5:00
At least 21. It depends on the "state" and or "country" in question. Some states (Texas for instance) allows a cashier that is 16 to sell beer, and at the same time requires them to be 18 as a Bartender and 21 to drink. Check your local laws.
The Cheapest Pack of Cigarettes in Texas are Timeless Time cigarettes. They Sell between $3.29 to $3.49. They are only found in privately owned Gas Stations. You cannot find them at VALERO CORNER STORES or WAL-MART. Only privately owned stores. They are a Premium Cigarette at a CHEAP CHEAP price.
It is on at 11 AM on KCBD-TV the related link has other showing in Texas at different Times and Stations
Yes it can, we buy cars from Florida to California that are salvage and sell them in Texas all the time.
You may purchase beer and/or wine in Texas at 7:00 am everyday except for Sundays when you are not allowed to purchase either until after the morning services are usually over with at 12:01 pm (Noon) We want you nice and sober for the sermon. After that's over you can get snockered.
Through the sale of commercial time at the national level and payment for the ability to sell local commercials at individual stations
No. It is not true. From time to time, a business like McDonalds restaurants or Mobil gas stations might run a promotion, where you get something for a bag of pull tabs. But there is nothing about pull tabs that makes them any more valuable than their weight in scrap aluminum or steel, which is not much.
It depends if you are in a "wet" or a "dry" county. In dry counties, they close early. In most "wet" counties the hours of opeation are Monday-Saturday 9am-10pm.
A beer baron is a person who organizes the illegal production and sale of beer during a time of Prohibition.
Since these statutes are usually local (i.e.: county) regulations its improssible to catalog them with any assurance, but there are many locations (particularly in the southern states of the US) where it is unlawful to sell beer (or alcohol) on Sunday OR prior to a certain time on Sundays.
Commercial radio and TV stations sell time. Companies who want you to buy something from them pay the radio and TV stations for time, in increments of 10, 20, 30, and 60 seconds, and use that time to broadcast their messages to you, encouraging you to buy their stuff. Those messages are called "commercial announcements", or simply "commercials". Commercials not only 'support' radio and television, but to any successful broadcast operation, they bring in more than the cost to keep the station going. The extra is the station's profit, and it is the reason that the radio and TV stations are on the air. The only sources of radio and TV programing where profit is not the reason for their existence are Public broadcasting, campus stations, experimental stations, and illegal 'pirate' stations.