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Bottom Dollar was created by parent Delhaize America at the same time as the upscale chain Bloom in 2004. [2] The first Bottom Dollar Food opened in High Point, North Carolina, on September 21, 2005, and eventually there were around 30 stores in North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Ohio [3] before the expansion into other states in 2010. [2]
Eagle Food Centers was a chain of supermarkets that operated in Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana, and Illinois for several years. The company was based in Milan, Illinois.The company operated stores under many names, including BOGO'S, Eagle Country Market, Eagle Discount Centers, Eagle Discount Supermarkets, Eagle Food Centers, May's Drug and MEMCO.
Bottom Dollar may refer to: Bottom Dollar Food, an American soft-discount grocery chain; Bottom Dollar, a 2002 album by Nathan Wiley
If it's a dollar it must be cheap, and if it's a dollar it must be a discount. But a discount is more than just the cost of an item -- it's the amount that item is discounted versus the competition.
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Sears, which previously had a store in downtown Danville, was offered an incentive by the city to move to the mall in the early 1990s. [6] Target closed in 1997 due to low sales, [7] and by 1999 had become a Hobby Lobby. [8] J. C. Penney closed its Danville store in 2001 along with two others in Illinois. [9]
Discount and dollar stores saw a 7.1% jump in foot traffic so far this year, but Family Dollar has lagged behind with a slight increase, up 0.5%, the smallest amid all the chains.