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Walter E. Smithe is a furniture company based in Itasca, Illinois. The company makes, sells, and repairs furniture, specializing in custom upholstery, and operates ten showrooms throughout the Chicago metropolitan area. It was founded by Walter Edward Smithe and Bill Shanahan in 1945.
Venture closed and vacated the space in January 1989. Other large retailers who vacated the mall, primarily as a result of the economic failure and reduction of the chains themselves, include Service Merchandise, Spiegel Outlet, John M. Smyth's Homemakers and Montgomery Ward. Marshalls originally occupied the interior space, hosting TJ Maxx ...
The Martinsville Novelty Corporation Factory is a historic factory complex located at Martinsville, Virginia.The main factory was built in 1929, and is a long, three-story, brick building that was constructed for the purpose of manufacturing small pieces of furniture called "novelty" pieces in the furniture trade.
Analyst Budd Bugatch of Raymond James & Associates compared Furniture Brands board members to the pigs in George Orwell's Animal Farm. [28] On September 9, 2013, Furniture Brands filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company planned to sell all businesses other than Lane Furniture to a group managed by Oaktree Capital Management LP. [29]
John Smyth (priest) (died 1704), Anglican archdeacon in Ireland; John Smyth (sculptor) (c. 1773–1840), Irish sculptor; John Smyth (snooker referee) (1928–2007) John Smyth (1748–1811), British member of parliament for Pontefract; John George Smyth (1815–1869), Conservative member of parliament for the City of York; John Henry Greville ...
John M. C. Smith (1853–1923), American politician; John Manners Smith (1864–1920), Chief Commissioner of Ajmer-Merwara; Frederick Smith (Conservative MP) (John Mark Frederick Smith, 1790–1874), British Army general and politician; John M. Smith (rapist), (1925–1945), war criminal killed in the 1945 Katsuyama killing incident; John ...
One of John Smyth's victims has described how the “sadistic beatings” he was subjected to as a teenager drove him to attempt to take his own life. Andy Morse told Sky News he met the barrister ...
The Wisconsin Chair Company [1] was a manufacturer of furniture and crafted wood products from the late 19th to the mid-20th century. It ran a large factory that for over half a century was the economic backbone of Port Washington, Wisconsin. The factory was destroyed twice: the first time by a huge, devastating fire in 1899 and the second time ...