell of varnish went up from the legs of the chairs, a crimson glare from the bottom of the grate smote upon the carpet, and a fiery crack defined the outline of the dull red blower. 6, This last being taken down, the walls and ceiling bloomed like a rose ; and while the glowing iron snapped and cracked, as it slowly cooled, Merrinian got himself into dressing gown and slippers, lighted a big pipe, settled himself in his easy-chair and, by the steady firelight, proceeded to read a “brace of letters which he had found on his mantel. The first of these ran as follows: BLANKSKILL-ON-HUDSON, December 18, 187-. Dear Mr. Merriman : Mamma is ill with a cold, so I am doing her correspondence. We came up to Blankskill very unexpectedly, but now that we have opened the house we mean to spend Christmas here, and we have hi |
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A Suburban Pastoral, And Other Tales $19.99 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:HI. A COMEDY OF ERRORS. A COMEDY OF ERRORS. J1R. WILLIAM MERRIMAN, JR., described by his friends as a rising young lawyer, came uptown one evening in December about an hour later than usual. It was his habit to stop somewhere on the way up and dine in a leisurely way, and then to get to his room at half-past seven or thereabouts. On this particular evening, however, he had lingered over his coffee and newspaper, and now, as he reached the door of his apartment, he was made aware of the lateness of the hour by the roar of the grate inside. The chambermaid had been instructed to leave the blower up when she kindled the fire, by which means the reluctant draught was coaxed into efficiency just at the time of his customary arrival. It had now an hour’s extra headway, but the faithful domestic, with the unreasoning obedience of a Casabianca, stuck to the letter of her instructions. Accordingly, when Merriman entered the room he found things booming. A loud smell of varnish went up from the legs of the chairs, a crimson glare from the bottom of the grate smote upon the carpet, and a fiery crack defined the outline of the dull red blower. 6, This last being taken down, the walls and ceiling bloomed like a rose ; and while the glowing iron snapped and cracked, as it slowly cooled, Merrinian got himself into dressing gown and slippers, lighted a big pipe, settled himself in his easy-chair and, by the steady firelight, proceeded to read a “brace of letters which he had found on his mantel. The first of these ran as follows: BLANKSKILL-ON-HUDSON, December 18, 187-. Dear Mr. Merriman : Mamma is ill with a cold, so I am doing her correspondence. We came up to Blankskill very unexpectedly, but now that we have opened the house we mean to spend Christmas here, and we have hi |
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A discourse on Coffee: its description and vertues. Written in Latin by Faustus Naironus Banesius, a Maronite. $10.75 The 18th century was a wealth of knowledge, exploration and rapidly growing technology and expanding record-keeping made possible by advances in the printing press. In its determination to preserve the century of revolution, Gale initiated a revolution of its own: digitization of epic proportions to preserve these invaluable works in the largest archive of its kind. Now for the first time these high-quality digital copies of original 18th century manuscripts are available in print, making them highly accessible to libraries, undergraduate students, and independent scholars.Medical theory and practice of the 1700s developed rapidly, as is evidenced by the extensive collection, which includes descriptions of diseases, their conditions, and treatments. Books on science and technology, agriculture, military technology, natural philosophy, even cookbooks, are all contained here.++++The below data was compiled from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure edition identification:++++Source Library: British LibraryESTCID: T031977Notes: Translator’s dedication signed: C.B.Imprint: London : printed by Geo. James, for Abel Roper; and sold by John Morphew, 1710. Collation: [6],31,[1]p. : ill. ; 8° |
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Absent a Miracle $26 Alice Fairweather, a lapsed Catholic who lives in upstate New York with her two sons and philandering husband (whom she loves to distraction), has just lost her dream job as a radio talk show hostess. When one of the family dogs suddenly becomes gravely ill, Alice opts out of a family spelunking vacation to nurse the pooch. Unexpectedly, her husband’s charismatic Nicaraguan Harvard roommate, Abelardo—coffee planter, failed seminarian, and scion of an old Nicaraguan family—comes to visit as part of his quest to have his aunt canonized as the first Nicaraguan saint. Through a variety of somewhat bizarre and miraculous events, Abelardo must return home to his village before his canonization work is complete. But Alice, with time on her hands and a void to fill, adopts Abelardo’s mission and becomes obsessed with helping him find the path to sanctify his ancestor. Not only does she befriend Hubert, the eccentric man in charge of New York’s hagiography club, she becomes somewhat of an expert on the various women who have achieved the distinction of sainthood, and soon finds herself on a plane destined for Nicaragua.Abelardo’s quest to canonize his aunt, together with Alice’s quest to save her marriage, makes for a miraculous story of love, loss, and faith. |
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Absent a Miracle $26 Alice Fairweather, a lapsed Catholic who lives in upstate New York with her two sons and philandering husband (whom she loves to distraction), has just lost her dream job as a radio talk show hostess. When one of the family dogs suddenly becomes gravely ill, Alice opts out of a family spelunking vacation to nurse the pooch. Unexpectedly, her husband’s charismatic Nicaraguan Harvard roommate, Abelardo—coffee planter, failed seminarian, and scion of an old Nicaraguan family—comes to visit as part of his quest to have his aunt canonized as the first Nicaraguan saint. Through a variety of somewhat bizarre and miraculous events, Abelardo must return home to his village before his canonization work is complete. But Alice, with time on her hands and a void to fill, adopts Abelardo’s mission and becomes obsessed with helping him find the path to sanctify his ancestor. Not only does she befriend Hubert, the eccentric man in charge of New York’s hagiography club, she becomes somewhat of an expert on the various women who have achieved the distinction of sainthood, and soon finds herself on a plane destined for Nicaragua.Abelardo’s quest to canonize his aunt, together with Alice’s quest to save her marriage, makes for a miraculous story of love, loss, and faith. |
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Among French Folk $19.99 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:Ill IN AKLES if it were England, would be called Micawber own, for it is the town where everyone is waiting for something to turn up. You can see them from morning to night lounging their lives away on the seats which are among the few modern improvements of which Arles boasts. There is scarcely a street in which two carriages can pass; there is—mirabile dictu—only one cinema ; no particular business seems to be carried on in this out-of-the-world little spot; but in every inch of shade—amid the mottled sunlight of the Place du Forum, under the tall avenues of trees on the Boulevard Victor Hugo, under the pollarded groves in the Place Lamartine—are rows of hard-backed seats on which the venerable inhabitants sit, smoke, spit, discuss local politics, and, since human nature is much the same everywhere, each other’s domestic affairs. It is a pleasant spot to linger in, this Sleepy Hollow on the banks of the Rhone, where a sense of impending adventure is the only thing that prevents it from crumbling completely into dust. We found it a place after our own hearts, did Helen and I. We lounged in the huge Roman Arena; in the cloisters of St. Trophime, half Roman half Moorish; in the Aliftamps, among Roman tombs; finally, and most whole-heartedly, among the other loungers on the shady side of the Boulevard. We were sitting over a coffee one afternoon, watching the infernal white dust being raised instead of settled by the municipal water-cart, when a lorry stacked high withwine-barrels slowed up alongside us and, after a few minutes’ breathless panting, shut off its engine and stopped. A perspiring little man, with twinkling black eyes and grossly unshaven chin, carrying in his hand an immense bunch of white lilac, descended from it, shook the dust out of his |
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Avalon Blues $26.99 As part of Stefan Grossman”s Guitar Workshop Audio Series this comprehensive and thorough collection of fingerpicking guitar lessons contains invaluable tips and instruction implemented throughout the arrangements in this book. The three audio CDs give 3 full hours of note-by-note, phrase-by-phrase instruction. Lesson One: Altered tuning (Open D). Songs: Avalon Blues, Sliding Delta, If You Dont Want Me, and Payday. Lesson Two: Songs include: Coffee Blues, Monday Morning Blues, and Candyman. Lesson Three: Songs: C.C. Rider, See See Rider, Stack OLee Blues, Big Leg Blues, Ill Go With Her Blues and Corrina, Corrina. |
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Bummer: And Other Stories $0.01 The women featured in these stories have one thing in common: They’re having a terrible day.There’s the housewife so entranced by the pristine order of her neighbors’ belongings that she can’t stop herself from breaking into their home. There’s the mother easing her young son through the trauma of a murder, suddenly confronted with the reappearance of his father. There’s the vulnerable middle-aged woman stuck in a coffee-chain job alongside snotty college kids, the talent manager supervising a corral of misguided young stars, and the spiky-haired artist who literally dumps her slacker fiancé—from a moving car—and moves angrily through Vegas, hitting the bars and casinos before engaging in an ill-advised fling with a sleazy player named Ramon.Janice Shapiro has created a cast of utterly distinct outsiders, yet her earthy warmth and asymmetrical humor so suffuse the stories that they surge with a collective voice, and the reader’s experience is that of getting to know a group of close-knit but independent friends. Shapiro’s gift for pitch-perfect dialogue—along with her instinctual ease in writing about such fraught topics as commercial sex, death, and the everyday tragedies of growing older—makes her voice one to be relished: tough-minded, sardonic, intimate, and free. |
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Bummer: And Other Stories $14.95 The women featured in these stories have one thing in common: They’re having a terrible day.There’s the housewife so entranced by the pristine order of her neighbors’ belongings that she can’t stop herself from breaking into their home. There’s the mother easing her young son through the trauma of a murder, suddenly confronted with the reappearance of his father. There’s the vulnerable middle-aged woman stuck in a coffee-chain job alongside snotty college kids, the talent manager supervising a corral of misguided young stars, and the spiky-haired artist who literally dumps her slacker fiancé—from a moving car—and moves angrily through Vegas, hitting the bars and casinos before engaging in an ill-advised fling with a sleazy player named Ramon.Janice Shapiro has created a cast of utterly distinct outsiders, yet her earthy warmth and asymmetrical humor so suffuse the stories that they surge with a collective voice, and the reader’s experience is that of getting to know a group of close-knit but independent friends. Shapiro’s gift for pitch-perfect dialogue—along with her instinctual ease in writing about such fraught topics as commercial sex, death, and the everyday tragedies of growing older—makes her voice one to be relished: tough-minded, sardonic, intimate, and free. |
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Coffee and Donuts $0.29 Calling a dumpster home in an unforgiving city, Jules and Dwight are down on their luck – and things are about to get much worse! Follow these stray cats as they botch an ill-fated armed robbery, dodge bullets in dark alleys and cross paths with small-time mobsters. |
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Eggs in the Coffee Sheep in the Corn: My 17 Years as a Farmwife $15.95 Tears of frustration and loneliness more than once filled the eyes of Marjorie Myers Douglas as she valiantly coped with her new status as a farmwife. Life on a western Minnesota stock ranch in the years during and after World War II was, after all, a far cry from growing up in her parents’ Minneapolis home community of academics and her years as a medical social worker in New York City and St. Paul. It all began in 1943 as a two-year plan to help Don’s ill father avoid losing the 1,200-acre farm. With World War II pulling able-bodied men into the military, it was nearly impossible to find good farmhands, and Don felt an obligation to contribute to his father’s physical and economic recovery from a severe heart attack. Leaving their modern suburban house behind, Marjorie, Don, and baby Anne moved their worldly goods to the simple farmhouse some three miles from the little town of Appleton. For Marjorie it was more a challenge than just a change – a challenge that stretched far beyond the two years into seventeen! In Eggs in the Coffee, Sheep in the Corn Marjorie Douglas tells how she faced the challenge and came out on top: raising three babies in a house with no running water; learning to understand and live with a demanding father-in-law; providing an ever-ready supply of coffee to go with endless lunches, dinners, and suppers; nurturing peonies for the touch of beauty she needed; making new friends and playing whist; establishing working relationships with the farm animals; finding some satisfaction in her own PTA and church work; keeping the sheep out of the raspberries; canning fifty quarts of rhubarb sauce; getting acquainted with German prisoners of war; butchering eighty-fivechickens. With sharp wit and quiet wisdom, Douglas offers a candid view of life in rural Minnesota from 1943 to 1960. Her stories will ring true to anyone who has ever experienced farm life and will pleasantly bring understanding to anyone who hasn’t. |
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English as a Second Language $13.99 In this wickedly funny first novel–think Legally Blonde at Oxford–a young New York woman exchanges her corporate job for a year of books, blokes, and new friends in graduate school in England.Alexandra Brennan is fed up with her dead end New York City job–and even more fed up with running into her smug ex-boyfriend. So when he crosses the line by telling her that shell never get into graduate school in the United Kingdom, thats precisely what she does. Armed with imported cigarettes and extra-strength coffee, Alex crosses the Atlantic to face all that Great Britain and grad school have to offer, including ill-considered romantic interludes, a red-headed nemesis with intellectual pretensions and ulterior motives, and more books than she can possibly read in a year. What she discovers, however, is that instead of running away from home, she may have actually found it. With its cheeky wit and terrific cast of characters, English As A Second Language is a hilarious coming-of-age story reader’s won’t soon forget about one young womans misadventures along the path to adulthood. |
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English as a Second Language $9.99 In this wickedly funny first novel–think Legally Blonde at Oxford–a young New York woman exchanges her corporate job for a year of books, blokes, and new friends in graduate school in England.Alexandra Brennan is fed up with her dead end New York City job–and even more fed up with running into her smug ex-boyfriend. So when he crosses the line by telling her that shell never get into graduate school in the United Kingdom, thats precisely what she does. Armed with imported cigarettes and extra-strength coffee, Alex crosses the Atlantic to face all that Great Britain and grad school have to offer, including ill-considered romantic interludes, a red-headed nemesis with intellectual pretensions and ulterior motives, and more books than she can possibly read in a year. What she discovers, however, is that instead of running away from home, she may have actually found it. With its cheeky wit and terrific cast of characters, English As A Second Language is a hilarious coming-of-age story reader’s won’t soon forget about one young womans misadventures along the path to adulthood. |
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Fever 1793 By Laurie Halse Anderson, Illustrated by Lori Earley $6.99 It’s late summer 1793, and the streets of Philadelphia are abuzz with mosquitoes and rumors of fever. Down near the docks, many have taken ill, and the fatalities are mounting. Now they include Polly, the serving girl at the Cook Coffeehouse. But fourteen-year-old Mattie Cook doesn’t get a moment to mourn the passing of her childhood playmate. New customers have overrun her family’s coffee shop, located far from the mosquito-infested river, and Mattie’s concerns of fever are all but overshadowed by dreams of growing her family’s small business into a thriving enterprise. But when the fever begins to strike closer to home, Mattie’s struggle to build a new life must give way to a new fight-the fight to stay alive. |
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Fever 1793 By Laurie Halse Anderson, Illustrated by Lori Earley $6.99 It’s late summer 1793, and the streets of Philadelphia are abuzz with mosquitoes and rumors of fever. Down near the docks, many have taken ill, and the fatalities are mounting. Now they include Polly, the serving girl at the Cook Coffeehouse. But fourteen-year-old Mattie Cook doesn’t get a moment to mourn the passing of her childhood playmate. New customers have overrun her family’s coffee shop, located far from the mosquito-infested river, and Mattie’s concerns of fever are all but overshadowed by dreams of growing her family’s small business into a thriving enterprise. But when the fever begins to strike closer to home, Mattie’s struggle to build a new life must give way to a new fight-the fight to stay alive. |
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Fever 1793 By Laurie Halse Anderson, Illustrated by Lori Earley $17.99 It’s late summer 1793, and the streets of Philadelphia are abuzz with mosquitoes and rumors of fever. Down near the docks, many have taken ill, and the fatalities are mounting. Now they include Polly, the serving girl at the Cook Coffeehouse. But fourteen-year-old Mattie Cook doesn’t get a moment to mourn the passing of her childhood playmate. New customers have overrun her family’s coffee shop, located far from the mosquito-infested river, and Mattie’s concerns of fever are all but overshadowed by dreams of growing her family’s small business into a thriving enterprise. But when the fever begins to strike closer to home, Mattie’s struggle to build a new life must give way to a new fight-the fight to stay alive. |
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Forces of Habit: Drugs and the Making of the Modern World $24.5 Why are coffee, tobacco, and marijuana available the world over, but not peyote or qat? Why are alcohol and tobacco legal, but not heroin or cocaine? What drives the drug trade, and how has it come to be what it is today—a vast, checkered pattern of use and abuse, medicine and recreation, commerce and interdiction? A global history of the acquisition of progressively more potent means of altering ordinary waking consciousness, this book is the first to provide the big picture of the discovery, interchange, and exploitation of the planet's psychoactive resources, from tea and kola to opiates and amphetamines. Offering a social and biological account of why psychoactive goods proved so seductive, David Courtwright tracks the intersecting paths by which popular drugs entered the stream of global commerce. He shows how the efforts of merchants and colonial planters expanded world supply, drove down prices, and drew millions of less affluent purchasers into the market, effectively democratizing drug consumption. He also shows how Europeans used alcohol as an inducement for native peoples to trade their furs, sell captives into slavery, and negotiate away their lands, and how monarchs taxed drugs to finance their wars and expanding empires. Forces of Habit explains why such profitable exploitation has increasingly given way, over the last hundred years, to policies of restriction and prohibition—and how economic and cultural considerations have shaped those policies to determine which drugs are readily accessible, which strictly medicinal, and which forbidden altogether. Far-reaching, fair-minded, and elegant, this book is the most thorough history of the traffic inpsychoactive substances yet written, a unique contribution to both world history and drug history. It brings wide research, reasoned judgment, and dry humor to a subject prone to ill-informed and overheated discussions. |
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Juan Manuel Fangio $86.49 Karl Ludvigsen”s careers as an auto industry insider and motorsport journalist gave him rare access to auto racing”s greatest drivers. In this series of lavish coffee-table treatments from Haynes Publishing, the author offers race fans insightful biographies, rare anecdotes, and a wealth of archival color and black-and-white photography detailing motor racing”s all-time greats.Beginning with the legendary Argentinian”s early car-building days, Ludvigsen examines Fangio”s F1 strut at Alfa Romeo, where he won his first world championship in 1951 at age 40; his dramatic success with Maserati in 1953, as well as his victory at Carrera Pan-Americana; his ensuing F1 world championships with Mercedes-Benz and Ferrari; his epic battles with Stirling Moss; and his ill-starred appearance in the Indianapolis 500. Also discussed are Fangio”s 1958 kidnapping in Havana. |
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London’s Sinful Secret: The Bawdy History and Very Public Passions of London’s Georgian Age $19.99 Georgian London evokes images of elegant mannered buildings, but it was also a city where prostitution was rife and houses of ill repute widespread in a sex trade that employed thousands. In London’s Sinful Secret, Dan Cruickshank explores this erotic Georgian underworld and shows how it affected almost every aspect of life and culture in the city from the smart new streets that sprang up in Marylebone, to the squalid alleys around Charing Cross to the coffee houses, where prostitutes plied their trade, to the work of artists such as William Hogarth and Joshua Reynolds. Cruickshank uses memoirs, newspaper accounts and court records to create a surprisingly bawdy portrait of London at its most-mannered and, for the first time, exposes its secret, sinful underside. |
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London’s Sinful Secret: The Bawdy History and Very Public Passions of London’s Georgian Age $40 Georgian London evokes images of elegant mannered buildings, but it was also a city where prostitution was rife and houses of ill repute widespread in a sex trade that employed thousands. In London’s Sinful Secret, Dan Cruickshank explores this erotic Georgian underworld and shows how it affected almost every aspect of life and culture in the city from the smart new streets that sprang up in Marylebone, to the squalid alleys around Charing Cross to the coffee houses, where prostitutes plied their trade, to the work of artists such as William Hogarth and Joshua Reynolds. Cruickshank uses memoirs, newspaper accounts and court records to create a surprisingly bawdy portrait of London at its most-mannered and, for the first time, exposes its secret, sinful underside. |
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Lord Chesterfield’s Advice To His Son On Men And Manners. To Which Are Added, Selections From Colton’s ‘Lacon’. $19.99 General Books publication date: 2009Original publication date: 1861Notes: This is a black and white OCR reprint of the original. It has no illustrations and there may be typos or missing text.When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from more than a million books for free.Excerpt: 10 AWKWARDNESS OF DIFFERENT KINDS. Many very worthy and sensible people have certain odd tricks, ill habits, and awkwardnesses in their behaviour, which excite a disgust to and dislike of their persons, that cannot be removed or overcome by any other valuable endowment or merit which they may possess. Now awkwardness can proceed but from two causes, either from not having kept good company, or from not having attended to it. When an awkward fellow first comes into a room, it is highly probable that his sword gels between his legs and throws him down, or makes him stumble, at least. When he has recovered this accident, he goes and places himself in the very place of the whole room where he should not; there he soon lets his hat fall down, and, in taking it up again, throws down his cane ; in recovering his cane, his hat falls the second time; so that he is a quarter of a hour before he is in order again. If he drinks tea or coffee, he certainly scalds his mouth, and lets either the cup or the saucer fall, and spills the tea or coffee in his breeches. At dinner his awkwardness distinguishes itself particularly, as he has more to do : there he holds his knife, fork, and spoon, differently from other people; eats with his knife, to the great danger of his mouth, picks his teeth with his fork, and puts his spoon, which has been in his throat twenty times, into the dishes again. If he is to carve, he can never hit the joint; but, in his vain efforts to cut through the bone, scatters the sauce in every body’s face. He generally daubs himself with soup and grease, though his napkin |
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Most Likely You Go Your Way And I’Ll Go Mine $14 Most Likely You Go Your Way and I’ll Go Mine takes place in an early nineties New York City and follows the romance between Jen and Geoff the novel’s two main characters. It is a story about fathers and sons, mothers and daughters, the value of friends, the reason its best to go out for coffee on first dates and what exactly defines being on the rebound. The characters riff on their favorite books, channel Yoda and Bob Dylan, deal with siblings and try to make sense of a world that shouldn’t be as confusing as it seems to be. They also seek greater self-awareness and debate why Dallas will always be superior to Knots Landing, even as they find love, lose it and find it again. |
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Patient in Affliction $4.95 Sometime in our lives, most of us will help an aging, frail, or chronically or terminally ill person do the most basic, personal tasks of daily living. We need to be empowered with knowledge, strength, courage and compassion in order to be the best possible in-home family caregiver. Enter Patient in Affliction, something like a S.W.A.T. team on paper. This handbook drills down to the heart of the matter: Practical tips to help with the day-to-day activities and cope with roller-coaster emotions, both for the family caregiver (to preserve his or her strength and sanity) and the patient (to preserve his or her dignity). Patient in Affliction is a unique, informative tool for family caregivers. As you read the pages, you’ll be enlightened, encouraged, entertained and equipped. You’ll feel like you’re in the same room with the author, sharing a box of tissue or perhaps a cup of coffee as you navigate your family-caregiver role. You’ll laugh and you’ll cry as you read anecdotes from the author, who infuses her storytelling with light humor about a very serious topic. By the time you read the last sentence, you will realize that whatever you go through, whatever emotions you experience, you are not the first or only person to feel what you are feeling. You are absolutely not alone. Somebody understands. Patient in Affliction is also encouragement for the encourager. Perhaps you are a friend of someone serving as family caregiver. This book raises your understanding about what a family caregiver goes through, and why your support is essential. Patient in Affliction is a great springboard to use as you extend your hand of compassion to a family caregiver. |
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Patient in Affliction: Tips, tears and laughter for the in-home family caregiver of a dying parent $3.15 Sometime in our lives, most of us will help an aging, frail, or chronically or terminally ill person do the most basic, personal tasks of daily living. We need to be empowered with knowledge, strength, courage and compassion in order to be the best possible in-home family caregiver.Enter Patient in Affliction, something like a S.W.A.T. team on paper. This handbook drills down to the heart of the matter: Practical tips to help with the day-to-day activities and cope with roller-coaster emotions, both for the family caregiver (to preserve his or her strength and sanity) and the patient (to preserve his or her dignity). Patient in Affliction is a unique, informative tool for family caregivers. As you read the pages, you’ll be enlightened, encouraged, entertained and equipped. You’ll feel like you’re in the same room with the author, sharing a box of tissue or perhaps a cup of coffee as you navigate your family-caregiver role. You’ll laugh and you’ll cry as you read anecdotes from the author, who infuses her storytelling with light humor about a very serious topic. By the time you read the last sentence, you will realize that whatever you go through, whatever emotions you experience, you are not the first or only person to feel what you are feeling. You are absolutely not alone. Somebody understands.Patient in Affliction is also encouragement for the encourager. Perhaps you are a friend of someone serving as family caregiver. This book raises your understanding about what a family caregiver goes through, and why your support is essential. Patient in Affliction is a great springboard to use as you extend your hand of compassion to a family caregiver. |
Can coffee make me seriously ill?
I needed to stay up a little late to finish studying for a huge test I have tomorrow, so I made myself a ridiculously strong cup of coffee. I put 3 biggish level spoonfuls of instant coffee into a mug. I didn’t know it would be that strong. Now I’m having diarrhea and my body feels really tingly and so does my head. Will drinking water make me feel better? What can I do to get better? Is what the coffee did to me serious illness? I am kind of scared.
now my ears are also hurting
Don’t worry you aren’t dying ….you just had too much caffeine. Its like taking those ‘wake-up’ pills, they contain so much caffeine, which keeps you awake. The only thing you can do now is wait and the caffeine will be out of your system in about 8-10 hours. Drinking water is good, because drinking coffee dehydrates your body
2.Jo Sung Mo (조성모) – I’ll Smile (웃을께) Coffee House OST (eng roma lyrics)
Protect Yourself With Critical Illness Insurance
Unfortunately, when we are young and generally healthy, it is hard for most of us to focus on planning for a time when that may not be the case and fail to make a provision for critical illness insurance in our regular expenses. Most of us today will easily spend several dollars each day on a cup of coffee and a pastry considering this a necessity. We can rationalize this daily expenditure but are not willing allot the few dollars a week it would cost for critical medical insurance to protect our finances and our loved ones health, should we ever need to.
Most insurance medical providers now cater for many of the more common illnesses and because statistics show that there is a good chance you will suffer one of these at some stage in your life, it is a worthwhile policy to have. Recent studies have shown that one in five men will, unfortunately contract a critical illness before they reach retirement age. Women on the other hand, fair a little better with those figures being only one in six suffering a critical illness before they retire.
Lack of knowledge or belief in the chances of contracting a critical illness might be the main reason why so few adults take out critical illness insurance protection, according to insurance companies. Protection of mortgage payments is listed as the number one reason why people decide to have critical illness insurance cover. To enable continued payment of a mortgage, most mortgages can be set up to include protection policies that include critical illness insurance in addition to life cover.
More and more people are starting to use the facilities provided by the internet to research and purchase insurance policies, including critical illness insurance. As with any new technology, there have been a few glitches as more and more insurance providers decide to use the internet as a means to promote, inform and sell policies of this type. From a critical illness insurance providers point of view, this is quite understandable as there often needs to be a medical examination carried out on the policy applicant prior to the plan being accepted. This is also benefits the claimant as the last thing they want is to claim in on their critical illness insurance to have problems with the company over any potential settlement.
Smokers, unfortunately, are treated as higher risk critical illness insurance applicants, including anyone who has smoked within the previous year and as a consequence are placed in a high risk category. This is understandable as statistics show you are at a greater risk of smoking related conditions and so your insurance premium must increase in line with this potential risk. For the most part though, when you apply for critical illness insurance, the company will factor in your age, health, workplace, environment, activities and so forth. If you are laid off from work because of your condition or require specialist surgery, your critical illness insurance should cover the expenses incurred. There can be no argument about the peace of mind that having a critical illness insurance policy in place can bring to someone who has a family and financial responsibilities.
Prophetic Warning about Healthcare: Look to God: He heals mental & physical illness
He heals all diseases in Jesus’ name. He talks to everyone, thru the Holy Spirit, in our thoughts. People don’t need health care. They need to look to God. He is free, doesn’t make mistakes, and has no side effects.
Poor people often have more faith in God than rich people. Out of necessity, they are forced by circumstance to look to God and they discover that he is faithful and heals.
Rich people are often at a spiritual disadvantage. Because they can afford doctors, they are lured into that direction to solve medical problems. Because they usually put their security in money, they often don’t see their need for God. So when a crisis comes, they don’t often turn in His direction for help. If you want to hear testimonies of miraculous healing, you’re more likely to find it in a poor church than a rich church. The poor pray to God for direct healing by the Holy Spirit (available to everyone). The rich often pray for God to use doctors, which is less direct, a lower level of faith. God meets us at whatever level our faith is on. Jesus said, “as your faith is, so be it unto you.”
Sickness is an opportunity for everyone to see their need for God, to develop the relationship, accept Jesus as saviour and be saved, to assure salvation in Heaven instead of Hell. John 3:16 says “God so loved the world that He sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believes in him would not perish but have everlasting life. To be healed, ask God to tell you any sin you need to repent of. Any unforgiveness is sin. Forgive everyone. Repent of any drug habits (including smoking, caffeine) and ask God to deliver you from it. God wants you to be free from any drugs, which are openings for unclean spirits, which cause mental and physical illness. All drugs that affect the mind are openings for demonic oppression, which can cause illness. This includes caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, pot, lsd, cocaine, etc and psych meds as well. Don’t take any of them.
There are other possible openings for demonic oppression; what is in one’s environment that needs to be removed. This can include recordings of bad music (music inspired by demonic spirits, such as heavy metal, rap. Blues or country can be an opening for spirits of depress— which then can attack the listener. (I don’t use full names of diseases because they are caused by spirits whose “assignments” is those diseases, and they can be invoked by speaking or writing them). Listening to bad music is worse, but even having recordings of them around a person gives authority for the spirits which inspired those records to be near the person.
Bad books, which contradict the bible or are inspired by lying spirits; new age books, witchcraft books, philosophy; art, symbols such as peace signs, (which is really occult), jewish stars can invoke demonic spirits; occult objects like tarot cards or Ouija boards need to be renounced & removed. They bring curses.
Sometimes illness is caused by curses on us by sins of our ancestors. Praying Jesus’ blood over the person and breaking any curses solves this. Being saved, or born-again, means being filled with the Holy Spirit. God wants our bodies to be temples for the Holy Spirit and he doesn’t want to share them with unclean spirits.
Accept Jesus as Lord, repent of your sins, ask him to guide you and fill you with the Holy Spirit. Get baptized in Jesus’ name. Fast. Rebuke the illness in Jesus name. (Illnesses are caused by demonic spirits) I have rebuked illnesses and been cured. Don’t repeat the sin, or the sickness might return. Some sicknesses are due to specific sins. Sexual diseases, for ex. I was healed of one, and God told me not to do it again. Jesus said “Go and sin no more”. Don’t reconfess the sickness. People lose prayers by doubting. Negative confessions act like curses. So be thankful and praise God. You can read more on how to pray in the free minibook Spiritual Wisdom at http://1prophetspeaks.com
Mandated health care will be used for more government control. This will ultimately involve microchips to encode people’s healthcare info. The New Testament (rev 13) warns us against taking the “mark of the beast” which will be a mark “without which no man can buy or sell” – saying anyone who takes it will suffer eternal torment. Google Trumpet Ministry to see more on chips. Carl Sanders testifies that he helped design microchips years ago which are the mark of the beast. Also Nick Rockefeller/Aaron Russo video about this. Rockefeller admits that one of the goals of the global elite is to chip everyone.
The new healthcare bill passed this year mandates microchips! on page 1001, it mandates setting up within 36 months a registry of medical devices, purusant to an FDA regulation passed in 2004 that explicitly describes “implantable transponders for healthcare info and id”. This was put in the healthcare bill sneakily. God has also warned me that one of the ways they intend to chip people is sneakily, using vaccines.
Healthcare is being used to depopulate the planet. One of the agendas of the global elite whose goal is the new world order, a one world government, is depopulation. They are using toxic vaccines toward this goal. Bill Gates, in a recent speech, said that reproductive healthcare (abortion, sterilization) and vaccines, which he is funding, would help lower the world population. Jesse Ventura, in his show “Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura” in an episode on Secret societies interviews a dr. who says most vaccines have squaline, a poison, and their purpose is to make people sick and die. Avoid all vaccines. She testified meeting one of the global elite who said “the time to cull the population is drawing near”. Henry Kissinger has stated “we need to reduce the population by 50%”. His OPA as sec. of state under Nixon had a policy of only giving foreign aid to 3rd world countries who agreed to use abortion & sterilization for depopulation. They are not only trying to depopulate the 3rd world; the whole world is being subjected to this. The Council on Foreign Relations, the Bildeberger Group and the Trilateral Commission, led by David Rockefeller all have an agenda of global government with a goal of depopulation. You can read more about this in an article :”The New World Order; A prophetic warning to Jews & Christians” on my blog at http://1prophetspeaks.blogspot.com.
The Mental Health system is fraud. They hold people in hospitals just to get insurance money. Mental Health Parity is dangerous for patients because it increases the incentives for hospitals to hold them involuntarily, for months and years. This has been going on all along, and these types of laws will only make it worse.
“Mental Health” is Orwellian double-speak. It is not mental health, it is mental death. The drugs are toxic. They cause liver, kidney & brain damage, and death, with innumerable horrible side effects.
Mental health parity is a mistake since it is an incentive for hospitals to hold people to get insurance money. Read Melody Peterson’s book Our Daily Meds (2008) about fraud in health care. Drug co’s market drugs to doctors for various purposes with no evidence they are effective. Psychiatrists who write the DSM, the psychiatric bible for mental disorders, invent mental disorders so they can make $ as consultants to drug co’s for the “treatments”. They want to have “mental health screening” in schools as a way of labeling kids and drugging them, to sell drugs. Every kid who agrees to this gets labeled with some ridiculous label. Parents need to have their kids “opt out” of any screening program.The Citizens’ Commission on Human Rights has done a lot of work on exposing and fighting forced drugging of kids and situations where parents were threatened to have their kids taken away if they didn’t agree to drug them.
Psychiatry is all a charade. It is atheism masquerading as science. They claim mental illness is caused by chemical imbalances. This is a lie by drug co’s to sell drugs. Psychiatry admits truthfully that they don’t cure mental illness, they only “manage symptoms” This is so people will keep taking the drugs to make money for the drug co’s. Mental illness, according to the bible, is caused by demonic oppression. The psych meds are openings for demons. Since demons don’t cast out demons, only God casts them out, this is why psych meds can’t cure mental illness, they cause it. The drug handbooks say that possible side effects of anti-psychotic and anti-depressant drugs is psychosis. This has proven true; all of the suicidal school shooters were being ‘treated’ by psych meds.
Most people labeled psychotic are not – they are people with spiritual or religious beliefs and experiences that psychiatrists label delusions or hallucinations – symptoms of psychosis. Psychiatrists second question is always “Do you hear voices?” Anyone who says they hear God or demons is thought to have auditory hallucinations, a symptom of psychosis. They are given the label schizophrenic, schizo-affective or even bipolar. (Being hyperreligious is supposedly a symptom of mania, they then presume that the person also gets depress-, hence they are thought to be manic-depressived, which is now called bipolar. This is how they are trained.
The truth of the matter is that Everyone hears voices, as thoughts in our heads. Thoughts come into our head from the spiritual realm. The word “inspiration:” means “a spirit goes into it”. The bible (James ch 3) says there is wisdom from above and wisdom from below. Jesus said “my sheep hear my voice” John 10-:27. So it is NORMAL Christian theology to hear voices. It is not psychosis.The Holy Spirit is on the earth and talks to everyone. We need to learn to discern the difference between God’s voice and demons. Those who are oppressed by demonic “voices” need to address all of the above issues to remove them. Everyone is vulnerable to “lying spirits” if they are not careful about their environment and using drugs. Demonic spirits can affect thoughts and emotions, hence mood disorders. This can all be addressed through prayer. If you ask God what to remove around you, the Holy Spirit will answer you in your thoughts. Anyone who has accepted Jesus as Savior has authority to rebuke spirits of mental illness such as depress-, or physical illnesses. (You pray, “In Jesus name, I rebuke the spirit of xxx). I have done so; it works. Spirits can jump around from person to person like germs. I have had it happen to me. One can pick up the agitation of another person who is drinking coffee, for ex. Children can be hyper because their parents drink coffee. People may have problems because someone around them is using drugs or has another openings for demonic spirits. (Pot smokers used to call it a “contact high”).
Psychiatry is rooted in atheism and its historical purpose has been to deliberately destroy religious people. Google G. Brock Chisholm, director of World Fed of Mental Health. He was anti-God, and said the purpose of therapy is to eradicate morality. He also said the purpose of education is to prepare people for the new world order, a one world government. Both education and mental health are arenas of control by the social engineers who want to create a one world government, a scientific fascist state. Aldous Huxley described it in his prophetic book, Brave New world, where everyone is drugged. Huxley said “a scientific fascism will be easy to sell the public”. They not only use psych meds; they are using mass medication of the population through drugs in the water; flurodation of water is an example of this. The Nazis first used it in the camps to make the prisoners docile. The same element, fluoride, is in all the anti-psychotic and anti-depressant drugs, which do the same thing. Sodium fluoride, in toothpaste and water, is a toxic poison, a byproduct of aluminum processing. It is used in rat poison. Toothpaste tubes warn not to swallow it. It has been sold to the public as a positive benefit for teeth as a total scam. You can research this on the internet. Avoid fluoridated water by using filters. Some bottled water has fluoride added.
Psychiatric definitions of mental illness are all from an atheistic, materialistic non-spiritual worldview. Christians are labelled schizophrenic, schizoaffective or bipolar. The anti-psychotic drugs hinder the Holy Spirit. They impede one’s ability to pray. The Mental Health system is unconstitutional since it violates the 1st amendment guaranteeing religious freedom.Involuntary commitment and treatments violate this right. It says the government can not establish a state religion, and the religion of the mental health system is atheism.
You can read more on mental health and healing of mental and physical illness in a free book at http://1prophetspeaks.com: Manual for Transformational Healing-God’s Answer to Psychiatry. It warns about atheistic psychiatry & their toxic drugs. Includes Blueprint for Revival, a vision for an empowered church to heal the sick through prayer & worship, 24 hours.
Also has minibooks, Spiritual Wisdom, articles, including Blueprint for Revival, and samples of original worship music.
See my blog for more: 1prophetspeaks@blogspot.com
Residents blast racial reference by Iowa town’s new mayor (desmoinesregister)
A few words uttered in conversation over coffee at a convenience store ignited
a community’s worth of disapproval for one new Iowa mayor.
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Tips for Choosing a Wholesale Coffee Distributor
What is one thing that coffee shop owners and office managers have in common aside from lack of sleep? They both use (or should be using) a wholesale coffee distributor. The benefits of buying coffee wholesale include better prices, bulk ordering, and special discounts for loyal customers- to name a few. Choosing the right coffee distributor, however, can be an overwhelming task. There are several important aspects to take into consideration during the process. 1
Reputation
One of the most important factors when choosing any business’s service or product should be the company’s reputation. Consider the daily consumer buying decisions. People are more likely to make a purchase from a company that has a positive reputation rather than from one that doesn’t. 1
The same holds true for choosing a wholesale coffee distributor. This will require doing some research. Fortunately, today there is an abundance of resources on the Internet that offer business ratings and user reviews. There are also numerous blog properties that feature public commentary regarding such matters. Simply asking fellow office managers or non-competing coffee shop owners may be a good way to research as well. Although it may seem inconvenient, doing the necessary digging will lead you to the right wholesale coffee distributor. For more information visit Vending machines
Selection
The coffee distributor you choose should offer a wide variety of products. This includes a large assortment of blends, roasts and brands. Without an extensive selection your options will be limited and you will most likely find yourself going through multiple avenues in order to purchase the necessary coffees. This will inevitably increase costs.
Value
The price of coffee is not the only matter to consider here. Wholesale coffee prices are already going to seem fairly low compared to those of grocery stores or convenience marts. When doing your research, make sure to factor in the cost of shipping. Oftentimes coffee distributors will catch customers’ eyes with low prices, but then charge steep shipping costs. Another item to look into before making your decision is available discounts or allowances. For instance, distributors will often give quantity discounts for certain amounts purchased. All of these factors contribute to the overall value you are receiving from a wholesale coffee distributor. For more information visit ,Coffee Services
Experience
When looking into wholesale coffee distributors it is important to understand the significance of choosing one with extensive experience. Companies that have been operating for a substantial number of years understand how to operate in a manner that complements your business. They have already gone through their “growing pains” and have worked out any issues that might directly affect your order. Their history demonstrates that they have succeeded in providing quality services and products and will continue to do so.
Convenience
Perhaps the best consideration is that of convenience. Are customers able to order directly online, or do they have to call? Is there an automatic ordering program that ships and bills orders regularly without requiring customers to be involved each time? Wholesale coffee suppliers that offer these convenient services should rank high on your list.
Choosing the right wholesale coffee distributor is a tricky task. It will take time, research and planning to assess not only your needs, but also which company will view your decision as a partnership rather than a simple sale. By considering the items explained above you should be able to select the ideal coffee distributor for your unique situation. For more information visit Water Services
Article done by Mimi Naghshineh Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mimi_Naghshineh

