Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The mall opened as Gateway Shopping Center in 1960, developed by Bankers Life Insurance Company of Nebraska (now Ameritas Life Insurance Company) at 60th and O streets on land adjacent to its headquarters. It was an open-air mall anchored by Montgomery Ward and local department store Miller & Paine. An expansion was completed in 1971.
Miller & Paine was a department store in Lincoln, Nebraska.Founded in 1880, Miller & Paine was acquired by Dillard's in 1988. Prior to the acquisition by Dillard's, Miller & Paine had three stores: two in Lincoln, the downtown flagship store and Gateway Mall with one in the Conestoga Mall in Grand Island, Nebraska.
Growth continued for the Super Saver concept, and in 1999 B&R Stores purchased the Food-4-Less store in Columbus, Nebraska and the Festival of Foods store in Grand Island, Nebraska. A new Super Saver store at 27th & Pine Lake Road in Lincoln was completed in October 1999. An Omaha, Nebraska-area location was added in June 2000 with the opening ...
While some restaurant, grocery store and retail chains will be open on Wednesday, Dec. 25 this year, banks and post offices will be closed. Shipping services such as UPS and FedEx will also not be ...
Trending Walmart Black Friday Deals. HP 15.6 inch Windows Laptop, $199 (was $379) Apple AirPods 2nd Gen, $89 (was $129). Shark Navigator Lift-Away XL Upright Vacuum, $97 (was $199). KitchenAid ...
Two years later the company acquired an existing store in southeast Lincoln at 33rd Street and Nebraska Parkway. The company expanded into Hastings, Nebraska, by acquiring a store in 1984. In 1995, three Food-4-Less stores in Lincoln were acquired, becoming the company's fifth, sixth, and seventh Russ's Market stores. In 2001, B&R Stores, Inc ...
A tomahawk once owned by Chief Standing Bear, a pioneering Native American civil rights leader, is returning to his Nebraska tribe after decades in a museum at Harvard. The university’s Peabody ...
Brandeis acquired Gold and Company, a Lincoln-based department store, in 1964. [5] The Gold's flagship store, in downtown Lincoln, was the only store in the company but took up a large portion of the Lincoln market. Gold's kept their name but operated as a division of J.L. Brandeis until it was phased out of the chain and closed in 1981. [6]