Give thanks, then shop

Lines inside, outside stores on extended Black Friday

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Sisters Bailee (left), 11, and Kylie Highbarger, 13, of Amboy walk through UOI at Northland Mall Friday morning while doing some shopping with their mother, Becky. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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4:51 a.m. Friday, Galena Avenue, Dixon

The wind whipped and howled, gusting between 25 and 35 mph. Thirty-two degrees flashed on the lighted sign of Sterling Federal Bank. Two vehicles waited in the drive-through line at McDonald’s.

It was, by all accounts, just another weekday morning. A few cars passed through the major intersections in town. Convenience stores were among the few businesses with their lights on.

4:57 a.m. Friday, Walmart

Two women, presumably a mother and daughter, loaded their haul into the back of a minivan – a few large boxes and a couple of plastic bags. Each clutched a cup of coffee in her left hand.

The younger of the two women, clad in a white fleece pullover and a black fleece headband, pushed the empty shopping cart across the aisle to the corrall, heaving it toward the metal rails and shuffling back to the waiting van.

5 a.m. Friday, Walmart

The grocery side of the superstore was open. Cashiers waited at the ready. Most everyone in the store was gathered near the salty snacks aisle.

One by one, sleepy shoppers in sweatshirts and sweatpants, many without coats, slowly wheeled away a 50-inch high-definition TV, steadying the teetering box in the basket of the shopping cart with one hand and pushing the cart with the other. They all had waited most of the night for the hot item, on sale for $298 as part of the third sale event in 9 hours at the big-box retailer.

5:02 a.m. Friday, Walmart

A woman asked a store employee to scan an item – a food processor – in her cart to verify the price. It was $20.

“How long have you been here?” the woman asked.

“I’ve been here forever,” the worker replied.

5:04 a.m. Friday, Walmart

The shelves and aisles – except the area from which the deeply discounted TVs were distributed – were surprisingly tidy and well stocked.

A bespectacled man in khaki pants and an argyle sweater, presumably a store manager, thanked shoppers for their patience as they plodded down the main aisle with their loot. Two weary female employees leaned on a display of small electronics.

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