Mixter Blacksmith Shop was created in 1840.
Mixter right-angled forceps are commonly used in surgical procedures for grasping and manipulating delicate tissues or structures in confined spaces, such as during neurosurgery or vascular surgery. The right-angled design allows for better access and visibility in hard-to-reach areas without causing damage to surrounding tissues.
Russell L. Mixter died on 2007-01-16.
Florence Kilpatrick Mixter has written: 'Out Of Mist'
Mixter
Evaperat the mixter
A mixter of bright colors.
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Hard work is written as two separate words.
An assistant manager at a Vancouver Wal-Mart has apologized after she failed to call 911 when an 81-year-old man fell and broke his shoulder in the store's parking lot. Robert Mixter is recovering at the Ridgefield home of his son and daughter-in-law, George and Rita Mixter. Rita Mixter said the fall occurred about 8:45 p.m. May 23, outside the Wal-Mart at 221 N.E. 104th Ave., off Mill Plain Boulevard. She said she was waiting in a check-out lane with her purchases when her husband and 10-year-old daughter, Emily, left the store with Robert Mixter, to help him walk to their SUV. Robert Mixter tripped over the SUV's trailer hitch and landed on the pavement, breaking his shoulder, Rita Mixter said. A crying Emily ran into the store to get her mother. "She said, 'Mom, Grandpa fell and it's really bad!'" Rita Mixter said family members asked a parking-lot attendant to call 911, but instead, the attendant used his radio to tell managers there'd been an accident outside. When an assistant manager emerged from the store, she asked family members to fill out an accident form. Asked to call 911, she allegedly refused, saying it was against company policy, Rita Mixter said. Meanwhile, Robert Mixter "was in a lot of pain," Rita Mixter said. "He just couldn't move." After a delay of several minutes, Rita Mixter said she used her own mother's phone to call 911. Rescuers with the Vancouver Fire Department and American Medical Response ambulance service then arrived and took Robert Mixter to a hospital. Rita Mixter later told a KOIN-TV news crew what happened, and the station aired a story. Two corporate spokesmen for Wal-Mart, Greg Rossiter and Dan Fogleman, confirmed to The Columbian that the company's policy says store employees are expected to call 911 if someone needs medical assistance. Fogleman, calling from Bentonville, Ark., said he was told the assistant manager came outside and asked family members if she could use their cell phone to call 911. That was an error, Fogleman said, adding that the company would have preferred that she use her radio to ask employees inside to call 911. Rita Mixter said her mother was the only one in their group who had a cell phone with her, but her mother was still inside the store when family members asked the assistant manager to call 911. Rita Mixter said her mother came outside to the SUV several minutes later, and Rita Mixter used it to call 911. Her mother later said no one from Wal-Mart asked to use her phone, Rita Mixter said. At any rate, the assistant manager later apologized to the family for not calling 911, Mixter and Fogleman said. "We're still not happy with Wal-Mart," Rita Mixter said. "I told them to train their employees to call 911 in an emergency."
A jar of coins is fairly easy to separate.
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