Saturday, November 4, 2017

Just wait 'til next week!


13 comments:

RedPat said...

Okay?!? Maybe I should wait until next week to order.

Kate said...

I'll come back next week for half off on today's order, while my car is being fixed at O'Reilly's after I get some new furniture at Blocker's.

Sharon said...

Just my luck!

William Kendall said...

Messing around with the space-time continuum, now with drive through service.

Marleen said...

So let´s get back next week ;)

Re your question about Deventer on my blog.. I'm not sure why the city was built at only one side of the river, maybe the other bank is on a lower level and thus the risk of flooding a lot bigger.

Andy said...

You got me laughing (‾⌣‾) again.

Revrunner said...

So does that mean no business this week? :-)

Taken For Granted said...

There was a tavern in northern Wisconsin that had a permanent billboard that said, "Free beer tomorrow." Perhaps half off next week is like that.

Bill said...

What about the week after next week, can you still get a deal? :)
Too funny Lowell.

magiceye said...

Baiting! You sure have an eye for these!

Kay said...

I'm confused. I pay today and come back next week to get half my money back? I need some chocolate.

stardust said...

I’m puzzled what it means. Anyway, I can’t come back next week.

Thank you, Lowell, for your kind, encouraging commnet as alwaysl. Here’s about your question. I’m not sure if Goldfish holds special meaning to Japanese people but they are so familiar to us. At each summer festival where there are children, there is “goldfish scooping” game in which a player scoops goldfish with special scooper. Consequently most of people have the experience of having a few or more goldfish in a bowl at home. Art Aquarium, the collaboration of traditional culture with goldfish and modern technology, is a popular art show event which has been held at several locations across Japan since 2011.

Yoko

Small City Scenes said...

I'm half 'off' most of the time
MB

"Photographers deal in things which are continually vanishing and when they have vanished there is no contrivance on earth which can make them come back again." — Henri Cartier-Bresson