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49th Parallel Grocery; A&P; Best for Less; The Barn Fruit Markets; Canadian Tire (short-lived rollout) Commisso's Food Markets; Cooper's Foods; Darrigo's; DiPietro's; Dominion Stores; Dutch Boy; Eatons Supermarket (Winnipeg) Econo-Mart; Food Barn (Manitoba) Food City; Food for Less (Calgary) Galati Brothers; Garden Market IGA; Gordons; Hudson's ...
[2] Dominion's leadership was not resolved until 1939, when J. William Horsey became president. [3] He in turn sold Dominion Stores to Argus Corporation. Smaller stores were consolidated from 574 to 195 by 1954. [2] In the 1950s, Dominion began to build large stores with airy ceilings and large glass fronts. [4]
This is a list of Canadian retail stores that have gone out of existence due to either bankruptcy, a merger or takeover where their name is no longer in use. A&B Sound; ALIA N Tan Jay — Clothing store owned by Nygård; Big Lots! Canada — Department store; A&P — Canadian unit of US-based grocery store chain; Adventure Electronics
[2] At its height in the 1970s, it was a true conglomerate with many unrelated businesses. Among these were Dominion grocery stores, Orange Crush soft drinks, Massey Ferguson farm machinery, Domtar wood products and Carling O'Keefe breweries. The company was purchased by Conrad Black in 1978.
Knob Hill Farms – grocery store chain; Kresge (Canadian division) – discount store chain; Lumberland Building Materials (BC-based store founded in Surrey; it merged with Revy Home Centres in 1997, [2] which then was acquired by Rona in 2001) LW Stores – discount store chain; acquired by Big Lots in 2010 and closed all stores in 2014
A&P Canada left the Quebec market in 1984, and in 1985 acquired Dominion Stores in Ontario. It acquired Steinberg's Ontario grocery store chains Miracle Food Mart and Ultra Food&Drug in 1990 when the company divested them under new management (Miracle Mart rebranded by 1994 and Ultra by 2008). [1]
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Beginning in the late 1980s, A&P Canada opened several stores in the Toronto area under the Sav-A-Centre name. Its logo was the same as the American Sav-A-Center, with the exceptions of being red rather than green. A&P purchased 92 Dominion stores in 1985. [17] [14] By the late 1990s, some stores were rebranded as Dominion Sav-A-Centre. [18]