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Times Supermarkets (full name Times Supermarkets, Ltd.) is an American supermarket chain headquartered in Honolulu, Hawaii.Times operates 24 stores throughout the state of Hawaiʻi, 17 using the Times name, five operating under the Big Save brand (all on Kauaʻi), one specialty food/liquor store under the Fujioka's Wine Times name, and one location operating as Shima's Supermarket in Waimānalo.
The new Asian specialty store will occupy about 20, 700 square feet of space currently occupied by Times Supermarket along Kailua Road, according to a leasing brochure by property owner Alexander ...
KTA_Super_Store_in_downtown_Hilo,_Hawaii,_USA.jpg (640 × 480 pixels, file size: 70 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Many supermarkets are open twenty-four hours or have longer opening hours (like 8:00 - 22:00) every day. Large shopping centres are typically open longer hours every day (e.g. 09:00 - 21:00/22:00 weekdays, 09:00 - 19:00 Saturdays, 10:00 - 19:00 Sundays).
A breakwater across Hilo Bay was begun in the first decade of the 20th century and completed in 1929. On April 1, 1946, an 8.6-magnitude earthquake near the Aleutian Islands created a 46-foot-high (14 m) tsunami that hit Hilo 4.9 hours later, killing 159 total in the islands, [10] with 96 deaths in Hilo alone.
They opened their first store in Hawaii in 1958. Shelby was hired to oversee the Hawaiian sector of the company. The store was successful; at Wigwam's peak in Hawaii there were 17 stores: 15 stores on Oahu and two in Hilo. [3] Some of them were called Dodies, a local chain of department stores that Wigwam bought out.
Footprint map of Save-A-Lot locations, as of February 2021 Save A Lot store in Oxon Hill, Maryland, in July 2008 Save A Lot store in Murphy, North Carolina, in April 2023 Save A Lot store with the old logo in Streetsboro, Ohio, in June 2003. This has since been remodeled with the current logo. This location closed in 2021.
Using prison labor, it started near Holualoa Bay at and proceeded in a straight line up to the plateau south of Hualālai After ten years only about 12 miles (19 km) were completed, when work was abandoned at 19°38′38″N 155°45′12″W / 19.64389°N 155.75333°W / 19.64389; -155.75333 ( Judd Road east ) when the 1859 ...