-
Dry goods is a
historic term
describing the type of
product line a
store carries,
which differs by region. The term
comes from the
textile trade, and...
-
Dayton purchased a
company called Goodfellow Dry Goods. The
company was
renamed the Dayton's
Dry Goods Company in 1903 and
later the
Dayton Company in...
- Paul in La Crosse,
Wisconsin in 1873 to open a retail, wholesale, and
dry goods company. In 1875 the
partnership was dissolved, and S.E.
Olson opened...
- in 1825 as a
small dry goods store on Pine
Street in New York City. In 1857 the
store moved into a five-story
white marble dry goods palace known as the...
- The
Stewart Dry Goods Company—alternately
known as
Stewart Dry Goods, or Stewart's—was a
regional department store chain based in Louisville, Kentucky...
-
could be
considered perfectly durable goods because they
should theoretically never wear out.
Highly durable goods such as
refrigerators or cars usually...
- ****ociated
Dry Goods Corporation (ADG) was a
chain of
department stores that
merged with May
Department Stores in 1986. It was
founded in 1916 as an ****ociation...
-
Dry Goods USA
serving as a subsidiary. In 1989, they
rebranded once more to
simply Von Maur, with
Dry Goods USA
still a subsidiary. As of 2024,
Dry Goods...
- Inc.;
during this time,
Capwell kept its name
until 1979 City of
Paris Dry Goods Co. (San Francisco),
became City of
Paris by
Liberty House. Demolished...
-
importing British made
dry goods, and it is
within these partnerships that
Hicks transitioned from the
title ‘grocer’ to ‘
dry-
goods specialist’. It is also...