There must be Walgreens pharmacies somewhere in Rhode Island because we get an advertising circular from them in the Sunday paper, but our town is filled with CVS and RiteAid stores plus a couple of locals. (CVS began in R.I. and their corporate HQ is in R.I.)
The CVS we use is almost as big as a mid-size supermarket and is open 24/7.
I ended up doing stuff around the house, too. Washing the Christmas tablecloth that was my grandmother's was by biggest thing today. I'm talking a circa 1940+ barkcloth type tablecloth with poinsettias on it. Nice!
I tried washing it first because it has what appear to be gravy stains on it in the rather extensive white areas, so I was hoping that there might be a small chance of today's chemicals getting out multi-years of old stain. Doesn't look like it worked but at least I tried.
Now the tablecloth is sitting on my diningroom table, and it looks great. There's a Bath & Body Works candle shaped like a sitting moose with a green scarf as the centerpiece. Cute!
What a sneaky way to sell over-the-counter medicine!
None of the Walgreen's in my area have food counters. There are more than enough fast-fooderies around whose main business is feeding people that there's probably no market.
We don't have Walgreen's around here. Only time I was in Walgreen's was forty years ago, leaving New York City after a day trip. Waiting for the bus I stopped at a Walgreen's and had a hamburger which was either bad or badly cooked and was subsequently deathly ill on the bus trip home. My history with Walgreen's is short and unhappy.