New Fashion Design for 12″ rubber glove with cotton linning-rough finish to Somalia Manufacturers

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Heavy duty rubber glove,  made of 100% natural latex. 12”length(31cm), rough finish, seamless, cotton lining, left/right hand, 210g/pair, 120pairs/case. Using for Isolater, dry box, blast cabinet, glove box, etc.


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abide by the contract", conforms to the market requirement, joins in the market competition by its high quality as well as provides more comprehensive and excellent service for clients to let them become big winner. The pursue of the company, is the clients' satisfaction New Fashion Design for 12″ rubber glove with cotton linning-rough finish to Somalia Manufacturers, If you are interested in any of our products or would like to discuss a custom order, please feel free to contact us. We are looking forward to forming successful business relationships with new clients around the world in the near future.


Heavy duty rubber glove,  made of 100% natural latex.

12”length(31cm), rough finish, seamless, cotton lining, left/right hand, 210g/pair, 120pairs/case.

Using for Isolater, dry box, blast cabinet, glove box, etc.

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  • Thick, durable, w/long cuffs, good for cleaning, automotive, painting or dishwashing. Amazon Affiliate Product Link: http://amzn.to/2aiPMca

    These are the gloves in size large. They measure about 12.5” long and are made from a thick nitrile rubber which is a bit stiffer than your typical latex gloves. This affords the gloves better chemical resistance against strong acids and bases to protect your hands. I typically wear a men’s medium to large gloves and these were loose fitting, but still had good flexibility and dexterity. The cuff is extra long to protect your hands and wrists from splashes and liquids entering at the cuff. When using them for cleaning or doing dishes, they were pretty durable and haven’t torn or punctured yet. They do a good job keeping harsh chemicals and abrasives off your skin and the extra long cuffs protect your wrists and upper forearm.

    Amazon Affiliate Product Link: http://amzn.to/2aiPMca



    Made by RKO Pathe as part of the WWII industrial incentive effort, “Conquer by the Clock” presents a hectic montage of images of productivity, set to the click of time clocks, the hum of industrial machinery, and the clattering of guns. In wartime America, three 8-hour shifts and 24 hours of work were necessary in munitions plants, shipyards, and other vital factories. In 1943, the film was nominated for an Academy Award.

    The film shows the activities in a munitions plant at the 3:30 mark, with rifle cartridges being manufactured. A lazy employee goes off to have a smoke, and as a result a bad batch of bullets is missed. In the end this proves to be a fatal mistake for a soldier in the field, whose rifle misfires in combat and he is killed. It also shows the owner of a wartime plant who goes to watch a baseball game instead of overseeing the loading of a vital survival kit aboard a lifeboat, resulting in the inadvertent death of two men.

    Overall, the film encourages American workers to make the best possible use of their time in a war where industrial production and combat are synchronized on an international level. Encourages American wartime workers to “keep their sleeves rolled up.” Describes the volume of industrial and agricultural production that can be accomplished in a single day: enough rifles for a battalion, 1000 acres of corn converted to 30,000 bushels of food.” The film calls tired workers, in effect, “saboteurs”. Narration admonishes workers for the death of soldiers through inadequate equipment or supplies. Utterly melodramatic. Urges workers to move production forward relentlessly. Says that “the clock” is what will win the war.

    The film was directed by Director Slavko Vorkapich (1895-1976), the acknowledged master of “montage sequences” — image combination and superimposition techniques that infused often quite ordinary movies with moments of abstraction. With Robert Florey and Gregg Toland, he made the early American experimental film The Life and Death of a Hollywood Extra (1928); later, he made his famous contribution to Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur’s Crime Without Passion (1934). Besides Conquer by the Clock, he made six other This Is America short subjects for RKO-Pathe, including Private Smith, U.S.A., Women in Arms, Lieutenant Smith and New Americans.

    We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example like: “01:00:12:00 — President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference.”

    This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com

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