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Two Bond Stores were located at 1500 Main Street (Southwestern Life Insurance Building) and 1530 Main Street, now The Joule Hotel. Also in the 1960's - 1970's, there was a Bond Store in NorthPark Center at 8687 North Central Expressway .
The Metcalfe Bond Stores is a heritage-listed former bond store and warehouse and now shops and offices located at 68 – 84 George Street in the inner city Sydney suburb of The Rocks in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia. It was built from 1912 to 1916. It is also known as New Metcalfe Bond Stores.
Mason Transfer and Grain Co., bonded warehouse on the South Texas Border. Taken by Robert Runyon sometime between 1900 and 1920.. A bonded warehouse, or bond, is a building or other secured area in which imported but dutiable goods may be stored, manipulated, or undergo manufacturing operations without payment of duty. [1]
The store also accepted mail orders, though it was not a large business until the early twentieth century. [7] [8] Wanamaker first thought of how he would run a store on new principles when, as a youth, a merchant refused his request to exchange a purchase. A practicing Christian, he chose not to advertise on Sundays.
A Bonds Outlet store, 2022. George A. Bond & Co. Limited was established in 1915 by George Allan Bond, [1] an American who came to Australia in the early twentieth century. He started importing women's hosiery and gloves. In 1917 he began manufacturing hosiery in Redfern, Sydney.
Macy's got its start as America's first department store before the Civil ... The 164-year history of America's oldest department store, Macy's. ... Amid the junk bond and leveraged buyout boom ...
Grafton Bond Store, 1923. Grafton Wharf was established at what was then Cockle Bay in about 1835. In 1881 it was bought by John Frazer and Co and was greatly enlarged, so that by 1886 it had a frontage to the east side of Darling Harbour of 131 metres (430 ft), and three piers "capable of receiving and shipping cargo of any character and weight".
The store continued by using empty properties in Norwich. [2] The former Bonds store as a John Lewis today. The store was almost completely burnt down in the Baedeker Blitz [1] (or Baedeker Raids) on 27 and 28 April 1942. Then owner, Ernest Bond, was in business again within three days of the bombing, selling what he could salvage from his ...