More than 80 exhibitors participating in Neosho review

February 15, 2008 09:37 pm

By Derek Spellman
dspellman@joplinglobe.com
NEOSHO, Mo. — It was a day to showcase new products and services as well as just talk with people.
More than 80 exhibits crowded into the Neosho High School gym and lobby area on Friday for the first day of the city’s annual Business and Industry Review. The exhibits represented a gamut of operations that included businesses, industries, health care, real estate, non-profit organizations and service groups.
Deborah Kenny, an independent distributor of EcoQuest International Inc. products, for example, came to the review to show people a lineup of health-related products, principally air- and water-purification systems.
“My job is to help people,” Kenny said Friday night.
Among the EcoQuest products she showed people: an air-purification system people can hang around their necks like a necklace that helps purify the air immediately around the wearer, helping to prevent them from contracting colds, the flu or allergies.
Another product: Laundry Pure, a device that hooks up to a laundry machine that treats water with “silver ions for killing odor-causing bacteria, and the cleaning power of oxygen and bubbling peroxides to break down and lift away grime, without the need for detergent or hot water,” according to the company.
The technology, Kenny said, eliminates the need for detergent, kills germs without bleach and cuts down on energy costs by eliminating the need for hot water.
Some of the exhibitors came for educational purposes.
David Hendrix, manager of the National Fish Hatchery in Neosho, said the hatchery principally came to share information about projects.
“It is a good chance to give people an update on the hatchery,” he said.
Hendrix was on hand to let people know about the new $3.88 million visitors center that is planned for the hatchery.
“This year, we are all fired up to be one of the leading producers of endangered pallid sturgeon,” Hendrix said.
Some of the exhibitors attended the review just to get to interact with the community.
Representatives from Premier Turbines, of Neosho, did not expect to generate a lot of business leads from the review, said Alton Johnson, general manager of Premier Turbines. Much of the company’s business is in corporate aviation.
“It is more of giving back to the community,” Johnson said Friday night.
Many people are aware of Premier Turbine’s presence in Neosho but are unaware of what the company actually does, Johnson said. The review affords an opportunity to give an overview of it operations, which entail the repair and overhaul of commercial, government and military turbine engines, components and accessories.
“It is a chance for people to get to know us and for us to get to know them,” Johnson said of the visitors to the review.

Continuing today
The 16th annual Neosho Business and Industry Review continues from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today. The event is open to the public, and admission is $2. The exhibits are housed inside the Neosho High School gym and lobby area.

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Photos


Globe/T. Rob Brown Caleb Persons, 11, of Neosho, watches a wheel spin at the Arvest Bank booth at the Neosho Business and Industry Review on Friday night at Neosho High School. Michael Gandy (left), bank marketing officer, cheers him on.