HELL, Inc. to Market Personalized Copies of the Company’s Stock Certificate
HELL, Inc., a Texas corporation, will begin marketing personalized copies of the company’s stock certificates through its website, www.hellstock.com.
Hell’s Half Acre, Ft. Worth, TX (PRWEB) May 23, 2005 -- HELL, Inc., a Texas
corporation, will begin marketing personalized copies of the company’s stock
certificates through its website, www.hellstock.com.
Replicating one share of common
stock, the unique, copyrighted artwork is personalized with the name-of-choice
of the purchaser, simulating the ownership of one (1) share of HELL, Inc. Common
Stock.
The non-equity ‘gift stock,’ printed on parchment paper in high
resolution, is ideal as a gift or as a handsome addition to the home or office.
Presented as a two sided stock certificate, the stock’s front depicts a classic
view of the underworld, in a vintage wood-cut style, influenced by the 19th
century engravings of Gustave Doré and John Martin. Gift orders can be sent
directly to recipients. The 2-sided print is offered framed ($34.95) or
un-framed ($19.95).
The company indicated that their direct
Business-to-Consumer marketing would be directed toward individuals needing a
unique gift item or unique way to express them. www.hellstock.com
About
HELL, Inc.:
HELL, Inc., a Texas corporation, markets novelty, gift and
specialty advertising merchandise. Incorporated in 2004 and based in Fort Worth,
Texas, HELL, Inc. promotes its line of products, direct to consumer, through
e-commerce and web channels.
About Hell’s Half Acre:
In the late 19th
century, Hell's Half Acre became almost a generic name for the red-light
district in many frontier towns. Among the various Hell's Half Acres that dotted
the frontier, none was more infamous or more rambunctious than Fort Worth's. The
Fort Worth version started during the city's heyday as a drover's stop on the
cattle trails to Kansas in the early 1870s. The name first appeared in the local
newspaper in 1874, but by that time the district was already well established on
the lower end of town, where it was the first thing the trail drivers saw as
they approached the town from the south.
Illegal activities in Hell's
Half Acre were tolerated by city officials because of their importance to the
town's economy. The district prospered in the 1880s and added to Fort Worth's
growing reputation as a rowdy frontier town. Famous gamblers Luke Short, Bat
Masterson and Wyatt Earp and outlaws Sam Bass, Eugene Bunch, Butch Cassidy and
the Sundance Kid are known to have spent time in Hell's Half
Acre.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/5/prweb243365.htm