Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Montreal Fireworks Festival (French: L'International des Feux Loto-Québec), is the largest fireworks competition in the world. It has been held yearly in La Ronde over the Dolphin Lake since 1985 and is named after its main sponsor, Loto-Québec .
Canadian Tire: Consumer goods Tires Toronto: 1922 Retail P A Canadian Tire Bank: Financials Consumer financing Oakville: 2003 Credit card company, part of Canadian Tire: P A Canadian Western Bank: Financials Banks Edmonton: 1988 Banking P A Canadian Wheat Board: Consumer goods Farming & fishing Winnipeg: 1935 Agri-business, defunct 2015 P D ...
This list displays all Canadian companies in the Fortune Global 500, which ranks the world's largest companies by annual revenue. The figures below are given in millions of US dollars and are for the fiscal year 2022. [2] Also listed are the headquarters location, net profit, number of employees worldwide and industry sector of each company.
Jul. 2—MANKATO — As fireworks illuminate the sky in cities across the U.S. every Fourth of July, it's easy to get lost in the explosions of light, color and sound. However, it takes hard work ...
The Walt Disney Company, the world's largest consumer of fireworks, [15] was the competitor for the United States, while Australia was represented by Howard & Sons, whose displays have included the opening and closing ceremonies for 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney [16] and opening and closing ceremonies for the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi ...
The fireworks are synchronized to music which is also broadcast over a local radio station. Over 3 million spectators gather each year to see the fireworks. The main viewing locations are: the Jacques-Cartier Bridge (closed to traffic the evening of each event), La Ronde (amusement park), and on either side of the St. Lawrence River ...
Consumers Distributing purchased the 42-store Cardinal Distributors catalogue chain from Steinberg Inc. and the 70-store American chain Consumers from May Department Stores, bringing its total store count to approximately 400 in 1981. [3] During the 1980s, Consumers Distributing built a chain of toy stores called Toy City (Toyville in Quebec ...
Payless ShoeSource Canada — Shoe store; Kmart Canada — Canadian division of US-based parent; Canadian stores sold to Zellers; Knob Hill Farms — grocery store chain in Southern Ontario; Krazy Krazy; Les Ailes de la Mode — department store; Lowe's Canada — Hardware store, now RONA+; Lastman's Bad Boy — Furniture Store