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  2. Payless (footwear retailer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payless_(footwear_retailer)

    Pay-Less National was founded in 1956 in Topeka, Kansas, by two cousins, Louis and Shaol Pozez, to open self-service stores selling budget footwear. Circa 1962–1963, Volume Shoe company purchased the original Hill Brothers Shoe Company based in Kansas City, Missouri and converted all 25 of their stores to the "Payless" name. In 1971, Volume ...

  3. Gillman, South Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gillman,_South_Australia

    Gillman was intended to be the site of the Multifunction Polis (MFP), a joint project by the Australian and Japanese Governments in the late 1980s and 1990s. Started in 1987 by the Hawke government, the MFP was intended to be a high-tech industry and technology hub with local laws similar to those found in special economic zones around the world today.

  4. Cordwainer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordwainer

    Historically, cobblers also made shoes, but only using old leather recovered from discarded or repaired shoes. [10] Today, many makers of bespoke shoes will also repair their own work, but shoe repairers are not normally in a position to manufacture new footwear. [citation needed] A statue of a cordwainer in the Cordwainer ward of the City of ...

  5. Gillman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gillman

    Gillman may refer to: People. Gillman (surname) Other. Gillman, South Australia, a suburb of Adelaide; Gill-man, a fictional creature from the 1954 film Creature ...

  6. Pay Less - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pay_Less

    Pay Less, PayLess, Pay-Less, or Payless may refer to: . Pay Less Drug Store, founded by Lorenzo L Skaggs in Rochester, Minnesota, and later became Osco; Payless Drug Store, founded by Levi Justin Skaggs in Tacoma, Washington, and which later became Skaggs Companies

  7. Boots theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boots_theory

    Since the publication of Men at Arms, others have also made reference to the theory.. In 2013, an article by the US ConsumerAffairs made reference to the theory in regard to purchasing items on credit, specifically regarding children's boots from the retailer Fingerhut; a $25 pair of boots, at the interest rates being offered, would cost $37 if purchased over seven months. [7]