985 Comments Posted by Twug

wrote:
Wal Mart is taking over the world. That's scarier than Dixmont ever was. Thank-you, Motts. You have such a wonderful, giving nature.
wrote:
I agree, Java. I probably wouldn't be able to run as fast as you, as I'd wind up falling down. And if I'd fall down and not be able to get up, I'd be there 'til dark. Oh, God, I'm just scaring myself.
wrote:
It is so far gone, I have to really use my imagination to see this as a whole building with people instead of the sad shell of what it is now. A mere 21 years...I guess Pennsylvania's winters have not been kind.
wrote:
Makes you wonder if this is what Sam Walton had in mind.
wrote:
Hard to believe there's a major roadway right down a steep hill close by.
wrote:
It's either a tree, or shrubbery, would be my guess.
wrote:
Lynne, dear, had I known there was a chair there that you would have wanted, I could have gotten it in August when I was up there. But, then again, being the extreme coward that I am, by the time I would have worked up the nerve to get it, Wal Mart would already have been built!
wrote:
I agree, Lynne. It's eerie, but at the same time, beautiful.
wrote:
Amazing.
wrote:
Motts, once again, you have taken my breath away. Thank-you a thousand times over.
wrote:
Soap droppings!!! Tony, yer killin' me!
wrote:
I have goosebumps looking at these. Seriously.
: (
wrote:
Motts, is this where the fire was?
wrote:
Great contrast! I don't think I'll ever be able to shop at this Wal Mart when I visit home. It's too depressing to think about. I don't guess the corporate Wal Mart "big shots" will even put up a plaque or memorial to this sad, soon-to-be gone place.
wrote:
Pretty amazing that a mattress even remains.