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Thrifty PayLess
Thrifty PayLess Holdings, Inc. was a pharmacy holding company that owned the Thrifty Drugs and PayLess Drug Store chains in the western United States. The combined company was formed when Los Angeles-based TCH Corporation, the parent company of Thrifty Corporation and Thrifty Drug Stores, Inc., acquired the Kmart subsidiary PayLess Northwest, Inc. At the time of the merger, TCH Corporation was renamed Thrifty PayLess Holdings, Inc. and Thrifty operated 495 stores, PayLess operated 543 stores. In 1996, Rite Aid acquired and the 1,000-store west coast chain's owner Thrifty PayLess Holdings re-branded it as Rite Aid, creating a chain with over 3,500 drug stores. Additional recommended knowledge
History of PayLessPeyton Hawes and William Armitage acquired a controlling interest in five drug stores in three communities in Oregon and Washington, which were named PayLess, and grew their chain through both acquisition and internal expansion. By 1984 PayLess Drug Stores was the largest independently owned and operated drug store chain in the United States. It became a wholly owned unit of Kmart in 1985, as part of the Kmart expansion program created by CEO Joseph Antonini. In 1986, there were 225 PayLess stores. Between 1986 and 1988, it attempted a strategy of creating PayLess Wonder World stores in select Kmart, Value Giant, and former TG&Y locations in Texas, Oklahoma, and New Mexico; these stores lacked pharmacies at first, but included other sundries at discount prices. The Wonder World chain peaked at 16 stores, and they were eventually reverted back to PayLess stores. By 1990 PayLess operated in nine western states. Today, Payless Drugs is still in business as a long-term healthcare pharmacy but no longer operates retail stores. Acquisitions
History of ThriftyIn 1919, brothers Harry and Robert Borun, with brother-in-law Norman Levin founded Borun Brothers a Los Angeles, California drug wholesaler. In 1929, they opened their own retail outlets under the name Thrifty Cut Rate in Los Angeles, California. By 1942, Thrifty Drug Stores had 58 stores. During the 1950's, a Thrifty commercial jingle was heard on numerous radio stations in Southern California: "Save a nickel, save a dime. By the late-1980s, Thrifty Drug stores acquired Pay 'n Save, Sportswest stores (converted to Big 5), and Price Savers Wholesale Club warehouses from the Pay 'n Save corporation. Thrifty Corporation also owned Big 5 Sporting Goods Price Savers Membership Warehouses and Bi-Mart for a time. In Washington State Thrifty went by the name of Giant T since the Thrifty name was in use by another chain of drug stores. The name was later changed to Thrifty in 1984. Later all Thrifty stores in Washington state were renamed to Pay 'n Save after the acquisition. The Thrifty name and logo live on at Rite Aid, as Thrifty Ice Cream is still sold in the West Coast Rite Aid locations. The Thrifty brand of ice cream was retained because it had won several important awards in its history. Thrifty Ice Cream is also operated as ice cream shops around California. In popular culture
PayLess of TacomaA separate chain of drug stores was operating in Tacoma using the Pay Less name. These stores operated in the counties of Pierce, Kitsap, and Thurston counties in Washington state. Pay Less Northwest would rename thier stores operating in those counties as House Of Values. Later the name was changed to Value Giant. Arizona Thrifty PayLessA separate and probably unrelated chain going by the name Thrifty-Payless was founded in Arizona by Allen Rosenberg in 1934. This self-service drug stores was sold in 1942 to L.L. Skaggs Payless drug store chain that later became Osco Drug in 1981. Rosenberg went on to be a philanthropist helping to establish Phoenix Children's Hospital. References
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Thrifty_PayLess". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |