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  2. These popular glass storage containers are 40% off: 'I like ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/these-popular-glass...

    It's a 24-piece set of storage food containers that shoppers love. They are leakproof and made of ultra-durable borosilicate. ... You'll get 12 containers and lids for just $40 — that's $1.67 a ...

  3. Food storage container - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_storage_container

    Warehouse storing many kinds of food Consumer pantry, also diverse Home storage containers with latched lids. Food storage containers are widespread in use throughout the world and have probably been in use since the first human civilizations.

  4. Rubbermaid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubbermaid

    Rubbermaid glass food storage containers. Rubbermaid was founded in 1920 [3] in Wooster, Ohio as the Wooster Rubber Company by nine businessmen. Originally, Wooster Rubber Company manufactured toy balloons. [citation needed] In 1933, James R. Caldwell and his wife received a patent for their blue rubber dustpan. They called their line of rubber ...

  5. Food storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_storage

    Photograph by Edward S. Curtis U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) food storage containers stacked on shipping pallets in Texas, 2008. A new braided granary is inaugurated. Kapsiki, North Cameroon. Food storage is a way of decreasing the variability of the food supply in the face of natural, inevitable variability. [1]

  6. How to score free storage containers! - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2009-03-11-how-to-score-free...

    Not much grinds my gears more than paying for a box, but every year without fail I end up buying several boxes so that I can store my assorted belongings in something that is easier to stack than ...

  7. Mason jar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mason_jar

    John Landis Mason, inventor of the Mason jar. In 1858, a Vineland, New Jersey, tinsmith named John Landis Mason (1832–1902) invented and patented a screw threaded glass jar or bottle that became known as the Mason jar (U.S. Patent No. 22,186.) [1] [2] From 1857, when it was first patented, to the present, Mason jars have had hundreds of variations in shape and cap design. [8]