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A lemonade stand is a business that is commonly owned and operated by a child or children, to sell lemonade. The concept has become iconic of youthful summertime American culture [ 1 ] to the degree that parodies and variations on the concept exist across media.
Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation (previously known as Alex's Lemonade Stand and currently abbreviated as ALSF) is an American pediatric cancer charity founded by Alexandra "Alex" Scott (January 18, 1996 – August 1, 2004), who lived in Connecticut before moving to Pennsylvania.
Lemonade stand may refer to: Lemonade stand, a business that is commonly owned and operated by a child or children, to sell lemonade; Lemonade Stand, a computer game used to teach basic business, math, and computer skills; Lemonade Stand, a 2011 album by Illinois (band)
Word spread quickly, and when their new lemonade stand opened for business, the scene was extraordinary. More than 650 people came from near and far. Friends, neighbors, local firefighters, police ...
The grand prize is a wooden lemonade stand. Reaghan Micklus won the raffle at the bank center in Gardner this year and she said she plans to continue to sell lemonade and sweet treats from her ...
Jim and Cheryl encourage the girls to make a lemonade stand and raise money for their scooters. What was supposed to be a lesson about the value of the dollar turns into a racy competition among neighbors. Dana and Andy pitch in, while Cheryl tries to stay out of it – until she gets into a catfight with the neighbor's wife.
"First annual lemonade stand turned a $148 profit to be donated to @cincychildrens #thankyouforyourbusiness *shout out to Zerbes for hand squeezing 8,473,727 lemons," the post read.
Del's was founded by Angelo DeLucia, who originally received the recipe for lemonade from his father, Franco DeLucia, who brought the recipe to the United States from Italy. [2] Angelo then developed a machine to dispense their product. The first Del's stand was a small, pushable cart in Cranston, Rhode Island, in 1948. [2]