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These days, it takes more than a good promotional product to stand out in the marketplace. Your main aim is to get the word out there and make your company name one to remember. One of the best ways to do so is to use business promotional gifts.
We all have heard about promotional gifts and your drawer must be full of promotional plastic pens, sticky note pads, and keyrings with company names imprinted on them. They simply sit in a drawer, unused and unseen. The bottom-line is that wastage of money invested in having them printed up. This only happens when you choose wrong gifts for the wrong occasion. The biggest word of caution is choosing carefully.
Whenever you are looking for business promotional gifts for advertising your business keep two words in mind. Those are functional and fun. One of the best ways to cut down your promotional marketing budget is to choose promotional gifts that will be used often by their recipients. This can be ensured by doing a little market research and finding promotional gifts your targeted audience want to use.
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John Graham came to Stow in 1809 and bought his farm on what is now West Graham Road. His sons, Maxwell and William, became very well known horticulturists and the owners of large fruit farms. Of the thirteen original states, only Connecticut held anything back, reserving a strip of land lying south of Lake Erie. As the new state's government was short of money, part was given in lieu of bonuses to Revolutionary soldiers. Connecticut sold the rest of the Reserve to the Connecticut Land Company, made up of speculators organized for that purpose. Joshua Stow of Middletown, Connecticut, secured for his share the land that is now the City of Stow.
Joshua Stow came often to his township and spent a good deal of his money in developing it, but never actually took residence. Stow's agent on the land, William Wetmore, also from Middletown, came to Stow in July, 1804, bringing his wife, three sons, and one daughter.
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Stow Township's rolling hills, thick forests, the Cuyahoga River and many lakes made it "one of the very best townships of Summit County." The settlers earnestly set about chopping down trees for their cabins and to clear land for farming. They also had to deal with many kinds of wild animals. Some of these were hunted for meat, such as deer, rabbits and pigeons. Some animals were hunted in order to make the area safer: those included bears and wolves.
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Stow Township for many, many years was a farming community. Most of the farmers kept some milk cows. Their wives made butter and once in a while cheese. When the cheese factories were built, dairying became a major industry. Some of the farmers milked a lot of cows. The milk had to be taken to the factory twice a day and the sanitary conditions were non-existent. Factories only ran in warm weather, so the cows were bred to freshen in the spring. The cheese factories furnished a market for the milk for a long time, but when they quit there was quite an interval when Stow dairymen didn't know what to do with their milk. In 1915, the Stow Elgin Butter and Ice Cream Co. was organized. It provided a market for milk for some time.
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