There appears to be numerous links to the company/product you are looking for. However, the name "Lume International Inc." appears to have no direct website. Sometimes companies change or alter their name, or are bought by another company. I did find a few links that sell products by a company called " Lume' Nailcare". This is most likely the same manufacturer that you are looking for. I would recommend searching sites for that name.
yes
The most commonly known mineral that can be scratched with a fingernail is talc.
Brian could potentially use fingernail clippers in Hatchet to help trim any fishing line or cord he may need to use for survival tasks. They could also be used to trim materials for constructing a shelter or repairing clothing. Overall, while not a primary survival tool, fingernail clippers could provide utility in small, precise tasks.
Both could be called International Cities.
I read somewhere that a podiatrist could remove fingernails as well as toenails.
You could:contact the store where you bought the food, or the restaurant manager if it's at a dining establishmentcontact the manufacturersave the food and fingernail and take it to an attorneyor, you could throw it all away and do nothing
That is not their usual habitat, but some could probably hang in there for a short time.
See your doctor. The infection could lead to blood poisoning (septicaemia) if ignored.
Fingernails will be partially broken down by the acids in your stomach. What's left will then move through your intestinal tract and become part of your stool. On very extremely rare occasion, a sharp fingernail could become stuck in the appendix and could cause inflammation or appendicitis.
That could be graphite, which is a natural allotrope of the element carbon.
* There was some news but not much that was International. * There is always international news. To find out the news in a nutshell, you could probably use Trackle. They have a section called this day in history. That may help you find international news in 1997.
The branch is called International Maritime Law documents include the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and the statute of the International Maritime Organisation. Claims could be brought at the International Court of Justice in the Netherlands, The Hague or the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in Hamburg, Germany.