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Payless Shoes emerged from bankruptcy in January, after closing all of their U.S. brick-and-mortar locations. Now, the company says they have plans to open a couple hundred new stores.
More shoes, fewer salesmen Payless, founded in 1956 by two cousins in Topeka, Louis and Shaol Pozez, was a business built on an innovation: that shoe salesmen weren’t entirely necessary.
Payless ShoeSource has emerged from bankruptcy less than a year after filing. The company will relaunch its U.S. e-commerce site and open some stores.
A big-hearted Arkansas woman bought out a closing Payless shoe store — containing 1,500 shoes worth nearly $21,000 — so she could donate the footwear to children in need, according to reports ...
Woman Buys Out Entire Payless Store, Worth Almost $21K, and Donates 1.5K Shoes to Students Arkansas attorney Carrie Jernigan was checking out and realized that were many shoes still for sale ...
Payless ShoeSource announced it's closing all of its US stores, but the shoe retailer was once one of the largest family-owned businesses.
A woman looks to buy shoes at Payless ShoeSource for a new job. The shoe company has filed for creditor protection and is closing all of its stores in Canada and the United States.
Despite a slick media campaign and TV commercial last fall comparing their shoes to expensive designer lines, Payless could no longer turn a profit. How good are the deals?
Despite a slick media campaign and TV commercial last fall comparing their shoes to expensive designer lines, Payless could no longer turn a profit. How good are the deals?