Montgomery Ward Building U. S. National Register of Historic Places Front of the building Location 3-7 W. Market St., Lewistown, Pennsylvania Coordinates 40°35′54″N 77°34′25″W / 40. 59833°N 77. 57361°W Coordinates: 40°35′54″N 77°34′25″W / 40. 57361°W Area 0. 3 acres (0. 12 ha) Built 1929 Architect G. Frank Witman; James A. Royer Architectural style Art Deco NRHP reference No. 84003497 [1] Added to NRHP September 7, 1984 The Montgomery Ward Building is a historic department store building located at Lewistown, Mifflin County, Pennsylvania. The east facade faces the Mifflin County Courthouse on Monument Square. It was built in 1929 in the Art Deco style, and consists of the store building and attached office building. The store is two-stories, with a mezzanine level and measures approximately 40 feet by 150 feet. The office building is two-stories and measures approximately 30 feet by 145 feet. They are both of steel frame construction with brick exterior walls and feature terra cotta ornamentation.
Winter - 01 The First Snowstorm Of The Season! WOW!! It's only November (and BTW, just a week before Thanksgiving Day). For all fans of Winter Wonderland, we just had to let it snow, let it snow, let it snow. This classic Dean Martin catchphrase is what brings you to the very experience of Winter Wonderland in November. Well, we perhaps like our snow but wish that we would bring back fall. Those of you who watched all those leaves changing colors then falling down will never ever experience the same ol' thing like this the rest of the year. The whiteness is all here!! Taken in the Northeast section of Connecticut, there's the one & only where you'll experience the most of winter in view. Not only that, but for boys & girls, play the time down the snowy grounds and just picture yourself in the snow. Or even better, throw a snowball to your humorous person which they'll be seldom entertained for a bit of a second. Winter is finally here but before the winter solstice even begins!! Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow!
Sometimes, walking brings out the finer details of a community. "We are not your cookie cutter town, " said Chris Coderre, business coordinator for the Putnam Business Association. "We have kept the quaint New England downtown vibe, but it isn't just vintage. We have galleries, theater and many restaurants. Our motto is 'Vintage feel, modern appeal. '" Putnam has such a welcoming vibe and one-of-a-kind look. Putnam features many locally-owned businesses. The WINY (AM 1350) radio "broadcast house, " right by the scenic but rather rough-looking Quinebaug River and waterfall, has a 1950s-style architectural look with on-air talent and local ads, promoting local businesses, to match. It's almost a throwback to hear announcers broadcasting on location, at the car dealership, and using the "you heard it here first" breaking news flash in this rather quiet town. For all its typical small-town appeal, Putnam's real drawing card is antique shopping with 17 shops totalling 50, 000 sq. ft. of merchandise.