TIME
In the noisy shadow of the Ninth Avenue L, at 47th street, Manhattan, there is a tiny grocery store bristling with progress. First glance reveals no striking difference from myriad other stores; glance two does. A placard reads: “Nothing in this store over 5 & 10 cents.” There are other wall slogans: “Ordinarily we dislike seeing folks get in a Pickle but let us help you. There is no gamble about our Diced carrots.” A lone cashier, for a dime, will dispense eggs by threes, bacon in strips of six, butter in quarters of a pound, anchovy paste, or vegetal buds.
The store is incorporated “The G. V. Quinlan 5 & 10 Cent Stores.” As yet there is only one, but Groceryman Quinlan says he will soon have five or ten.
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