序号 | 专利名 | 申请号 | 申请日 | 公开(公告)号 | 公开(公告)日 | 发明人 |
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181 | Container for housing a premium | US10891941 | 2004-07-14 | US20040256252A1 | 2004-12-23 | Michael Dennis Ryan; Angela L. Rowland; Felicia Ann Pinkstone |
A container apparatus for simultaneously housing a product and a premium, the apparatus comprising a carton and a premium item. The carton includes a front panel, a back panel and two opposing side panels defining an interior region, and a top closure and a bottom closure for enclosing a product within the carton. A recessing flap is formed in an originating panel selected from at least one of the front panel, back panel and two opposing side panels to form a recessed cell in the carton which is at least partially separated from the interior region of the carton. The recessed cell spans the originating panel and at least one adjacent access panel in the container which is positioned adjacent to the originating panelnullto allow access to the recessed cell from outside the carton through at least two adjacent sides of the carton. The premium item is received in the recessed cell such that the premium item is likewise accessible from at least two sides of the carton. The premium item may be selected from a number of different configurations, and may include an interactive element capable of manipulation without interfering with the interior region of the carton, to enable facilitated viewing and/or playing of a premium without detachment of the premium from the carton. | ||||||
182 | Aerosol spray can tool | US681821 | 1996-07-29 | US5988575A | 1999-11-23 | Joseph John Lesko |
The Aerosol Spray Can Tool is a device that holds and stores certain accessories and vital parts of the common aerosol spray can. It is a flexible bracelet that snaps around the can and it has holes thru it, slots, clips and a suitcase. The holes hold the spray straw, the slots hold the spray straw and the clip holds the spray straw. The suitcase molded or machined with the bracelet stores the spray nozzle. A very long straw is laced thru two or more holes to store the long straw. | ||||||
183 | Cartridge-free stacks of slide elements | US317972 | 1994-10-04 | US5507388A | 1996-04-16 | Maurice A. Kildal; Frank A. Richardson; Claude E. Monsees |
A stack of plastic articles and a process of forming the stack are disclosed. Preferably the stack is of heat-fusible plastic slide elements for use in a diagnostic analyzer, the elements being temporarily and non-destructively fused together so that the stack can be used free of a cartridge.In another embodiment, the stack can be of any plastic article temporarily fused to adjacent elements, one side edge of each element bearing a colorant and another bearing no colorant, so that a bar code for the stack is inherently formed simply by rotating each element to project outwardly the colored side edge or the side edge lacking colorant, prior to fusing the elements together. | ||||||
184 | Dry pocket nozzle receptacle | US195809 | 1994-02-14 | US5400928A | 1995-03-28 | Todd A. Resnick |
A container is provided which includes a dry pocket nozzle receptacle for storing a pouring implement such as a nozzle. The nozzle receptacle comprises a generally cylindrical tube for accommodating a nozzle. The tube includes a threaded proximal portion having an aperture for receiving the nozzle, and a cap, which is flexibly attached to the proximal portion of the tube, for sealing the tube so as to prevent environmental exposure to the nozzle and residual container contents. In one embodiment, the nozzle receptacle is an integral part of the container, while another embodiment provides a separate device which may be used with existing containers. Yet another embodiment includes an integral frustoconical portion disposed within the cap and a similar frustoconical portion disposed within the distal end of the tube for sealing the interior of the nozzle when it is situated within the tube during storage. | ||||||
185 | Thermal container | US889155 | 1992-05-27 | US5398842A | 1995-03-21 | Robert Sokolski; John Downey |
A double-walled, thermal container is disclosed in which the outer portion and the inner cup are formed by a unitary piece of molded polymer. The present invention also provides a double-walled thermal mug including a removable base element. The removable base element allows the user of the thermal mug to conceal articles within the annular space between the outer enclosing portion and the inner cup. The removable base also allows insertion of an insulating sleeve. A double-walled thermal mug including can abutment means for positioning a beverage can within the inner cup of the thermal mug is also disclosed. | ||||||
186 | Bonded stacked snap rings | US923319 | 1978-07-10 | US4165001A | 1979-08-21 | Thomas F. Cooper |
A stacked plurality of snap rings adhesibly retained by varnish coating, or other bonding method applied to the rings. Internal or external circular or C-shaped snap rings typically have retainer ring holes and in this invention the holes in adjacent rings in the stack are misaligned. Snap ring pliers or automated equipment can be inserted into the retainer ring holes of the endmost snap ring fastened at the top of the stack, with the tips of the pins penetrating only through the holes in the topmost ring, due to their misalignment, with the topmost ring being removed by movement of the pins relative to each other, thereby facilitating efficient dispensing of one snap ring at a time. | ||||||
187 | Unitary two-compartment package for sterile surgical articles | US508143 | 1974-09-23 | US3954174A | 1976-05-04 | Robert G. Kraus |
Disclosure is made of a unitary two-compartment package for sterile surgical articles which comprises; two separate and sealed containers, each defined by walls of sheet material which are permeable to a means of bacterial sterilization for surgical articles contained within the containers; and means such as an adhesive strip associated with at least one of the containers for permanently joining the two containers to each other. | ||||||
188 | Bottle carrier device | US24056672 | 1972-04-03 | US3923155A | 1975-12-02 | TANZER JOHN J |
A carrier for bottles or the like arranged in package form, such as a six-pack, and particularly designed for bottles of the molded glass envelope type with thin and substantially uniform wall thickness, and wherein the bottom of the bottle, which is often of non-supporting configuration, is capped with a cup-like base member or coaster of less brittle material for protecting the bottle and providing a self-supporting base therefor; the carrier being in the form of a sheet of suitable material, as plastic, with one or more vertical walls lapped with the side walls of the base members and secured thereto by releasable fastening means by which the package may be supported for transport by grasping handle grip means adjacent the tops of the packaged bottles; the handle grip means being adjacent the top of a single vertical wall disposed between rows of bottles in the package, or being on a horizontal shelf portion joining two vertical walls in which case the vertical walls are disposed exteriorly of the bottles and joined to corresponding exterior side wall portions of the cup-like base members.
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189 | Assembly blank for plastic utensils | US28004572 | 1972-08-11 | US3829350A | 1974-08-13 | DAVIS S; WATSON H |
THE PRESENT INVENTION IS DIRECTED TO AN ASSEMBLY BLANK FOR PLASTIC ARTICLES SUCH AS SPOONS, FORKS, ETC., IN WHICH A PLURALITY OF UTENSILS ARE MODED ON A FRAME WITH THE HANDLES IN OPPOSITE RELATION TO EACH OTER AND WHEREIN THE FRAME HAS REINFORCING MEANS TO PERMIT THE UTENSILS TO BE EASILY SEVERED THEREFROM.
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190 | Package of bags | US3587844D | 1967-09-11 | US3587844A | 1971-06-28 | WING RALPH L |
THIS INVENTION IS DIRECTED TO A PACKAGE OF IMBRICATED BAGS, EACH OF THE BAGS AFTER THE BOTTOM BAG IS OFFSET FORWARD FROM THE NEXT UNDERLYING BAG AND OVERLIES THE OPENING OF THE UNDERLYING BAG AND THE TOP SIDE OF THE UNDERLYING BAG IS ATTACHED TO THE BOTTOM OF THE OVERLYING BAG IN SEQUENCE, IN ONE SPECIE THE BAGS ARE ATTACHED TOGETHER BY AN ADHESIVE APPLIED IN SUBSTANTIALLY EQUAL AMOUNTS TO EACH HALF OF THE BAG FROM A MEDIAL DIVISION OF ONE SIDE THEREOF, IN ANOTHER SPECIE THE
BAGS ARE ATTACHED TOGETHER BY FUSING THE SIDES TOGETHER TO PROVIDE A WHOLLY SELF-SUPPORTING CHAIN OF IMBRICATED BAGS, ALL AS DESCRIBED HEREAFTER. |
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191 | Wireless strapping seal | US3553794D | 1968-09-26 | US3553794A | 1971-01-12 | KNEIDL FRANZ A; AMSDEN ROLLIN M JR |
A NESTABLE MAGAZINE SEAL BLANK INCLUDES IN ITS FLANGES INTERLOCKS COMPRISED OF AN APERTURE AND AN INWARDLY DEPRESSED BOSS FACILITATING BOTH EMBRACEABLE RETENTION BETWEEN SEAL BLANKS WITHIN A STACK AND ENDWISE SEPARATION OF THE BLANKS.
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192 | Fully insulated c rings | US3506116D | 1968-12-13 | US3506116A | 1970-04-14 | WINTERS FRANCIS G |
193 | Shadow box display | US3482678D | 1968-08-26 | US3482678A | 1969-12-09 | MASON THOMAS A |
194 | Insulated "c" rings in coherent strip form | US23756262 | 1962-11-14 | US3170160A | 1965-02-23 | BURNISTON RAYMOND J |
195 | Closure device | US47903154 | 1954-12-31 | US2814405A | 1957-11-26 | BRYANT EDWARDS |
196 | Blank for container closures and method of making the same | US74277634 | 1934-09-05 | US2027343A | 1936-01-07 | LA BOMBARD LEON E |
197 | Wrapping and protecting device for razor blades | US64627932 | 1932-12-08 | US1986230A | 1935-01-01 | TALBOT SAMUEL H |
198 | Food preservative | US15180826 | 1926-11-30 | US1654003A | 1927-12-27 | ULRICH LARSON CARL |
199 | Staple package | US67747823 | 1923-11-28 | US1557121A | 1925-10-13 | MAX VOGEL |
200 | Geobge e | US1516012D | US1516012A | 1924-11-18 | ||