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May 1943. "Palacios, Texas. Liquor store." The original wine box. Photo by John Vachon for the Office of War Information. View full size.
The store probably had its fair share of military customers, since Palacios was home to Camp Hulen, a Texas National Guard camp before the war and used as an anti-aircraft training center during Ww2.
There was a time, long ago, when businesses respected the Flag Code of the U.S., and did not use the flag or a true likeness of it in their advertisements or in their logos. That day is long past, and so are the days of not wearing the flag as apparel.
This would explain the flag not looking like a real flag.
Guess I am old fashioned, even in my early 50's. :)
I could get a little wobbly on that bench without partaking.
Knowing Palacios, that building may well be standing yet. Everything there remains until it falls into a heap of rubble; nobody ever bothers to tear down anything. I once spent a very uncomfortable Fourth of July in Palacios at a ramshackle beach hotel that ought to have fallen down years ago, but somehow still goes on.
We say "puh-lash-us"
I too am just a simple Canadian, but, eve I know there's some stripes missing on that flag too. I guess they got into the liquor before they painted the place.
My first thought regarding the besmudged starfield is that it wasn't really meant to be an accurate depiction. Kind of an abstract.
Despite some lost or badly replaced brackets, that screen door is the building's fanciest feature by far.
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