First they saved the theater, then someone saved the pizza shop, the newspaper is attempting a re-visioning, and now… who will save the hardware store. Home town re gentrification. All you need is customers.
Probably driven out of business because some a-hole rented all his port-a-potties for the eclipse and then destroyed them by cutting the roof off, with the side effect of them also flooding in the rainstorm meaning fines for all the environmental damage the blue goo and human waste flowing out the flooded doors, wrecking the side business that kept the family establishment afloat.
I love my local hardware store. It doesn’t carry as much as a Lowes or Home Depot, but I can get service (because nobody knows where the stuff is hidden except the employees) and almost any essential item I need.
Unfortunately, neighborhood hardware stores, have a hard time competing against the “Mega Home Improvement stores.” Even if they get a franchise. In order to survive they have to offer something the “giants” can’t. Personalized service is one way.
We have an old hardware store. The builders used it while constructing our homes and they still have the odd bits that the big stores don’t. You can replace that one odd bit or do demolition to replace the whole system.
So now we’ll have them auctioning off the contents? Then closing? Then many months from now, someone will buy it and reopen it and the townsfolk will donate back everything they bought?
Everyone take a step back. If he panels were reversed and the ’30 seconds earlier" words omitted, then it would be plain that they walked past a Shoppe, with brick walls, and Cranky told Mitch the hardware would always be there for him just as they were walking past the hardware with the closing sign and wood paneled walls. So stop whingeing! I miss the old independent hardware stores and have loved going to hardware stores since I was very young. I used to go with my dad. Ace hardware is the closest thing now, I think.
So what’s Ed complaining about? The store may be going out of business, but right now when he needs it, it’s still there. Maybe he could even take advantage of the sale and stock up on the stuff he can’t buy at Home Despot or Lower’s.
I have mixed feelings about my neighborhood hardware store. I try to support them, but their prices on the stuff I really need from them—the onesie-twosie nuts and bolts and such—have gotten to the point where it’s almost cheaper to buy a box of 100 (or an assortment of twenty different sizes) at the big-box store and throw the leftovers away. Especially true if I’m trying to fix something metric (even though 90+ percent of the merchandise they sell in the store is held together with metric fasteners).
Tomorrow, we will learn that the store is going out of business not because it isn’t making money, but because the building, apparently made out of moldy boards, is on the verge of collapse. Should have been made out of good solid bricks like the “Shoppe” they passed half a minute earlier!
Which is the more annoying comic strip? The single sideways panel that makes you crane your neck to read it? Or the one with the panels printed in reverse order unnecessarily?
On the theory that I oughta say something good about the strip from time to time: Davis really nails the “sloppily lettered sign even more sloppily taped up” thing today!
On Friday, we will learn the main reason the hardware store is closing: they used to make a big part of their annual profit selling seeds and gardening supplies to a cranky old school-bus driver… but then he discovered an online site, and without his purchases the store in town just can’t stay in business.
Hey gotta snark on this “30 seconds earlier” thing. It’s trite and steps all over the joke. Far better to reverse these panels, and stop it please MR B!
Bill Thompson 8 months ago
Their hardware store is only now going out of business? Did we just make a time jump forty years into the past?
Gent 8 months ago
Now onwards them hardywere stores be called hardlythere stores eh.
French Persons Premium Member 8 months ago
If there’s one thing we can count on with Batty, it’s “Lisa’s Story”.
Sevvie Premium Member 8 months ago
Why, in the space of 30 seconds, does these appearance of thestore change completely?
grozar 8 months ago
Well, ye olde Lamp Shoppe is holding on.
Jhony-Yermo 8 months ago
Welcome to Meg-a-lo Mart.
capndan Premium Member 8 months ago
Support local businesses any time you can.
goboboyd 8 months ago
First they saved the theater, then someone saved the pizza shop, the newspaper is attempting a re-visioning, and now… who will save the hardware store. Home town re gentrification. All you need is customers.
Cabbage Jack 8 months ago
Probably driven out of business because some a-hole rented all his port-a-potties for the eclipse and then destroyed them by cutting the roof off, with the side effect of them also flooding in the rainstorm meaning fines for all the environmental damage the blue goo and human waste flowing out the flooded doors, wrecking the side business that kept the family establishment afloat.
ladykat 8 months ago
Oh, dear. Another family business bites the dust.
rockyridge1977 8 months ago
Famous last words!!!!!!!
WorkshopGardener Premium Member 8 months ago
I love my local hardware store. It doesn’t carry as much as a Lowes or Home Depot, but I can get service (because nobody knows where the stuff is hidden except the employees) and almost any essential item I need.
fuzzbucket Premium Member 8 months ago
Buy the store. Judging by your attitude as a bus driver, it would make an interesting plot.
Daltongang Premium Member 8 months ago
Good old Ed. There are few people that can get it wrong so often as he can.
gigagrouch 8 months ago
Funky will buy it
MuddyUSA Premium Member 8 months ago
Hardware stores like neighborhood grocery stores are things of the past……progress?
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] 8 months ago
Hitting a slight nerve…my neighborhood Rite-Aid is closing in 2 weeks
lanainutahdesert 8 months ago
Ah! A Walmart moved to town—Walmart: The Killer of Local Businesses
WilliamVollmer 8 months ago
Unfortunately, neighborhood hardware stores, have a hard time competing against the “Mega Home Improvement stores.” Even if they get a franchise. In order to survive they have to offer something the “giants” can’t. Personalized service is one way.
lemonbaskt 8 months ago
hey what happen to the eclipse arc i thought it had two weeks to go now we gonna get a week of nuts and bolts
PoodleGroomer 8 months ago
We have an old hardware store. The builders used it while constructing our homes and they still have the odd bits that the big stores don’t. You can replace that one odd bit or do demolition to replace the whole system.
mousefumanchu Premium Member 8 months ago
The new places take all the fun out of hardware stores.
Mopman 8 months ago
So now we’ll have them auctioning off the contents? Then closing? Then many months from now, someone will buy it and reopen it and the townsfolk will donate back everything they bought?
skolinger1 8 months ago
Everyone take a step back. If he panels were reversed and the ’30 seconds earlier" words omitted, then it would be plain that they walked past a Shoppe, with brick walls, and Cranky told Mitch the hardware would always be there for him just as they were walking past the hardware with the closing sign and wood paneled walls. So stop whingeing! I miss the old independent hardware stores and have loved going to hardware stores since I was very young. I used to go with my dad. Ace hardware is the closest thing now, I think.
lawguy05 8 months ago
A sign of the times :-( Vote differently next time.
puddleglum1066 8 months ago
So what’s Ed complaining about? The store may be going out of business, but right now when he needs it, it’s still there. Maybe he could even take advantage of the sale and stock up on the stuff he can’t buy at Home Despot or Lower’s.
I have mixed feelings about my neighborhood hardware store. I try to support them, but their prices on the stuff I really need from them—the onesie-twosie nuts and bolts and such—have gotten to the point where it’s almost cheaper to buy a box of 100 (or an assortment of twenty different sizes) at the big-box store and throw the leftovers away. Especially true if I’m trying to fix something metric (even though 90+ percent of the merchandise they sell in the store is held together with metric fasteners).
puddleglum1066 8 months ago
Tomorrow, we will learn that the store is going out of business not because it isn’t making money, but because the building, apparently made out of moldy boards, is on the verge of collapse. Should have been made out of good solid bricks like the “Shoppe” they passed half a minute earlier!
Foob 8 months ago
Which is the more annoying comic strip? The single sideways panel that makes you crane your neck to read it? Or the one with the panels printed in reverse order unnecessarily?
puddleglum1066 8 months ago
On the theory that I oughta say something good about the strip from time to time: Davis really nails the “sloppily lettered sign even more sloppily taped up” thing today!
Lord Flatulence Premium Member 8 months ago
Sure, why not show the punch line first?
Mopman 8 months ago
Is this a one-off, or are we going to get a “one minute” earlier, “two minutes earlier”, “one hour earlier” for the rest of the week again?
puddleglum1066 8 months ago
On Friday, we will learn the main reason the hardware store is closing: they used to make a big part of their annual profit selling seeds and gardening supplies to a cranky old school-bus driver… but then he discovered an online site, and without his purchases the store in town just can’t stay in business.
Prince George XXXV 7 months ago
Hey gotta snark on this “30 seconds earlier” thing. It’s trite and steps all over the joke. Far better to reverse these panels, and stop it please MR B!