X-Nico

4 unusual facts about Chain store


Bumpin' My Music

The next scenes feature shots of C.O.D. Cash on Delivery; his associates carry boxes of his CDs into a local goods store.

Chain store

By the early 1920s, the U.S. boasted three national chains: A&P, Woolworth's, and United Cigar Stores.

Foodland Hawaii

"Foodland" (Full name Foodland Super Market, Ltd.) is the name of an American supermarket chain, headquartered in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Times Supermarkets

"Times Supermarkets" (Full name Times Supermarkets, Ltd.) is the name of an American supermarket chain, headquartered in Honolulu, Hawaii.


Arby's

Arby's was founded in Boardman, Ohio, in 1964 by Forrest and Leroy Raffel, owners of a restaurant equipment business who believed there was a market opportunity for a fast food franchise based on a food other than hamburgers.

Coq Roq

Coq Roq, also typeset as COQ ROQ, and pronounced "Cock Rock", was an advertising program created in late 2004 to promote international fast food restaurant chain Burger King's chicken product, BK Chicken Fries.

Dream Pets

The names Dakin and Dream Pets were purchased by retail chain Big Lots, as of July 2011 Big lots had not produced any further Dream pets.

Garden Ridge

Garden Ridge is a privately held home decor retail chain based in Plano, Texas.

GI Partners

With $6 billion of capital under management, GI Partners owns assets ranging from chains of pubs and specialist care homes for children in Britain to nursing homes and wineries in California.

PowerCity

Power City is an Irish electrical retailer of consumer and electronic goods with branches in Blanchardstown, Coolock, Tallaght, Finglas, Fonthill, Sallynoggin, Drogheda, Bray and Naas.

V. E. Howard

Two of his younger brothers, W. L. "Jack" Howard and Alton Hardy Howard, were the co-founders in 1946 of Howard Brothers Jewelry and in 1959 the chain store, Howard Brothers Discount Stores, based in Monroe, where Jack Howard was the mayor from 1956 to 1972 and 1976 to 1978.


see also

Caldor, California

:For the defunct chain store, see Caldor.

Shapiro, Bernstein and Co. v. H.L. Green Co.

The plaintiff in the underlying action was the proprietor of certain copyrights (Shapiro, Bernstein and Co.), and it sued two defendants: a record concessionaire (Jalen Amusement Company, Inc.), which allegedly infringed Shapiro's copyrights by selling bootleg copies, and the chain store in which the record concessionaire was based (H. L. Green Company) which allegedly engaged in contributory infringement of those copyrights by virtue of its business relationship with the record concessionaire.