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    Blast-O-Matic provides you with the most powerful AD submission system in the world - and best of all, it's FREE! Not just another Ad submission either! No other AD submission service can compare to the "high-tech" / "high-touch" service you receive from Blast-O-Matic. Most companies charge a fee to provide you with an inferior service! The following is a comparison of a few of our "competitors" prices as of January, 2004:

    Service

    Cost

    Received

    Submit Cheap $25 Out of Business
    Submit Wolf $95 Software
    Mega Response $39 1 year
    123 Link $99 6 subs
    Ace Promote $129 12 subs
    Blast-O-Matic

    FREE

    Unl. Subs
  • Welcome to the Internet's premier Ad submission service web site, Blastomatic, #1 throughout the Internet. Blast-O-Matic has developed a viral system that combines AD submission with a confirmation of your data prior to submitting, there-by eliminating the aggravating false submission, spamming, and email bombing associated with all the rest of the AD submission services. We also offer free AD systems on our other servers if you are looking for an excellent lead generator. Contact me for more information on how you can get one of these new lead systems for your self or business. By the way, our new lead sites also come with a free autoresponder system and a lead control panel to help you manage the leads this system brings in. This is one powerful marketing system! Search engines are the latest craze, because that's where most of a web site's traffic comes from! Over 48% of your site's traffic comes from people looking for what you have in the search engines. But only the top 20 in any type of search will draw the traffic. You don't have to think very far to realize that you will probably never reach those heights in the search engine wars. However, all is not lost. The next big source of traffic is good news. Links from other sites represent about 20% of site traffic. This is where link sites, Guest books, Web Boards and Classifieds come in. Our Blast-O-Matic service submits to all the links, Guest books, Web Boards and Classifieds on the Internet. This represents over 12 million links to your site and can represent a major increase in site traffic in the short run. If you continue to use this service every 30 or so days, you will get more traffic and more traffic is good, right? We have also addressed the problem of false and erroneous submissions by putting our subscribers into the equation. You may have noticed that most other link/search engine submission services charge a sizable fee for their service. We do not charge you a fee to help you achieve the desired results regarding your marketing efforts and using our Blast-O-Matic system. This also assures that our system gets little if any unscrupulous submissions and false email addresses, both saving you time, money as well as making a mentor available to help you. Allowing your visitors to leave a link from your AD system to theirs is also a great way to build traffic. Giving them a Links Page and autoresponder is one of the best ways to develop a loyal subscriber. We have both services. Anyone can get a free submission system from us which includes an autoresponder lead control panel and as one of our subscribers you get the lead details from anyone setting up a free submission system. We have discussion and Support Forums! Get your marketing questions answered by successful webmaster, share your experiences and show off your expertise, learn Internet marketing tips and tricks, or just start a general discussion. We guarantee that every question will be answered. We also have a weekly live broadcast you can interact with to listen to and learn first hand from the pros. Contact me to find out how you can get in on the calls. You'll probably also want to subscribe to our newsletter. If you do, each month we'll send you a concise report detailing proven traffic-building strategies that you can put to use and profit from immediately. Wade Houston is proud to offer you this amazing time saving ad blaster to add your link to 12 million sites with a single submission. Register your free account and then get in on the free live training to find out how to use this tool
    Feeds for Yahoo! News [Health News ]

    1. Study: 1 in 3 breast cancer patients overtreated (AP)
    AP - One in three breast cancer patients identified in public screening programs may be treated unnecessarily, a new study says. Karsten Jorgensen and Peter Gotzsche of the Nordic Cochrane Centre in Copenhagen analyzed breast cancer trends at least seven years before and after government-run screening programs for breast cancer started in parts of Australia, Britain, Canada, Norway and Sweden.

    2. FDA: Dough's E. coli strain differs from illness (AP)
    AP - The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday the strain of E. coli found in a sample of raw cookie dough collected at a Nestle USA manufacturing plant does not match the strain that has been linked to a 30-state outbreak, and they aren't sure how the dough was contaminated.

    3. Monkeys live longer on low-cal diet; would humans? (AP)

    This May 28, 2009, photo provided by the University of Wisconsin at Madison via the journal Science shows Rhesus monkeys Canto, 27, left, who is on a restricted diet, and Owen, 29, right, who is on an unrestricted diet, at the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The two are among the oldest surviving subjects in a pioneering study of the links between diet and aging in Rhesus macaque monkeys. The 20-year study found cutting calories by almost a third slowed the aging of monkeys, and fended off death, and shows the first evidence that it delays the diseases of aging in primates too, researchers from the University of Wisconsin report in the Friday, July 10, 2009, issue of the journal Science.  (AP Photo/UW-Madison University, Jeff Miller)AP - Eat less, live longer? It seems to work for monkeys: A 20-year study found cutting calories by almost a third slowed their aging and fended off death. This is not about a quick diet to shed a few pounds. Scientists have long known they could increase the lifespan of mice and more primitive creatures — worms, flies — with deep, long-term cuts from normal consumption.




    4. Tests reveal some pet supplements skimp on meds (AP)

    In this June 25, 2009 photo, Nicole Albino poses for a photograph with her pug Chakka at her home in New York. Albino said Chakka was constantly chewing and licking his knees until her veterinarian recommended glucosamine and chondroitin. (AP Photo/Tina Fineberg)AP - Arthritis supplements bought by millions of pet owners for their dogs, cats and horses sometimes skimp on the ingredients the makers claim can help aching paws and aging joints, and some contain high amounts of lead, an independent laboratory found.




    5. Swine flu shots at school: Bracing for fall return (AP)

    A scientist prepares a DNA test for the A(H1N1) virus. A vaccine for swine flu could be ready for testing next month and ready for mass distribution by October, US health officials told a high-level meeting here Thursday.(AFP/File/Leon Neal)AP - U.S. swine flu vaccinations could begin in October with children among the first in line — at their local schools — the Obama administration said Thursday as the president and his Cabinet urged states to figure out now how they'll tackle the virus' all-but-certain resurgence.




    6. Ebola found in Philippine pigs for first time (AP)
    AP - A form of ebola virus has been detected in pigs for the first time, raising concerns it could mutate and threaten humans, scientists report.

    7. Anti-obesity product safe in mid-stage study (Reuters)
    Reuters - Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc said on Thursday a mid-stage study of its combination obesity product involving versions of hormones linked to appetite and metabolism yielded positive results.

    8. Use of vibrators common, surveys show (Reuters)
    Reuters - Two Indiana University surveys suggest that vibrator use during sexual encounters is common among American men and women and is linked to better sexual health.

    9. Questions to Pharmacists Rise After Michael Jackson's Death (HealthDay)
    HealthDay - THURSDAY, July 9 (HealthDay News) -- News reports about a possible link between pop star Michael Jackson's death and his alleged abuse of prescription drugs may have increased the public's concern about prescription medication overdose risks, suggests a survey of U.S. pharmacists.

    10. Weight affects how littlest kids see themselves (Reuters)
    Reuters - As early as kindergarten, kids who are overweight feel more lonely and anxious than their normal-weight peers, new research shows.

    11. Can Language Skills Ward Off Alzheimer's Disease? (Time.com)
    Time.com - A small study of aging nuns illuminates the curious condition of "asymptomatic Alzheimer's disease" -- when brains show physical lesions, but patients display no signs of cognitive decline

    12. On Memory, Older Americans Outsmart the English (HealthDay)
    HealthDay - FRIDAY, July 3 (HealthDay News) -- Older people in the United States scored better than their counterparts in England on a memory and awareness test, possibly because of differences in levels of depression and education and the fact that American adults receive more aggressive treatment for heart disease, a new study suggests.

    13. Migraines Linked to Reduced Breast Cancer Risk (HealthDay)
    HealthDay - THURSDAY, July 9 (HealthDay News) -- For women who suffer from migraines, here's a bit of good news: New research shows that your risk of breast cancer may be reduced by as much as 26 percent.

    14. Vaccine May Someday Thwart Ear Infections (HealthDay)
    HealthDay - THURSDAY, July 9 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. researchers have developed a pain-free vaccination that might thwart ear infections in children.

    15. End for HIV Travel Ban (The Advocate)
    The Advocate - The federal government has taken a bureaucratic step that will finally remove restrictions that barred HIV-positive travelers from visiting the United States.

    16. Study Pinpoints Risk Factors for Death in Young Stroke Victims (HealthDay)
    HealthDay - THURSDAY, July 9 (HealthDay News) -- Younger adults who suffer a stroke are more likely to die if they are heavy drinkers, have heart failure, cancer, type 1 diabetes or an infection before their stroke, Finnish researchers report.

    17. C-Section Stress Could Alter Baby's Immune Cells (HealthDay)
    HealthDay - THURSDAY, July 2 (HealthDay News) -- Babies delivered by cesarean section experience changes to the DNA of white blood cells, which might explain why they're at increased risk for immunological diseases such as diabetes and asthma later in life, Swedish researchers say.

    18. Amylin obesity treatment trial fails to impress (Reuters)
    Reuters - Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc said on Thursday a mid-stage study of its combination obesity treatment yielded positive results, but investors were unimpressed and the company's stock rose just 1 percent.