the grocery store
Items such as potato chips, pretzels, corn chips, popcorn, peanuts and other packaged nuts, and crackers are exempt when sold at a grocery store, convenience store, or similar place of business for consumption off the seller's premises. SOURCE: Florida Dept of Revenue
Mrs. Mike's Potato Chips are great tasting potato chips that are similar to Old Salty's or Mrs. Fisher's if you get them (Rockford, Illinois). Mrs. Mike's are made in Freeport, IL. I buy them in my grocery store in Rockford, Illinois http://www.mrsmikes.com/ On their site, they say "Mrs. Mike's makes old-fashioned, open-kettle style potato chips that are cooked in vegetable shortening with no cholesterol to provide a great potato taste. Other party/picnic items are also for sale at this factory retail store."
you can get bags of corn chips as well as potato chips and banana chips In a store frozen food department, you can get frozen bags of cabbage, cauliflower, corn.
They are discontinued. So if your local store is out, they will not be getting any more.
you can buy it in the supermarket i use to live there almost every single store have it
No Because Mod Chips are Against The Companys Like Sony Microft and etc... so They will not associate with a game store that sells them so stores dont sell them....shout out to My H8ters
Color swatches (sometimes called color chips) for painting can be found at any hardware store, home improvement store, or big box retailer that sells paint.
They make sure you dont lose your work and they help you to store more data
Actually potatoes are a complete meal. They have all of the carbohydrates, proteins and even vitamins and minerals. People can and many have lived only on them. And they are a cheap food to grow and store.
The colored circles on the back of potato chip bags are part of the quality control process during manufacturing. They help the machines detect and remove bags that are not properly sealed or filled, ensuring that only high-quality bags of chips make it to store shelves for consumers to purchase.
In the early 1960's a single portion bag of Wise brand potato chips in New York City was 5 cents. It later was raised to 10 cents. There weren't many other brands at that time and no store brands for potato chips.