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Tisham Candella

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Aug 3, 2024, 3:57:08 PM8/3/24
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Happy Mother's day to all who celebrate! We've compiled a list of some favorite wares from Ware that are especially useful for new parents. Whether you're gifting or treating yourself, here's a good place to start. Bag Drying Rack One...

If you're reducing, reusing, and refilling, you're likely also repurposing jars. It's an early lifestyle adoption for folks venturing down the zero waste (okay, low waste) path. Getting labels off of jars can be its own hurdle, and we've got advice...

Even countries like Japan, where the population is already shrinking, still benefit from a growing global labor force from which to draw workers and a growing global marketplace in which to sell their wares.

Ruth Ware is an international number one bestseller. Her thrillers In a Dark, Dark Wood, The Woman in Cabin 10, The Lying Game, The Death of Mrs Westaway, The Turn of the Key, One by One, The It Girl and Zero Days have appeared on bestseller lists around the world, including the Sunday Times and New York Times, and have sold more than nine million copies. Her books have been optioned for both film and TV, and she is published in more than 40 languages. Ruth lives near Brighton with her family. Visit ruthware.com to find out more.

When I was in my twenties I began to work in the book industry. On the one hand, it was a brilliant apprenticeship, and I learned a lot about how publishing works. On the other hand, it gave me a massive attack of stage fright. I was working with some amazing, award-winning writers, and had a first-hand glimpse into the number of brilliant books published every single week, and it became increasingly hard to imagine that there would ever be a place for me on those heaving bookshop shelves. I kept writing, but I kept putting the books under the bed. (Or rather, leaving them on my hard drive, as by this time I had learned to touch type and use a word processor).

Please note that DOEE recognizes some customers with disabilities require plastic straws as a reasonable accommodation to consume food or beverages. Pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act and the DC Human Rights Act, some customers may request single-use plastic straws to consume food and beverages. Regulated entities must keep a stock of plastic straws available to meet these needs and remain compliant.

Businesses and organizations that sell or provide food or beverages are subject to the requirements of both the foam ban and the compostable and recyclable requirements. The law applies to any food service products designed for single use. These include takeout containers, bowls, plates, trays, cups, cutlery, straws, stirrers, and other items.

In addition, the compostable and recyclable requirements only apply to foods prepared for immediate consumption; grocery store produce sections, raw grains and pasta, etc. are exempt. The ban on foam food service ware still applies.

In addition to the aforementioned foam containers (including cups, bowls, and clamshells) and single-use plastic straws and stirrers, the following items are banned due to their inability to be composted or recycled:

Check out more of these videos of some local businesses sharing examples of their successful conversion to recyclable or compostable foam-free alternative products: Culture Coffee, Queen Vic, Founding Farmers

DOEE currently enforces the foam ban and the food service ware requirements, issuing warning letters as well as fines to entities that are not in compliance. DOEE solicits tips from the public and conducts regular inspections to determine compliance.

Ware was first settled on Equivalent Lands in 1717[3][4] and was officially incorporated in 1775. Its name derives from the word "weir." The native Americans who settled in the area would construct weirs for trapping fish on the Ware River. The English settlers pronounced the word "ware."[3]

In 1716, a tract of land which was slightly more than 11,000 acres (4,500 ha) in size was granted to John Read. He named it "The Manor of Peace" and had it in mind to develop in the style of an English manor, anticipating that it would later become a very valuable country estate. He leased out the land and did not sell 1-acre (4,000 m2) until after his death, when he bequeathed a gift of 200 acres (0.81 km2) to serve as a ministry lot. As time passed, the town of Ware grew up around the old Congregational meeting house and later became a small center of local manufacturing and commerce.[3]

For nearly 100 years, the Otis company had been the largest single Ware employer. Cotton had been the primary raw material, and by 1937 denims, awnings and tickings were the principal output. It had been very prosperous until World War I, when its employees numbered close to 2,500. By the 1920s, however, the company began to decline due to lack of modern machinery and movement of industry to the south.[5][citation needed]

Instantly, the townspeople rallied to the cause. A public mass meeting was called that evening and plans to raise the necessary cash in order to forestall what appeared to be the imminent ruin of the town were formulated. The citizens of Ware were able to purchase the mills with the backing of the Ware Trust Company. The mills became Ware Industries Inc., and Ware came to be known nationwide as "The Town That Can't Be Licked".[citation needed]

Ware is the easternmost town in Hampshire County and is bordered by Franklin County to the north, Worcester County to the east, and Hampden County to the south. The town is bordered by New Salem to the northwest, Petersham to the north, Hardwick to the northeast, New Braintree and West Brookfield to the east, a small portion of Warren to the southeast, Palmer to the south, and Belchertown to the west. (There is no land link between New Salem or Petersham and Ware due to the Quabbin Reservoir.) Downtown Ware lies 24 miles (39 km) east-southeast of the county seat of Northampton, 26 miles (42 km) northeast of Springfield, 30 miles (48 km) west of Worcester, and 72 miles (116 km) west of Boston.

Ware has no interstates or limited-access highways, the town center being 8.5 miles (13.7 km) north of Exit 63 (the Palmer exit) of Interstate 90. The town is linked to Route 9, the major east-west route through central Massachusetts, by Route 32, which runs concurrently with Route 9 from their merging point to just west of the West Brookfield town line, where Route 32 crosses through the eastern edge of Ware as it heads north. Route 9 heads west through town, passing along the edge of the Quabbin Reservation on its way towards Belchertown. The town has no public transit systems, but does have a commercial rail line, the Massachusetts Central Railroad, which follows the former Ware River Railroad line along the Ware River from Barre to where the line meets the Boston and Albany Railroad lines in Palmer. There is a private general aviation airstrip along Route 32 in the eastern part of town. The nearest national air service airports are Bradley International Airport in Connecticut and Worcester Regional Airport in Massachusetts.

Mr. Ware has represented numerous companies in significant civil litigation, including Philip Morris, General Electric, Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Pyramid Corporation, Harvard University, Countrywide and RBS Citizens Bank.

He has tried numerous jury and non-jury cases to conclusion in federal and state courts and has represented companies at trial in the courts of each of the New England states, California, Michigan, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Wyoming, Texas and Pennsylvania.

Mr. Ware is a former law clerk to a Judge of the United States District Court in Boston, Massachusetts. He previously served as Assistant United States Attorney (Department of Justice) in Boston as a Federal Prosecutor. He has been a member of the U.S. Magistrate Merit Selection Panel for the First Circuit.

Mr. Ware has been recognized by The Best Lawyers in America Best Lawyers for his work in Bet-the-Company Litigation, Commercial Litigation, Copyright Law, Litigation - Intellectual Property, Litigation - Patent, Patent Law and Trademark Law 2022-2023.

The act of the Legislature of Virginia of 1779 entitled "An actconcerning escheats and forfeitures from British subjects," andunder which a debtor to a subject of Great Britain had, inconformity to the provisions of that law, during the war, paid intothe loan office of the state a portion of the debt due by him, didnot operate to protect the debtor from a suit for such debt afterthe treaty of peace in 1783. The statute of Virginia, if it wasvalid and the legislature could pass such a law, was annulled bythe fourth article of the treaty, and under this article, suits forthe recovery of debts so due might be maintained, the provisions ofthe Virginia law to the contrary notwithstanding.

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