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- Many times the space you have is more than enough for your belongings.
- It's dark, it's dangerous, and it's alive....
- Carpet cleaning advice for those really muddy, dirty carpet situations.
- Anyone who has washed or worn white clothes knows that white shirts stop looking white after a few washes and start to turn a shade of gray. A new laundry-detergent enzyme helps prevent this from happening, without the use of bleach.
- Webpage provides direct access to information on cleaning product ingredients.
- You can't see it. You can't smell it. But you can take steps against radon in your home, starting with an inexpensive test.
- When a school looks clean and healthy, people tend to have a positive attitude about it. But looks can be deceiving: a clean-looking school may have been cleaned merely for appearance and not for health. Desks may have heavy chemical residues and bacterial contamination. Restrooms may have been treated with a harsh disinfectant — the sink handles wiped but not sanitized. A fragranced deodorizer or air freshener may be hanging in the air emitting chemicals without addressing the source of the odor.
- Identify the source and attack it intelligently.
- Check the Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI) for top performers in soil removal, indoor air quality and carpet protection.
- After learning about dust mites, you too, may want to see if your vacuum cleaner is a CRI certified product.
- If you live where the winter is harsh, it's all the more important to be prepared.
- When a problem arises, you’ll know where to find the solution.
- An easy and economical way to clean your oven is to put it off until tomorrow.
- Make your professional or family photographs last.
- An Environmental Protection Agency list of indoor pollutants and solutions that could affect your health.
- For health's sake, know your ceiling's ingredients before dusting up a storm.
- Start working efficiently now to take the "big" out of the big spring projects.
- Every year the combination of winter storms and frozen pipes causes millions of dollars in water damage to homes and buildings. Here's what you can do to prevent problems or clean up.
- Careful maintenance of your home's outer shell prevents costly indoor messes caused by water damage later.
- Families are questioning the presence of chemical products in their homes and taking steps to replace them with healthier alternatives made from more benign ingredients.

