Another great place to shop for Trolley Red products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
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Waring WPM25 Professional Popcorn Maker, Red
List Price: $150.00
Sale Price: $72.94
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With this Waring Popcorn Maker you can make popcorn in your own home like you were at the movies. Classic kettle style Waring Popcorn Maker includes removable serving tray, pivoting kettle, and magnetized door...
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![Nostalgia Circus-Cart Popcorn Makers]() |
Nostalgia Circus-Cart Popcorn Makers
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At just under 5 feet, this tall, circus-style popcorn cart will be the hit of every party. This full-sized cart pops up to 1.5 gallons of movie-house quality popcorn per batch. Despite its old-fashioned, street-corner look, the Circus Cart Popcorn Maker is designed for use in your home so you can prepare hot, fresh popcorn anytime...
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Great Northern Popcorn Red Foundation Antique Style Popcorn Popper Machine Complete with Cart and 8-Ounce Kettle
List Price: $569.95
Sale Price: $233.97
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Includes a FREE Starter Kit: 25 FREE bags, measuring cups and a popcorn scoop with every popper! If you are in the market for a popcorn popper, stop looking! These Great Northern Popcorn top quality machines feature stainless steel food-zones, easy cleaning stainless steel kettles, an exclusive warming deck, old-maid drawers (for unpopped kernels), tempered safety glass panels and an industry leading 8 ounce kettle...
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Their Last Time Out
List Price: $15.99
Sale Price: $8.45
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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New Tide
List Price: $12.99
Sale Price: $47.97
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Deluxe edition includes bonus live concert DVD! British indie veterans Gomez follow-up 2006's 'How We Operate' with 'A New Tide', marking a return to the band's more experimental roots. Including guest appearances from vocalist Amy Milan (Broken Social Scene) and cellist Oliver Krauss (Paul Weller, Beth Orton), 'A New Tide' provides an example of a band that is comfortable with the input and creativity of each member...
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Torin T92003 20 Ton Hydraulic Bottle Jack
List Price: $41.99
Sale Price: $39.88
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This 40,000-lb. Torin Hydraulic Bottle Jack has a high-quality, glide-action pressure pump, making big loads easy to lift. Lift Capacity (tons): 20, Min. Lift Height (in.): 9 1/2, Max. Lift Height (in...
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Trimmer Extra Large Shopping Cart, Red
List Price: $50.00
Sale Price: $24.49
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This extra large foldable shopping cart is ideal for carrying groceries or laundry. It's easy to assemble and folds flat for storage. Red.
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Pacific Electric Los Angeles Streetcars Combo DVD
List Price: $29.95
Sale Price: $26.95
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The Pacific Electric Railway-once the largest interurban railway in the nation-and the unique streetcars of the Los Angeles Transit Lines exist now only in memory and on film. Two outstanding documentaries from Pentrex have been combined on one DVD to let you relive the final years of these two transportation legends...
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San Francisco's Trolleys, Special Two Volume Set with 3 DVDs
List Price: $69.90
Sale Price: $64.95
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This special Two Volume Set includes three DVDs filled with more than 4.5 hours of the new and vintage trolley action from this city of the bay!
Volume 1 (Regular price $39.95) includes a rock-steady "motorman's view" on the following lines: F-Market, J-Church, L-Taraval, and M-Ocean View, plus some tracks not used in regular service! See historic cars Nos...
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Floppy Seat
Sale Price: $31.95
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"Oh, how cute!" "Excuse me... could you tell me where you got that?" "What a great idea! Where did you get that?!" Don't use the Floppy Seat unless you're prepared to answer these questions while shopping with baby! We know Moms who have visited a new grocery store and watched the population of Floppy Seats balloon weekly as word spreads about this patented solution for the shopping cart nasties...
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Electronic Bed & Dialysis Scale with Equipment Trolley
List Price: $7,500.00
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Electronic Bed & Dialysis Scale with Equipment Trolley Always in use: the seca 984 facilitates the easy, gentle and precise weighing of bedridden patients and is an indispensable aid in dialysis and intensive-care...
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Swiss Gear Ibex 17-Inch Notebook Backpack
List Price: $89.99
Sale Price: $60.71
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Quik Pocket with headset portShock absorbing shoulder strapsComputer pocket: 12" W x 16" H x 1 3/4" DAir-flow back paddingiPod /MP3 player pocketQuik-access phone pocket on shoulder strapCase base stabilizer platformRear hanging handle doubles as trolley strap Limited lifetime warrantyBlue
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Lowepro Fastpack 250 Camera/Laptop Backpack
List Price: $129.99
Sale Price: $68.99
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Go all day with the lightweight, comfortable Fastpack 250 backpack. It protects your digital SLR and 15.4" wide screen notebook compactly while providing generous storage for your other gear. Side-entry compartments let you quickly grab equipment and accessories, even while you are on the move.
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![2009 Red Car Trolley Pinot Noir 750ml]() |
2009 Red Car Trolley Pinot Noir 750ml
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Deep red. Dark berries, licorice, bitter chocolate and leather on the perfumed nose and palate. Tight, juicy and precise, with strong minerality and a meaty aspect. Finishes vibrant, gripping and long, with lingering smokiness...
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Here are some more information for Trolley Red:

The Big Switch-off
In the Nineties, when light bulb jokes were still funny, Australians used to tell one about the English. "How many Englishmen does it take to change a light bulb?" Answer: "What do you mean change it? It's a perfectly good bloody bulb! We have had it for a thousand years and it has worked just fine."
Edison's original incandescent light bulb design - patented in 1880 - has been used for 127 years in Britain. It releases up to 95 per cent of its energy in the form of heat, and despite the fact that only the remaining 5 per cent is put to good use, it's still the most popular way of lighting our homes. Energy-saving bulbs use up to four times less electricity to generate the same amount of heat, saving energy, money and the environment.
Eco-conscious Australia has already seen the light, recently unveiling its plans to become the first country in the world to ban yellow incandescent bulbs by 2012 - they will be gradually phased out and replaced by compact fluorescent bulbs (CFLs). In Britain, have been a little slower to get off the mark. But earlier this week, the high street electrical store Currys announced plans to cease selling traditional bulbs. And Gordon Brown has taken on the Conservatives for the green vote, with a move to phase out the use of all old-fashioned bulbs by 2011. So why is Britain so reluctant to make the switch? Well, the energy-saving alternatives don't always seem to be quite bright enough, we say.
They flicker. They hum. Don't they emit more toxic gases than the incandescent type? And it's all very well championing eco-friendly bulbs if you're living in sunny Australia. But here in grey Britain, we say, let there be light! All Australian households will run on more fuel-efficient CFL bulbs by 2010, using around 20 per cent of the electricity to produce the same amount of light. But we want to know more than simple statistics. What we need are viable alternatives to old favourites. Lucy Mantovani, a nutritionist, bought her first home last year, a period property in north London. "While my workplace has switched to energy-saving bulbs, I still use yellow incandescent lighting at home," Lucy admits.
"I find I need quite a bright bulb in the kitchen for cooking. But my guilty pleasure is halogen. I've fitted bright spotlights in the ceiling in the hallway, and upstairs in my bedroom I have a gorgeous mother and baby lamp that only takes halogen bulbs. "Last weekend my boyfriend and I were in B&Q, and as I slung a box of 50-watt halogens into the trolley, I found myself throwing a quick glance over my shoulder, almost as if to check nobody was watching me. I count myself as an environmentally aware person. I recycle and I carbon offset whenever I fly. But I can't find a decent alternative to halogen, even though I get cross with myself for buying the bulbs. They have their wattage splashed across the front of the box, almost like warnings on a cigarette packet."
Lucy should look again. The range of energy saving bulbs available in the UK has greatly improved since the first designs came on the market. CFLs now warm up much faster than older designs, typically reaching 95 per cent of their full light output in under a minute. They still flicker slightly, but new tech-nology has reduced the humming. And instead of those halogens? Once confined to the school physics lab, LEDs (light-emitting diodes) are now available as a sound alternative to halogen lighting. Not only do they produce more light per watt than incandescent bulbs, but LED bulbs have no filament so they don't burn out. For those worried there may be significant amounts of CO2 and mercury released in the production of CFL bulbs - research is still under way, but speculation abounds - LEDs are a greener bet. Each bulb will light up your life for more than 50,000 hours (incandescent light bulbs typically run for 1,000-2,000 hours). Nigel's Eco Store (www.nigelsecostore.com) sells packs of two LED bulbs - suitable for ceiling spotlights - at [pound]18.99 a pop. Expensive, yes, but on a pay-per-use basis, that's 0.04 pence an hour. Or there's the Osram dot, a bright, handheld, sticky LED that can be attached to any surface and gives 100 hours of light with three AAA batteries (from [pound]5.22, the-lightbulbshop.co.uk).
A number of UK companies are vying to become "the Englishman who changed the light bulb". Mega-man (www.megamanuk.com) offers 14 different types of bulb, including coloured globes, outdoor designs and the Cat's Eye - a bulb that lulls kids to sleep by emitting a soft, sleep-inducing afterglow long after being switched off. Or try eco-designers Luminair. Their range includes attractive - yes, really - coloured CFL globes, with edgy recycled lamps to fit, and they also sell a range of ultra-modern light fittings specially designed for LED bulbs. Proof that, really, Britain is more switched on than we once thought.
About the Author
Kate Thomas is a foreign news reporter for the Independent, paying special attention to humanitarian and development stories. She has reported from West Africa, Europe and Southeast Asia. Kate has previously worked in the NGO sector in Thailand, Cambodia and the UK, and regularly contributes to travel supplements and guidebooks on developing countries.Rwanda tour . Rwanda tours . congo tour .
Should I spend £299 on a Rimowa trolley suitcase?
It's the Salsa range, in Red and it's made from polycarbon and extremely durable and the lightest suitcase I've ever lifted.
It's has a 104 litre capacity, and has a 5 year guarantee.
I look at in the way.. like a watch.. a £30 one tells the time, so does a £15,000 rolex
if you feel you will get use of it (travel a lot) then buy one..
and yep baggage handlers do chuck cases on to trolleys..
me, I'm mr cheap and cheerful.. £30-40.. .i'd rather spend that sorta money on something i will get far more use out of..
e.g. a new pc.. or a soundcard for music (the RME one i want is £300
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Spring training: Fun in the Arizona sun
Although the cynical view that professional athletes are pampered, overpaid divas spreads with each new story about holdouts and special contract clauses, sports in this country still has the ability to evoke wholesome feelings of nostalgia. No pastime epitomizes that sentiment more than baseball, and...
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