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Some kind of wine bar and dim sum in a former pub building. Since become Mongolian Grill Hotpot Restaurant and Bar, and then closed. Reopened as The Old Town Tavern in 2019. (It was in the Good Beer Guide as Mistress P's.)
Address: 29 North Street.
Former Name(s): Mistress P's; The North Pole.
Owner: Enterprise Inns (former); Whitbread (former).
Links:
Pubs History (history)
Trader Joe's, Cherry Creek, Colorado
Editorial Use Only: Trader Joe's is a trademark of The Trader Joe's Company
Traders with baskets of vegetables at the side of a street in the ancient city of Dali, Yunnan, February 1988.
Interesting scene with some old cars. I wasn't able to approach this yard any closer.
On the right is visible:
60s 4-dr Opel Rekord-B and a
late 70s Mercedes-Benz W116 S-series.
Far left you can see a glimpse of a 60s Ford 12M P6.
Igel (Trier suburban) along road 49, Eifel, Aug. 9, 2013.
Ā© 2013 Sander Toonen Amsterdam | All Rights Reserved
Beach trader, Marina Palmense, on the Adriatic cost of Italy. The itinerant beach traders who come along at the rate of one every few seconds during certain times of the day are not all African, many of them, like this man, are Asian, though I don't know from which country or countries.
Writeup on Exploited African Beach Traders.
BASS TRADER
...later MERCEDES Del MAR
Australian
IDNo:7356252
Year:1976
Name:BASS TRADER
Keel:
Type:Cargo ship (roro)
Launch Date:8.11.75
Flag:AUS
Date of completion:20.7.76
Tons:6374
Link:2462
DWT:7483
Yard No:94
Length overall:142.0
Ship Design:
LPP:127.0
Country of build:AUS
Beam:23.4
Builder:NSW Govt DY
Material of build:
Location of yard:Dyke End
Number of
screws/Mchy/
Speed(kn):2D-14.5
Naval or paramilitary marking :
A:12
End:
Subsequent History:
[1997 cv to passenger/roro/ferry, 16537gt] - 97 IONIAN BRIDGE - 99 BLUE BRIDGE - 04 MERCEDES DEL MAR - 10 BRIDGE
Disposal Data:
Details: Mirimar Shipping Index
Photo Credits: Many thanks to the Mattmar collection, great images ty
Trader Joe's #660 (13,028 square feet)
503 Hilltop Plaza, Hilltop Plaza, Virginia Beach, VA
This location opened in 2009; it was originally part of a Zayre, which opened in 1972. It became an Ames in fall 1989, which closed in March 1992, then became The North Carolina Furniture Company in the mid 1990s, which closed in 2008.
I bought this at Trader Jack's Flea Market for $1. It is a full 16 Fluid Ounce (1 Pint) bottle of Pepsi Light.
Pepsi Light was a Cola by Pepsi flavored with lemon much like the current Pepsi Twist. It was produced in the 1970's and 1980's.
The product contains Saccharin, a non-nutritive artificial sweetener which a warning on the cap says that saccharin has been determined to cause cancer in laboratory animals.
This particular bottle was bottled in May of 1976 by the Pepsi-Cola Metropolitan Bottling Company, Inc. of McKees Rocks, PA.
The only thing I don't like about this bottle is that it has a microhole in the cap, that I found out about when I was taking this photo, but as long as I keep the bottle upright, it shouldn't present a problem.
2015 Vintage Ale comes with a champagne cork closure - which reveals the source to be Unibroue. It tastes sweet and spicy - it would be nice at Christmas, mulled.
1959 Thames Trader dropside, PPM 927. Location & date unknown, can anyone help? Scanned from an original slide now in my collection.
This Trader had been in Gun Hill for about 30 years, the only bits removed from it were the back lights and a badge, thats until i had my pick from it! It gave up very valuble and hard to find spares. The cab was so rotten i opened the door and walked in to have my pcture taken!
Taken on Thursday November 15, 2012, this is a view of market traders packing up after a day's work in Greenwich Market, the covered market in the centre of Greenwich, with its independent shops and market traders -- artists, craftspeople, and food vendors every Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday, and antiques, vintage items and collectables every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. The market is a huge attraction for visitors to Greenwich, even though it is permanently endangered, and the large outdoor market nearby was closed to make way for faceless new university buildings.
The market is owned by Greenwich Hospital, which describes itself as "a Crown charity, established in 1694, which provides charitable support to serving and retired men and women of the Royal Navy and Royal Marines and to their dependants. It devotes its resources to paying pensions; providing grants to naval charities, running three sheltered housing schemes; and awarding means tested bursaries at the Royal Hospital School. The Hospital does no fund-raising and its outputs are met entirely from its investments including the Greenwich Estate."
The website also explains, "Greenwich Hospital owns a large proportion of Greenwich Town Centre, including 'Greenwich Market' and further retail, residential, public houses, leisure properties and commercial properties in an area bounded by Romney Road, Nelson Road, Greenwich Church Street, the river and Eastney Street."
Greenwich Hospital proposes to "regenerate the area around and including Greenwich Market with a 100,000 sq ft mixed use scheme including a 100 bed hotel, 17,000 sq ft of retail space and 155 trading stalls on the 1.64 acre site bounded by College Approach, Greenwich Church Street, Nelson Road and King William Walk." The proposals were turned down by Greenwich Council in August 2009, but Greenwich Hospital appealed, and in January 2011 the "regeneration" plans were approved by Eric Pickles, the minister for communities and local government.
For the market, see: www.shopgreenwich.co.uk/greenwich-market
For the planning proposals, which look superficially appealing, until you realise that they would allow for a corporate-led retail invasion which would destroy the unique appeal of Greenwich as somewhere that doesn't look like every other high street in the country, and would also invariably lead to independent market traders being priced out, see: www.greenwichmarketconsultation.org.uk/
For more on Andy Worthington, see: www.andyworthington.co.uk/