merchants
41Merchants Club — The Merchants Club was a predecessor club to The Commercial Club of Chicago. It was organized in Chicago in 1896. It merged with the Commercial Club in 1907.[1] Its leaders included Charles G. Dawes, Frederic A. Delano, and Charles H. Wacker. It… …
42Merchants House Museum — 40° 43′ 39″ N 73° 59′ 33″ W / 40.7276, 73.99238611 …
43Merchants Distributors, Inc. — Alex Lee, Inc. is a wholesale distributor of food and non food items to grocery stores, headquartered in Hickory, North Carolina, United States. Its Merchants Distributors, Inc. division supplies more than 600 stores located in nine states,… …
44Merchants, Statutes of — Statuta de mercatoribus, 1283 and 1285. The first statute made provision for the collection of monies owed by merchants. In 1283 the mayors of London, York, Bristol, Lincoln, Winchester and Shrewsbury were empowered with the *sheriff to seize… …
45merchants — mer·chant || mÉœrtʃənt / mÉœË n. seller, marketer; trader, retailer adj. mercantile, commercial, of or pertaining to trade or commerce, industrial …
46merchants — Po e kū ai, po e kālepa …
47Merchants Adventurers — Incorporated in 1407, this was a trading company, which by the mid 16c controlled three quarters of English foreign trade and had superseded the *Hanse. Its first continental centre was at Bruges; it moved to Antwerp in 1446, and Calais in 1493,… …
48Merchants' Lane — In Thames Street (W. Stow, 1722). Not named in the maps …
49Merchants of Death — epithetic nickname applied to alcohol and tobacco vendors, armament makers, drug pushers, munitions makers, narcotics traffickers, and others whose business may result in the death of their customers …
50Merchants’ Haven — Copenhagen, Denmark …