I haven't tried it on wood but lighter fluid seems to get most things off. Acetone too, but it might damage the wood.
Try scrubbing with rubbing alcohol. Sometimes that works.
Once you own the pillow, you can take the tag off.
The King-Haase Furniture Co. was in Memphis, Tn.. I have a piece that was made in the early 1900's that has the original shipping tag on the back.
When cleaning new dishes or glasses, the sticky residue will come off with soap and hot water. Goo Gone and rubbing alcohol also work for stickier, stubborn residue.
Clip system: no whistler: yes sticky: yes dart tag: yes (it'll crack)
You cut it off with scissors.
there a date on the drive off tag, you can drive it until that date. after that you have to get insurance and a tag. if it doesn't have a date then your in luck, you can pretty much use it for however long you want.
I would suggest looking at consignment shops, tag/garage/yard sales too. As a matter of fact I have found pieces of patio furniture at consignment shops and for extremely low prices.
rip the tag off and wear it
If you want to buy cheap furniture, it is a good idea to get it for children. They will often not care what type of furniture they have. They are also more prone to breaking things than adults, so it is a good ideal to get them things that do not cost as much as name brand furniture. You can find styles that they will enjoy even though they do not come with a large price tag.
Restriction enzymes can leave blunt or sticky ends. This will depend on where they cut the DNA, if they cut at the same point on both strands, they will leave a blunt end, if they cut at different points, they will leave sticky ends. For example: (| represents point of cut) Blunt end ATC|GCTA TAG|CGAT Sticky end A|TCGCTA TAGCGA|T