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Peter owns a grocery store.
The first customer enters.
PETER:
Good morning
Can I help you?
DANBO:
Bleep....1 + Bleep.....1
PETER:
Oh...you mean 2 screws
I have it for you
And... you're lucky!
It's 1 plus 1 free this week!!!
Shall I pack it for you?
DANBO:
Bleep
PETER:
That will be 1 cent
DANBO: (gives 1 cent)
Bleep
PETER:
Thank you!
Have fun with it!
DANBO:
Bleeeep!!
PETER:
Bye
The Lewis Brothers (Grocery) Store was built in 1933. They expanded their product line and began selling Gulf gasoline in 1941 until the late 1980s. Today the building houses a successful antique store which is open Thurs. - Sunday. The owner of the business lives in Pipe Creek, and being quite knowledgeable of the local history, decided to keep the Lewis Bros. Store name. Located on State Highway 16S. Pipe Creek, Texas.
52 weeks in 2015 ... the diptych became a triptych ... I cannot choose ...
... this is the cat with no tail that sits every day on a litterbin at our grocerystore begging for food although he has a home of his own ... and as you can see he is very succesful :) ...
I put the 35mm film behind the 120 blackout paper in the darkroom, then rolled it up and put it in the Hasselblad film box in the 120 way.
Hasselblad 503cw
Carl Zeiss 80mm F2.8
Film: Ilford HP5+ 400
shot at 1/15 F2.8
HC110 1+49 19C 8:30min
Fix: 7mins
© All Rights Reserved
L'ambiance des épiceries d'antan persiste toujours à Paris, rappelleront certains.
Pourtant, même sur Alençon, on peut trouver quelques échos de ces épiceries à l'ancienne... Et aujourd'hui, celle-ci demeure terriblement photogénique !
A view of the 100 block of S. Commerce St. on the east side of Lockhart's Courthouse Square. This photograph looks to the south from San Antonio St. In a previous post, we looked at the east side of the square looking north from E. Market St. The buildings in this view are contributing properties in the Caldwell County Courthouse Square Historic District listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.
On the corner at 100 S. Commerce is the J. C. Fulps Building. Built originally as a dry goods business for J. C. Fulps, the one-story brick and stone building retains its original detail. The three-bay building has three round arched openings with a central double door and flanking display windows. The transoms have been enclosed. Above the arches brick pilasters divide
the upper facade into three recessed panels and a round arched parapet crowns the central bay.
Next to the Fulps Building at 102 S. Commerce St. is the Blackwell Building. This building was constructed in 1898 for a grocery and hardware store owned by J. T. Blackwell. It is a one-story brick and stone store with a plastered facade that is painted white. Although the original facade composition of alternating display windows and double doors is still evident, applied tile has been added to the window bases and the transoms have been painted.
Third from the corner at 104 S. Commerce St. is the William Ray Building. This building was constructed in 1898 for for William Ray, who operated a dry goods and millinery store. It is a two-story buff brick building with a red brick facade. Although the first floor has been altered, the second floor retains the original embellishments. Justicated stone forms a stringcourse above both the first and second floors. The four segmental arched windows are joined horizontally by buff brick stringcourses. Crowning the building is additional brick ornamentation emphasized by the use of the buff brick trim. The parapet displays the original building's name and date, "Ray, 1898."
As we enter the middle of the block, the fourth building from the corner at 108 S. Commerce St. is the B. F. Dodd Building. This is actually two buildings with the south half built in 1910 and leased to a Mr. J. P. Laney for a grocery store, and the north half built in 1912, This building was remodeled in 1967 and has a mid-century facade.
Descriptions of the four buildings on the south end of this block are described in a previous post.
Lockhart, a community of 14,811 at the 2020 census, is the seat of Caldwell County and is located just 30 miles south of the state capital in downtown Austin. Lockhart's square and downtown is filled with late 19th and early 20th century buildings, nearly all contributing properties to the historic district. The city's turn-of-the-century appearance has attracted the attention of film makers. Over 50 films for the theater and TV have been shot in whole or in part in Lockhart, including the 1996 Christopher Guest comedy film Waiting for Guffman and the 1993 drama What's Eating Gilbert Grape.
Dans les épiceries d'Alençon, le commerce de proximité bat son plein vers la fin de journée.
L'une d'elles ouvre un peu plus tardivement et commence son installation sous mes yeux avec un peu de calligraphie sur ardoise, histoire de ne pas perdre la main...
I remember that I was chowing down on a hamburger at Harvey's looking across to No Frills. Camera beside me on the front seat. Then it appears.
Happy Truck tHuRsDay
September 27, 2016 . . 10:58 am
Meet Pat Pippin. When I asked Pat if I could take her photograph, her answer was, " What are you going to do with the photo? Are you going to sell it?" . . Pat and her husband Tony are the owners of the Lyme Country Store, where they open up the store together at
6 a.m, seven days a week. The Pippins have been in business since 1966 . . Here we see Pat working behind the deli counter preparing some fresh, homemade breakfast treats. They also offer groceries, local products, fresh cut meats. locally grown organic vegetables, farm raised eggs, milk and cheese, deli salads, fresh fish, propane, homemade baked goods, gas, beer/wine, fresh cut flowers,
30 flavors of ice cream, catering and free delivery, all in a beautiful New Hampshire country setting.
Lyme, New Hampshire Population: 1,753
New Hampshire Motto: "Live Free or Die"
. . . . www.lymecountrystore.com/
Típica frutería en La Adrada (Ávila). Frutas y verduras de primera calidad. Agrado, simpatía y amabilidad.
one of the most popular places in Kazimierz, shops are located on Szeroka Street, in the close vicinity of the Remuh Synagogue
We needed just a few things for dinner so we stopped off at a village store on the way home. They had a very large pumpkin on display. This is not the big thing that Robertson is famous for.
This beautiful old store has been empty for a long time. I posted a close-up of just the front several months ago, but the entire building is worth seeing. It was the hub of a small crossroads called Alfonso, Virginia. This was a grocery store and Post Office. There are only a few houses here and a church. Other than some roof and porch problems, it is in fairly good shape.
Happy Window Wednesday!