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Feeds a memory bank
Answer for the clue "Feeds a memory bank ", 6 letters:
stores
Alternative clues for the word stores
Usage examples of stores.
Walton family almost instinctively put a pretty tight lid on personal publicity for any of us, although we kept living out in the open and going around visiting folks in the stores all the time.
I think my coming by to visit the stores somehow means more to them now.
He had been a barber in Odessa, Missouri, before he and his brothers started a variety store chain which had grown to around sixty stores by that time.
New York named Blake, who traveled around the country auditing stores and evaluating personnel and whatnot, and he would come to see us pretty regularly.
The intersection where I worked in Des Moines had three stores, so at lunch I would always go wander around the Sears and the Yonkers stores to see what they were up to.
It was the smallest of the towns we considered, and it already had three variety stores, when one would have been enough.
Around this time, I read an article about these two Ben Franklin stores up in Minnesota that had gone to self-servicea brand-new concept at the time.
So here we were challenging two popular stores with a little old 18-foot independent variety store.
We made them up in his attic, and sold a ton of them at his stores and mine.
We opened variety stores, many of them Ben Franklin franchises, in Little Rock, Springdale, and Siloam Springs, Arkansas, and we had a couple more in Neodesha and Coffeyville, Kansas.
So I started running all over the country, studying the concept from the mill stores in the East to California, where Sol Price started his Fed-Mart in 1955.
He had already opened the Rogers Wal-Mart and he was up in Chicago trying to convince our officers to franchise his discount stores in small towns.
Ben Franklin stores, where if necessary you could simply look over what you needed and order it from Butler Brothers, then price it accordingly.
Crest at Springdaleand you stacked it high in the stores to call attention to what a great deal it was.
By the early sixties, we had eighteen variety stores and a handful of Wal-Marts.