cheap mattresses cleveland ohio

cheap mattresses cleveland ohio

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Cheap Mattresses Cleveland Ohio

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Enter Address or Zip Code: We Ship Anywhere in the U.S and Canada. Corsicana - Cresswell - Pillow Top Dreamhaven - Harbor Shores - Euro Top - Queen Corsicana - Balfour - Plush Corsicana - Balfour - Pillow Top Dreamhaven - Perfect Sleeper - Butler - Firm - Queen Serta - Pivot - Adjustable Foundation - Queen Dreamhaven - Perfect Sleeper - Hopkins - Firm - Queen Beautysleep - Areca Palm - Plush - Queen BeautySleep - Areca - Firm - Queen Dreamhaven - Perfect Sleeper - Landham - Firm - Queen Dreamhaven - Perfect Sleeper - Hopkins - Super Pillow Top - Queen Why choose Sleep City Mattress Center? Sleep City Mattress Center is a family-owned discount furniture store based in Piqua, OH. Since 1989, Sleep City Mattress Center has served customers in Piqua, Troy, Sidney, Greenville, Vandala, Wapak, Urbana, St Paris, Dayton, St Marys and Lima with low prices on furniture, bedding and top notch customer service. Our knowledge on the furniture we sell sets us high above the competition.




Sleep City Mattress Center is an authorized dealer of such brands as and more. We can help you select your new home furniture at any budget. We look forward to seeing you at Sleep City Mattress Center, serving Piqua, Troy, Sidney, Greenville, Vandala, Wapak, Urbana, St Paris, Dayton, St Marys and Lima in Ohio since 1989. Find out how we can help View our in-store inventory Tear Drop End Table was $229 now $119Coffee tables & End tables Tear Drop Coffee Table was $179 now $129Coffee tables & End tables Wood & Glass End Table *Comes With Set*Coffee tables & End tables Wood & Glass Oval Coffee & End Table Set was $389 now $349Coffee tables & End tables Featuring names you trustWhen it comes to furniture, your mattress is one of the most difficult, personal choices you can make. You need to decide not just the size and softness of the mattress, but the type: Innerspring, Pillowtop, Memory Foam, Natural Latex, even Adjustable Beds…the possibilities are endless.




Metro Home prides itself on carrying the largest variety of mattresses, from the finest manufacturers in the world today: Beautyrest and many more. Stop in today and try our many mattresses on for size. This is a decision best made lying down.Ohio Company Sells Mattresses At Weekend School Sales LABELLE, FL. -- Plastered illegally throughout LaBelle are yellow plastic signs advertising a Saturday mattress sale at the local high school. Only saying "help the kids" there's no company name or indication of just how or who is being helped. Custom Funding Solutions LLC of the Cleveland, Ohio area is behind the gimmick. CFS recruits area mattress sellers around the country and gets permission typically from school athletic coaches to set up a mattress display and take orders for mattress sets priced from $199 to $1900. The school athletic department gets about $50 from the sale of a $199 says one school coach, and a larger commission from pricier units. Brands sold are Restonic and Southerland, both with not such a great consumer rating.




CFS was started in 2006 by Joseph J. Matejka Jr., and incorporated in Ohio in 2008. The Cleveland Better Business Bureau says Matejka formerly owned Cleveland's Best Furniture Direct which "went out of business with an unsatisfactory record with the BBB due to unanswered complaints." The Ohio furniture company, says the BBB, was a "close-out mattress outlet."  All sales were final and there were no refunds. It ceased operation in 2008. According to the BBB, customer "complaints alleged non-delivery of ordered items and difficulty in reaching the company once orders were placed or purchases were made." The LaBelle High School sale is being run this weekend by Richard "Jay" McCreadie of Fort Myers, a former employee of Matejka's mattress company. McCreadie owns Mattress & Furniture Wholesalers LLC in Fort Myers, doing business at the school sales as "Custom Fundraising Solutions of Florida." McCreadie started the mattress sales company in 2009 after closing down SW Florida Furniture Direct Corp.




McCreadie formerly worked for Matejka at Cleveland's Best Furniture Direct. He says the mattress being sold at the school sales are not "close-outs" but are manufactured for each order. There is a $50 delivery charge added to the mattress prices, and the company's sub-contracted delivery service will not pick up old mattresses unless they are in good clean condition. Among the brands being sold are Restonic and Southerland, according to McCreadie. The Restonic brand is typically sold at these high school fund raisers by CFS and has developed a poor reputation from buyers. And not to be left behind, Southerland mattresses also garnered bad reviews from purchasers. Prices at the school sales typically start at $199 for twin size mattress set and go up to $1900 plus delivery charges. Our advice: If you want to help the local athletic department when you see one of these school mattress sales events in your area of the country, just write a check to the school as a donation.




If you really need a mattress, carefully compare brands and prices before you buy one at a local high school gymnasium or cafeteria.Barry Cik is a Board Certified Environmental Engineer, member of the Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families coalition, and founder of Naturepedic, an organic mattress company based in Cleveland, Ohio.Chemical Regulations and the Modern Mattress: The Stuff of NightmaresI’ve spent the last 30 years as an environmental engineer, but it wasn’t until I became a grandfather that I fully understood the extent to which industrial chemicals had invaded the American home.My rude awakening came when my wife sent me to buy a crib mattress for our first grandchild. I was appalled by what I found; the crib mattresses were full of industrial chemicals. Because of my environmental engineering background, I knew how harmful these chemicals could be to a developing child.No one sets out to make toxic baby mattresses; it just evolved that way. As just one example, nearly all baby mattresses are covered with polyvinyl chloride (PVC) to make them waterproof.




Because PVC is rigid, manufacturers mix in a class of chemicals called phthalates to soften the PVC. When added to PVC, phthalates don’t stay put; they leach into the air, making children more vulnerable to asthma, reproductive harm and cancer. One short-sighted decision leads to another and, before you know it, you’ve got a very unhealthy baby mattress.The good news is, Congress is considering legislation that requires chemical manufacturers to show that their products are safe before they end up in products. Called the Safe Chemicals Act in the Senate and the Toxic Chemicals Safety Act in the House, these proposals have the potential to improve Americans’ health and restore consumer trust in American businesses and products.Now it is up to our elected officials to make sure these bills become law. Yet they will only succeed if we can all stand firm in the face of chemical industry lobbyists who will argue that more regulation will hurt small business. My story demonstrates that just the opposite is true.




Back at the baby store, I told the salesperson, “My grandfather slept on straw. I’ll have my grandchildren sleep on straw before I let them sleep on these mattresses. This is not progress.” That shopping trip six years ago spurred my sons and I to start our own business, Naturepedic. It took some work to find the right combination of materials and the right manufacturing process, but I’m proud to say that today we offer waterproof baby mattresses made with organic and non-toxic materials. Yes, you can make a baby mattress without toxic chemicals.Today, businesses like mine are thriving thanks to rising consumer demand for non-toxic products. But there still is a problem: It’s hard for companies like Naturepedic to be fully certain which suppliers do and do not use toxic chemicals. Most of them do, whether they admit it or not. The blame rests squarely on our outdated system for regulating chemicals, the Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976 (TSCA). Under TSCA, chemical manufacturers don’t have to demonstrate that their products are safe for children, nor do they have to disclose all the ingredients.




This lack of transparency puts businesses like mine in a bind. We’re forced to foot the bill for what chemical manufacturers don’t provide, spending our own resources to independently assure safety.By reforming TSCA, we can create a new marketplace where chemical safety information is easily available to all and businesses can make informed choices about what brands and materials to use, making it easier to avoid exposing workers and customers to harm.I know from experience that once people realize that their kids’ beds, mattresses, toys and bottles may contain toxic chemicals, they start reading labels and put their trust in brands that can demonstrate safety. But not everyone can afford to act on this knowledge. Consider families living paycheck to paycheck that can’t always afford to buy the least toxic choice. Our next challenge is to turn frustrated consumers into vocal citizens who will support Congress in making non-toxic the norm, not a market niche.I never expected to be a mattress maker.

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