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'And what were you doing looking through my tuck box?'
I found the receipt in your tuck box.'
You either got tuck boxes from home or you had to supplement it with your own earnings, which, ten shillings a week.
The Tuck Box, at Dolores Street between Ocean and Seventh Avenues, (831) 624-6365, is the place to go for afternoon tea.
Chez Guevara is still available, but only in its original "tuck box" format, and has not been re-released in "large box" format.
When the boy's friends refused to turn him in, the whole school was punished when the headmaster confiscated food parcels and their tuck box keys the pupils had received from their families.
One evening her friends, reviewing the dwindling stocks of sweets in their tuck boxes, asked Diana to rendezvous with another girl at the end of the school drive and collect more supplies from her.
But all is resolved at a triumphant Old Peoples At Home (RIP) in the tuck box room, with some help from Mr Carter and old Wilkie.
Sękalski constructed his printing press himself, from the back axle of a car, a tuck box and some odd items and built the machine on the floor of his apartment at 29 North Street St. Andrews.
But Carmel itself is where visitors can still wander cypress-lined lanes filled with shops, galleries, restaurants and inns with storybook architecture and names - the Tuck Box, Candle Light Inn, Cypress Inn.
You'll notice that the expression "sob story" has recently fallen out of common parlance and that's because everybody is now assumed to have one: you can't turn on the radio without hearing some allegedly successful person wailing about the fact that there was never a sweetie in their tuck box.
We kno what it will be like at the other end Headmaster beaming skool bus ratle off leaving trail of tuck boxes peason smugling in a box of flat 50 cigs fotherington-tomas left in the lugage rack and new bugs stand as if amazed.
Both places are a few miles from town in the Church Neck area of big houses with merry names (The Tuck Box, Baybury Bank Farm), and just down the road from Southwind, the onetime home of James A. Michener, who chronicled the area in his novel "Chesapeake."