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In the Republic of Ireland, the retail sector provides one of the largest sources of employment in the economy, representing over 12% of the workforce. [1] As of 2017, approximately 40,000 wholesale and retail businesses employed almost 280,000 people in Ireland, [2] [1] with the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment reporting that 90% of these businesses were Irish-owned.
By 2000, B&Q had 51 large warehouse shops; this had doubled by 2003. By May 2014, B&Q in the United Kingdom had 359 shops, and 20,887 employees; [36] and eight shops in Ireland. [37] In March 2015, Kingfisher said it would close 60 B&Q shops in the United Kingdom and Ireland over the next two years, and a few loss-making shops elsewhere in Europe.
A follow-up search by British security forces nearby found two drogue bombs in a garden. [120] a bomb exploded on the Belfast-Dublin railway line between Newry and Poyntzpass, County Down. [116] [118] A young boy in a house a quarter of a mile away narrowly escaped injury when a large piece of railway line crashed through the roof. [120]
Yum yum sauce (also known as Japanese white sauce, Japanese steakhouse sauce) – type of mayo-based sauce of U.S. origin usually found in Japanese-American steakhouses in North America but not in Japan; at the moment, current sources (i.e., NPR, and Garden & Gun magazine) seems to indicate that the apparent inventor of yum yum sauce is a long ...
Tesco Ireland was one of seven shops fined for failing to display prices properly by the National Consumer Agency in July 2008. [15] Tesco Ireland decided in 2019 not to make home deliveries in Tallaght due to a anti-social behaviour incidents in the area. [16] [17] [18] Tesco apologised for selling anti-Jewish literature to customers in Ireland.
A turntable for the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Turnplates at the Park Lane goods station of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in 1831. Early wagonways were industrial railways for transporting goods—initially bulky and heavy items, particularly mined stone, ores and coal—from one point to another, most often to a dockside to be loaded onto ships. [4]