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Kuhn's Quality Foods Markets is a family-owned chain of grocery stores located in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area of the United States.. The Dentici family were already in the grocery business when in 1967 Joe and Tom Dentici purchased Kuhn's Market from its founder Joseph Kuhn, who owned and operated the small grocery on Perrysville Avenue since 1939.
The drainage basin of Turtle Creek is designated as a Warmwater Fishery and a Migratory Fishery. [17] In the 1930s, the creek was noted in the Pennsylvania Angler to be a viable spot for sucker fishing. [18] The riparian buffers of Turtle Creek are diminished or completely absent in the areas where the creek flows through agricultural land.
Turtle Creek (also known as Turtle Run) is a tributary of the Susquehanna River in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 2.5 miles (4.0 km) long and flows through Conyngham Township. [1] The watershed of the creek has an area of 1.59 square miles (4.1 km 2). Wisconsinan Bouldery Till, Wisconsinan Ice-Contact ...
George Westinghouse Memorial Bridge in East Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, carries U.S. Route 30, the Lincoln Highway, over the Turtle Creek Valley near to where it joins the Monongahela River Valley east of Pittsburgh. The reinforced concrete open-spandrel deck arch bridge has a total length of 1,598 feet (487 m) comprising five spans. The longest ...
The township is named for the Turtle Creek, a stream named for Indian chief Little Turtle. [4] It is the only Turtlecreek Township statewide, although there is a Turtle Creek Township in Shelby County.
Turtle Creek (Monongahela River), a tributary of the Monongahela River, which flows through Turtle Creek, Pennsylvania; Turtle Creek (West Branch Susquehanna River), a tributary of the West Branch Susquehanna River in Union County, Pennsylvania; Turtle Creek (South Dakota) Turtle Creek (Dallas County, Texas), a tributary of the Trinity River
The building is built into a limestone bluff and cantilevered over the heavily wooded site overlooking Turtle Creek. The design is predominantly horizontal interrupted by the towering concrete drum. The entrance to the theater faces Southeast and original plans called for patrons parking on the other side of the elevated railroad tracks (now ...
Dr. James G. Kuhns and his sister Mrs. Anne E. Kuhns-van der Steur inherited the land, and out of concern of rapid industrialization in the area, sold it to the State of Kentucky in order to preserve it in perpetuity [3] using $3.3 million from the Kentucky Heritage Land Conservation Fund. In July 2006 1,110 acres from that purchase were used ...