A triumphant return for a small business in Modesto, as the Asian Market celebrated its grand opening Friday morning — nearly two years after a fire reduced the original storefront to ashes.
To celebrate, dragon dancers graced through aisles as drummers played, "They come in, bless the store, and chase out the bad spirits," Trong Vuong, the owner of Asian Market said.
"I'm so grateful. I'm just thrilled that all the customers came back to us and they followed us," he said.
While you're here, how about this:
Main Squeeze Juice opens storefront with production facility | Fast Casual
Main Squeeze Juice Co., a New Orleans-based juice and smoothie bar whose ownership group includes New Orleans Saints punter Thomas Morstead, has opened a storefront with a production facility in Cypress, Texas. The dual-purpose venture is the first of its kind for Main Squeeze and is owned by the multi-unit franchisee duo of Marc Miller and Jeff and Tabitha Drost.
"We were excited to work with the Main Squeeze team on this new concept and to see it come together and be completed is an incredible feeling," Drost said in a company press release. "As business partners, we are always looking at how we can streamline processes, and this production facility will help us better supply our locations and provide the freshest and highest-quality products possible to the local communities."
Hit-and-run crash sends truck into Fort Myers storefront
A hit-and-run in Fort Myers resulted in a delivery truck crashing into the front of a store Thursday morning.
The crash occurred near the intersection of Fowler and Katherine streets just after 4 a.m. According to the Fort Myers Police Department, a car ran a stop sign and collided with the rear of a bread delivery truck, damaging the truck’s axle and sending it swerving into the storefront of All American Office Furniture at 2730 Fowler Street.
Valentino faces $207M lawsuit for breaking lease on Manhattan storefront | TheHill
Luxury design house Valentino SpA is facing a $207.1 million lawsuit after the landlord of its former American flagship store on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue accused the Italian brand of breaking its lease illegally and leaving the building damaged, multiple outlets report.
Valentino closed up shop at the four-story Fifth Avenue location in December amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The owner of the location at 693 Fifth Ave. claims the fashion house is liable for rent until July 2029 when the lease is set to expire, according to Reuters .
This may worth something:
Massena mall turns vacant storefront into rink for roller skating, rollerblading | Business |
Roller skaters make their way around the anchor store turned roller rink at the St. Lawrence Centre mall in Massena on Friday. Christopher Lenney/Watertown Daily Times
MASSENA — St. Lawrence Centre mall officials are putting an empty storefront to good use, pr…
Valentino Sued Over Claims of Ditching Fifth Avenue Lease, Damaging Storefront – Commercial
The owner of a Fifth Avenue building sued Italian luxury retailer Valentino for $207 million, claiming the company ditched the space with nearly eight years left on the lease and caused millions of dollars in damages to the storefront, court records show.
French holding company Financière Marc de Lacharrière , under the entity 693 Fifth Owner LLC , filed the suit Friday in Manhattan Supreme Court accusing Valentino of leaving the four-story boutique at the end of December with $12 million in damages to the space's high-end finishes.
Militant preppers, ‘boogaloo’ members and QAnon adherents can push products on Amazon
But the top video on his YouTube channel is different: An advertisement for his affiliate marketing page on Amazon.com.
On this low-profile corner of Amazon’s expansive online retailscape, militant preppers, pro-gun provocateurs and election-fraud conspiracy theorists are turning a buck on the back of their beliefs.
There is no publicly accessible database of Amazon affiliate marketers, and a company spokesperson declined to release details on the scope of its affiliate marketing programs, making it difficult to know how many far-right groups are making money on Amazon.
Spain: Peaceful protests for jailed rapper see more clashes | Wire | chronicle-tribune.com
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — A fifth night of peaceful protests to denounce the imprisonment of a Spanish rap artist once more devolved into clashes between police and the members of fringe groups who set up street barricades and smashed storefront windows Saturday night in downtown Barcelona.
No comments:
Post a Comment