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Purina Mills licenses the Purina and Chow brands for the United States and its territories (including Puerto Rico) from the successor of the Ralston Purina Company and owner of the trademarks, Nestlé Purina PetCare. Outside of the U.S., the rights to the Purina and Chow brands for animal feeds are licensed to Cargill [3] [4] by Nestle Purina ...
Gray Summit is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Franklin County, Missouri, United States. The population was 2,701 at the 2010 census. [4] Also called "Gray's Summit", it was founded by Daniel Gray of New York, who built a hotel here in 1845. [5] It is located on Missouri Route 100 just north of Interstate 44. [6]
I-44 BL / Route 100 east – Gray Summit: Former US 66; access to Shaw Nature Reserve and Purina Farms: Pacific: 256.555: 412.885: 256: I-44 BL – Pacific: St. Louis:
He was the only horse to win the $10,000 stake at the Kentucky State Fair two successive years – 1928 and 1929. His fame as a model five-gaited horse was so wide that he became Ralston Purina's advertisement for their new horse feed. The Longs sold four brothers and sisters of the chief and received over $45,000.
Nestlé Purina PetCare (/ p j ʊ ˈ r iː n ə /), or simply Purina, an American company operating as an independent subsidiary of multinational corporation Nestlé.It is based in St. Louis, Missouri. Founded in 1893 by William H. Danforth. It produces and markets pet food, treats, and cat and dog litter.
[3] [4] Franklin County is part of the St. Louis, MO-IL Metropolitan Statistical Area and contains some of the city's exurbs. It is located along the south side of the Missouri River . The county has wineries that are included in the Hermann AVA ( American Viticultural Area ) and is part of the region known as the Missouri Rhineland , which ...
The orchids were moved to the land, then called the Gray Summit Extension, the following year, but were restored to the original location of the garden when pollution waned. The Missouri Botanical Garden kept the land, and over the next fifty years, amounting eventually to the 2,444 acre (9.89 km 2) parcel currently known as Shaw Nature Reserve.
Gassoff was killed in a motorcycle accident on the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend in 1977. He and his pregnant wife, Diane, had been invited to a postseason barbecue at teammate Garry Unger's 200-acre (0.81 km 2) farm near Gray Summit, Mo. At roughly 6:00 p.m., Gassoff joined several others in riding motorcycles around Unger's property.