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Valu-mart (styled as valu-mart) is a chain of supermarkets based in Ontario, Canada. [2] It is a unit of National Grocers, itself a unit of Loblaw Companies Limited , Canada's largest food distributor.
Econo-Mart; Food Barn (Manitoba) Food City; Food for Less (Calgary) Galati Brothers; Garden Market IGA; Gordons; Hudson's Bay Company Grocery (Winnipeg) Kauffmans (Winnipeg) Kmart Canada; Knechtel Foods; Knob Hill Farms; Lady York; Loeb; Lofood; Marché Frais; Miracle Food Mart; Montemurro (North-Western Quebec and North-Eastern Ontario) Mr. Grocer
Highway Book Shop — near Cobalt, Ontario; Hyman's Book and Art Shoppe — an independent Jewish bookstore in Toronto, Ontario; Mondragon Bookstore & Coffeehouse — former political bookstore and vegan café in Winnipeg; This Ain't the Rosedale Library — in Toronto; Toronto Women's Bookstore — in Toronto
Miracle Food Mart was a supermarket chain in Ontario, Canada, owned by Steinberg's, a Quebec-based retailer in the 1970s and 1980s. Steinberg purchased the Canadian division of Grand Union , with 38 stores, in June 1959 to make its entrance into Ontario.
Miracle Food Mart, a supermarket chain operating in the Ontario regions where there were no stores of the grocery chain Steinberg's (they had been rebranded as such starting in 1969). Ontario operations had been poor in early years, but by the time they were sold to A&P Canada they were one of the more valuable assets remaining in the company.
Valumart or Valuemart may refer to: . Valu-mart, a Canadian supermarket chain; Valu-Mart, a defunct U.S. discount retailer; Valu Mart, a shopping mall in Atterbury, Pretoria, South Africa; see List of shopping centres in South Africa
Super Centre was a hyper supermarket banner used by Loblaws during the 1990s in Ontario. Some stores were an expansion from the Super-Valu banner. These stores were about 60,000 to 120,000 square feet (5,600–11,100 m 2) in size on average, larger than standard supermarkets, sold a wider selection of merchandise (including department store merchandise, such as clothing), and contained in ...
Power (Ontario) – began as one store in Toronto in 1904 by Samuel and Sarah Weinstein and sold to Loblaws in 1953 and re-branded in 1972; [36] SaveEasy (Atlantic Canada) - rebranded as Your Independent Grocer; Super Centre (Southern and Southwestern Ontario) – stores converted to other Loblaw's brands and some sold off