Montgomery Ward, now an online U.S. retailer, plans to revive its iconic catalog in a brand-rebuilding gambit, the president of its new parent company said. The retailer, which once operated some 400 ...
The legend of Montgomery Ward lives on: Although the venerable mailer had closed its big book general merchandise catalog in 1985, filed for bankruptcy in 1997, and went out of business in 2000, a ...
The "Stark, actually" featurettes are about people, places and things in Stark County. Prior examples have included everything from a thoroughbred horse farm to the annual spawning run of white bass, ...
The venerable Montgomery Ward catalog , with origins dating back to 1872, will soon be back in the mail. It’s new owner — Monroe, WI-based multititle mailer Swiss Colony — plans to drop a new ...
Montgomery Ward celebrates this Christmas with its thickest book since the venerable brand relaunched in fall 2004. The 148-page holiday catalog dropped in early October and again in early November.
NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwired - Feb 4, 2014) - Greene Concepts, Inc. (OTC Pink: LKEN) CEO Lenny Greene announces today that the companies "Free Ink 4 Life" No mess inkjet refill kit is featured in the ...
CHICAGO — There is life after death — at least in retail. Five years after Montgomery Ward went out of business, its brand name has been revived on the Internet and there’s even a 21st-century version ...
Aaron Montgomery Ward saw catalogs as an expression of American values. Aaron Montgomery Ward saw catalogs as an expression of American values. His catalogs gave more people, especially Black and ...
If you're clicking through the internet today hoping to do a little shopping, you likely have Aaron Montgomery Ward to thank. Ward's catalog was a single sheet offering 163 items. By 1884, the catalog ...
Chicago — Montgomery Ward‘s 2007 Holiday Catalog began arriving in mailboxes in October, the second to be produced since Chicago-based Direct Marketing Services, Inc. (DMSI) acquired the brand in 2004 ...
CHICAGO — Montgomery Ward & Co., which ran the nation’s first mail-order business, said yesterday that it plans a cautious re-entry into the catalog market it abandoned as unprofitable six years ago.
I was 9 years old in 1958. It was different then: 9-year-old girls still had little girl thoughts, little girl interests, and little girl wishes. It was a simpler time, as they say. But I digress; ...