About the graphic: You could safely say it's "back to basics." I fondly remember the neighborhood drug stores we had in our neighborhood. Let's see....there was Coleman's at Greenwood and South Olden Avenue, Long's in a number of moves (E. State and South Olden?) was at one time at Hamilton and South Olden Avenue, replaced by Steinel's, and let me see...oh yes, Fromkins on Liberty and Kline, replaced by Liberty Pharmacy, and I will never forget Silk's on Greenwood and Norway Avenue.
I REMEMBER NAPOLEON'S, SALVATORE'S, ETC.
SEND ME YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD DRUGGIST WITH THE STREET ADDRESS AND LET'S COMPILE A LIST COMPLETED.
- Anonymous said...
- Tom,
what you refer to as Longs was Rhodes Pharmacy in the early 1950's
when I lived in the Wilbur section. Later we moved to the Brunswick
Avenue area where we went to Harbourt's at Brunswick and Spruce. The
owner, Harrison Harbourt was an avid Delaware Valley Sports Car Club
member. Later they changed the name to Scott-Taylor. When
Scott-Taylor were downtown they were said to have the first phone in
Trenton .. #1.
Ed Millerick
- Carlo said...
- Mike- it was Adams & Sickles
- Michael said...
- Tom:
Was the name I was looking for; Adams and Sylcles on West State and Prospect?
Did not want to leave out Siegles pharmacy on Broad and Liberty. John Fityere was the pharmacist. A great guy.
Mike
- Michael said...
- Hey Carlo:
How is one of the brightest, smartest kids who ever attended Jr.4? I didn't see you post until after I finally posted it. The name came to me in the middle of driving back from North Carolina.
Damm old age ain't fun.
If you see Johnny, let him know I was thinking of the "the Three bright stars of my homeroom in 1947. I guess Alger is gone, but not forgotten.
Mike
- JoeZ said...
- Tom:
Like Ed on Brunswick Ave. we had Harbourt's and also a
hole-in-the-wall place called Brunswick Drugs. When we lived on Revere
Ave.it was Episcopo's. Pardon if I spelled the name wrong.
- Anonymous said...
- Brunswick Drugs with that great soda fountain. The lime-rickey in a frosted glass was Heaven. Amen.
Ed Millerick
Unless it was a cherry Coke?
- Mack said...
- Episcopo's & Siegel'a were our drugstores and they usually had calendars we would pin up next to the phone in the kitchen:))
- Carlo said...
- Hey Mike, Johnny is fine..we get together once a month for lunch.
Alger is living in San Francisco, doing a lot of traveling. Jr 4..a long time ago, but great memories Stay well!
12 comments:
- HI TOM...ESPOSITO'S ON CHAMBERS STREET WAS OUR PHAMARCY FOR QUITE SOME TIME. BUT YOU ARE CORRECT. THEY OVERSHADOW THE SUPER STORES AND ARE MORE DEPENDABLE. REGARDS.
- Tom:
In the 1930's, there was "Dr" Arthur Yetters at the corner of So.Warren, and Fall Sts. Not only did you go to him for somthing in your eye, where he would roll your eyelid up, and take the offending object out with a que tip, but he had the only phone in the neighborhood, which everyone made, and recieved call on;FREE Dr. Yetter would compound medications, and the salves he made were like incredibly effective.
After him, came Sully Alexander at the corner of Market, and Union St. Sully was the dad of Jay and Richard of the "Twins" Pharmacy on So. Olden near Whitehorse. What is now "Joe's Mill Hill Saloon at Market and Broad Sts., was Stucherts (sp)Down the street from Jr. Four was "Grove's" on the corner of Dayton, and I think Virginia.
The biggie was the one on Prospect, and West State, and damm if I can remember the two named partnership.
Regards
Mike Kuzma - Tom, what you refer to as Longs was Rhodes Pharmacy in the early 1950's
when I lived in the Wilbur section. Later we moved to the Brunswick
Avenue area where we went to Harbourt's at Brunswick and Spruce. The
owner, Harrison Harbourt was an avid Delaware Valley Sports Car Club
member. Later they changed the name to Scott-Taylor. When Scott-Taylor
were downtown they were said to have the first phone in Trenton .. #1.
Ed Millerick - Mike- it was Adams & Sickles
- Tom:
Was the name I was looking for; Adams and Sylcles on West State and Prospect?
Did not want to leave out Siegles pharmacy on Broad and Liberty. John Fityere was the pharmacist. A great guy.
Mike - Hey Carlo:
How is one of the brightest, smartest kids who ever attended Jr.4? I didn't see you post until after I finally posted it. The name came to me in the middle of driving back from North Carolina.
Damm old age ain't fun.
If you see Johnny, let him know I was thinking of the "the Three bright stars of my homeroom in 1947. I guess Alger is gone, but not forgotten.
Mike - Tom: Like Ed on Brunswick Ave. we had Harbourt's and also a hole-in-the-wall place called Brunswick Drugs. When we lived on Revere Ave.it was Episcopo's. Pardon if I spelled the name wrong.
- Brunswick Drugs with that great soda fountain. The lime-rickey in a frosted glass was Heaven. Amen.
Ed Millerick
Unless it was a cherry Coke? - Episcopo's & Siegel'a were our drugstores and they usually had calendars we would pin up next to the phone in the kitchen:))
- Hey Mike, Johnny is fine..we get together once a month for lunch.
Alger is living in San Francisco, doing a lot of traveling. Jr 4..a long time ago, but great memories Stay well! - Tom - The only drug store I remember at our end of the township from the
time I was little was Foy's Drug Store on South Broad Street in White
Horse. It was the only one until Yardville Drug came into being sometime
in the '50's.
Lakeside Girl - My father and one of my uncles grew up in Trenton and both became pharmacists. They each worked at a pharmacy called Delahanty's in the city, and then set up separate pharmacies outside of the city. There was a vibrant commmunity of independent pharmacies in and around Trenton that sustained a group called the Society of Mercer County Pharmacists who regularly met and funded a scholarship. Though nominally competitors, the owners of the independent stores regularly socialized and close friendships developed through a couple of generations of men and women who practiced in Mercer from the 1950s through at least the 1970s. Presumeably, the prevalence of chain drug stores has eliminated or much reduced this congenial slice of local professional life.
In the 1930's, there was "Dr" Arthur Yetters at the corner of So.Warren, and Fall Sts. Not only did you go to him for somthing in your eye, where he would roll your eyelid up, and take the offending object out with a que tip, but he had the only phone in the neighborhood, which everyone made, and recieved call on;FREE Dr. Yetter would compound medications, and the salves he made were like incredibly effective.
After him, came Sully Alexander at the corner of Market, and Union St. Sully was the dad of Jay and Richard of the "Twins" Pharmacy on So. Olden near Whitehorse. What is now "Joe's Mill Hill Saloon at Market and Broad Sts., was Stucherts (sp)Down the street from Jr. Four was "Grove's" on the corner of Dayton, and I think Virginia.
The biggie was the one on Prospect, and West State, and damm if I can remember the two named partnership.
Regards
Mike Kuzma