"Hookah parlors?" Around here, that's what we call the place where all the sailors go when they're on shore leave.
Here's our own local drugstore, which ran on the same corner for nearly a century before being evicted a few years ago to make way for an "upscale" bank. I disapproved.
Anyone under the age of 45 probably doesn't know the best-known drugstore catchphrase: "Put them funnybooks back, this ain't a library."
I've always understood that the "Rx," an "R" with a slash through its downstroke, came from the Latin recipe, meaning "Take" -- the first word of most early prescriptions (and magic spells, I suppose. "Take one eye of newt . . ."). The "R" makes sense in that context, but why the slash?Even the "Rx" seen on pharmacy signs and what not is derived from the Ancient Egyptian Eye of Horus.
We still have one neighborhood drugstore, the "Royal Pharmacy," on Royal Street in the French Quarter. It looks almost exactly like that.How could I have forgotten this gem from Edward Hopper??
I've always understood that the "Rx," an "R" with a slash through its downstroke, came from the Latin recipe, meaning "Take" -- the first word of most early prescriptions (and magic spells, I suppose. "Take one eye of newt . . ."). The "R" makes sense in that context, but why the slash?
It's amazing how many symbols and institutions we have today that we take for granted and regard as totally mundane that in fact are ancient and actually have deep symbolical and allegorical meanings and are steeped in the ancient mysteries.