Images of Dodge vehicles with Hemi engines can be seen in many car and truck magazines. Motor Trend is one such magazine that has these pictures. Online one can see Dodge pictures at the official Dodge website as well as the automobile website Car and Driver.
You can see images of 1936 Dodge pickup trucks at the Pickup Trucks website. Once on the page, type "1936 Dodge" into the search field at the top of the page and press enter to bring up the images.
The Chrysler Corp makes the Dodge Charger. They at one time in the late 60's had Hemi Motors, you see
See link below
One can see images of bathing girls on Google Images where there are hundreds of images matching this description. One can also see them on Stock Free Images.
I am not sure why Dodge recommends every 30,000 miles. I see Hemi's regularly that go 60,000-100,000 between plug replacement.
Your owner's manual should provide that information. If you don't have one, it would be a good idea to inquire at your local Dodge dealer and see if you can get one.
One can see images of active RFID tags on Google Images where there are dozens of such images available to view. One can also see images on the RFID Labeling website.
One can see medical images of the male anatomy. One way that one can see medical images of the male anatomy is by searching for images of the male anatomy on Bing.
One can see images of the Nike Huarache online at various websites. One can see images of the Nike Huarache at websites such as KicksOnFire and Amazon.
One can see the images of the Qal'eh Doktar on a lot of pages online. Google images, maplandia, Geody, and Wikipedia are some examples of pages where one can see the images of the Qal'eh Dokhtar.
For a daily driver HEMI, you should see about 17-18 mpg running around the city.
I don't think the HEMI heads were invented/designed until the last 50's/early 60's, when Chrysler/Dodge/Plymouth first made them famous. I will check and see if this is true, but I think it is. A great site for anything Chrysler/Dodge/Plymouth and now Jeep related is www.allpar.com