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The 2nd Street Market is a public market in Dayton, Ohio. The market is located at the corner of Webster Street and East 2nd Street. It is Dayton's largest and oldest operating public market. In 2012, Country Living Magazine mentioned the market in its piece called “50 Things To Do This Summer in 50 States”. [1]
In 1991, Dorothy Lane Market opened a second location in Centerville, Ohio. A third location opened in Springboro, Ohio in 2002. [6] In 2005, the company's produce departments were certified organic by the Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association. [7] In October 2021, DLM announced plans for a 4th location in Mason, Ohio. [8]
Nielsen Media Research ranked the 11-county Dayton television market #65 in the United States. [1] Among the stations it includes are: 2 WDTN Dayton ; 7 WHIO-TV Dayton ; 16 WPTD Dayton ; 22 WKEF, Dayton (ABC/Fox) 26 WBDT Springfield ; 43 WKOI-TV Richmond, IN (Ion Television)* 45 WRGT-TV Dayton (MyNetworkTV)
On February 25, 2020, it was announced that locally-based regional chain Morris Home Furniture would be opening instead in the upper level of the former Sears store, with The RoomPlace confirming two days later that it had shelved its plans to enter the Dayton market. The Morris showroom was tentatively scheduled to open in spring 2020. [37] [38]
Super One Foods is an American supermarket chain, with 32 locations in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. [1] The chain is owned and operated by Miner's, Inc., a privately held company. A small number of the stores in the chain are branded as U-Save Foods, and a Duluth store is named Woodland Marketplace.
The Dayton–Springfield–Kettering Combined Statistical Area is a CSA in the U.S. state of Ohio, as defined by the United States Census Bureau.It consists of the Dayton Metropolitan Statistical Area (the counties of Montgomery, Greene and Miami); the Springfield Metropolitan Statistical Area (Clark County); the Urbana Micropolitan Statistical Area (Champaign County); the Greenville ...
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A Dayton Daily News headline dated August 12, 1945, announcing the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. On August 15, 1898, James M. Cox purchased the Dayton Evening News. One week later, on August 22, 1898, he renamed it the Dayton Daily News. In 2023, the Dayton Daily News celebrated 125 years in business.