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  2. Happy Family (American TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happy_Family_(American_TV...

    Happy Family is an American sitcom television series created by Moses Port and David Guarascio, that aired on NBC from September 9, 2003, until April 20, 2004.

  3. Jessica Rolph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessica_Rolph

    In 2005, with Shazi Visram, Rolph was a founding partner of Happy Family, the leading organic baby food brand, and she served as its chief operating officer. [5] [6] Happy Family was ranked the 68th-fastest-growing private company in America on the "Inc. 500" in 2011. [2] [7] The Kellogg Foundation made a $4.6 million investment in the company ...

  4. Shedd-Dunn House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shedd-Dunn_House

    The house was built for the Shedd family, who operated an early wholesale grocery. The family lived there until 1912; Eggleston Dunn of the Dunn-Taft Dry Goods Co. subsequently lived there until the early 1940s. The house then became used for commercial purposes, including office space for the architects Tibbals, Crumley and Musson. [2]

  5. Happy Family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happy_Family

    Happy Family or The Merry Frinks, an American comedy directed by Alfred E. Green; A Happy Family, a 1935 Krazy Kat animated short; The Happy Family, a British comedy directed by Maclean Rogers; The Happy Family, a British comedy directed by Muriel Box; Happy Family, a Hong Kong film directed by Herman Yau

  6. Simon Lazarus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Lazarus

    WOSU-TV Documentary: Many Happy Returns to Lazarus Documentary; Business First Article: Staffers Remember When Work Seemed Like a Family; Business First Article: So Long, Lazarus; Columbus Dispatch Article: Name Change Hurt Macy's: Decision to drop ‘Lazarus’ not a hit here [permanent dead link ‍] Simon Lazarus at Find a Grave

  7. Lazarus House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazarus_House

    The house was built in 1886 for Frederick Lazarus Sr., president of the F&R Lazarus & Company and son of company founder Simon Lazarus. [3] The Lazarus family moved in about 1906 to a new and larger house at Bryden Road and S. Ohio Avenue; that house was demolished in 1924.

  8. Lazarus (department store) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazarus_(department_store)

    Family patriarch Simon Lazarus (1808–1877) opened a one-room men's clothing store in downtown Columbus in 1851. By 1870, with improvements to the industry in the mass manufacture of men's uniforms for the Civil War, the family business expanded to include ready-made men's civilian clothing, and eventually, a complete line of merchandise.

  9. Robert F. Wolfe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_F._Wolfe

    According to biographies supplied by the Columbus Foundation and the Columbus Dispatch, newspaper founder Robert F. Wolfe arrived in Columbus, Ohio in 1888 and found work as a shoemaker, eventually beginning the Wolfe Brothers Shoe Company.