A veteran-owned clothing brand, Nine Line Apparel, made a concerning discovery after a test showed one of their suppliers is allegedly using cotton grown in a slave labor region in China.
for the perfect time for his dismount. he is a champ. what a fun way to spend the day. congratulations, thank you very much. congratulations charlie br brown. this is an hour of fox & friends . the national anthem to the g7 to the war in ukraine in the voter panel to surfing jobs to hunter biden. welcome to the show. nine line apparel to ethically source materials are testing the fabric to make sure it s not made from slave labor in china. the ceo joins us as equals in other companies to do the same of up to $26,000 per employee. all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then work with professionals to assist your business with its forms and submit the application. go to getrefunds.com to learn more. this isn t just freight. these aren t just shipments. they re promises. promises of all shapes and sizes.
To help with some of that growth near Grovetown, crews are expanding Horizon South Parkway off Exit 190 from two lanes to four.Here’s a timeline of the project and how some businesses there are handling it all.
Our friend Paul Bedard at the Washington Examiner reports that CBS turned down an ad made by a veteran-owned apparel company. "CBS was apparently not satisfied the firm could pay for the 45-second ad, despite having annual revenues of $25 million. A spokesman for Nine Line charged that CBS didn’t like the ad’s content."