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Whether you're bracing for price hikes or just getting your home ready for cookouts, guests and warmer weather, now's a great ...
Get prepped with this variety pack of disposable cutlery ... Save up to $70 a year when you opt for Member’s Mark baby wipes ...
At 3M Co., maker of Scotch-Brite disposable wipes and toilet scrubbers, "we talk about a 'quick-cleaning behavior' of consumers," said Mark Sorlien, technical director for the home-care division ...
Disposable wipes: Pull one out of the container, wipe down the entire kitchen and bathroom, then flush it down the toilet, right? While the wipes are a convenient and easy-to-use product that ...
Cottonelle has recalled several lots of its disposable wipes due to the possibility that they have been contaminated with bacteria. The bacteria is fairly mild, but those with compromised immune ...
North American customers have made disposable ... of the wipes, even those labeled as "flushable," are creating a costly mess here and across the country. "This is a big deal," said Mark Jockers ...
It was nearly impossible to even get a hold of disposable face masks and wipes a few months ago. Now, they’re everywhere—and they’re wreaking havoc on sewage and stormwater systems in the ...
CLEVELAND — You’ve probably been using more disposable wipes around the house lately as we all take extra precautions because of coronavirus. But please stop flushing those wipes down the toilet.
Store shelves are packed with disposable wipes these days. There are new products to make your life cleaner, wipes to use around the house, to clean your baby, your face, even your rear end.
In a matter of less than five years, sales of disposable wipes have risen to about $2.3 billion a year in the United States and Canada ($3.8 billion globally) from $750 million in 1997 ...
These Member’s Mark spring-themed paper plates are too cute to resist if you’re hosting an event or attending a potluck and need to bring along disposable tableware. Every package contains 85 ...
The Washington Association of Sewer & Water (WASWD) is officially acknowledging a new law requiring a “do not flush” symbol to be brandished on the packaging of disposable wipes.