Month: December 2012
Artisan Bakery opens at Yonge and St. Clair
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•Stunning non-surgical procedure at Sunnybrook
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•“Rouge” is Air Canada’s new discount carrier
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•Toronto public elementary teachers strike day
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•Why not send urgent medical records by 9-1-1?
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•City budget headed for a 2% increase: writer
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•Abducted kids returned from Zimbabwe
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LRT might impact Eglinton condo foundation
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•Million stories behind 30-year history of President’s Choice
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•There are a million stories behind the 30-year campaign of the Loblaws chain to extend its private brand, President’s Choice, into a household term representing thousands of products. In the process, Loblaws went from being merely a bunch of grocery stores in the 1980s to a huge manufacturer and creator of many of the items on its shelves. Amanda House and her complaint that Loblaws failed to deliver on buying her yogurt treat is just the latest tale. She says that Loblaws didn’t carry through on undertakings it made to buy and sell her pro-biotic product. Loblaws then produced a product of its own which Ms. House says looks a lot like hers. Her $20-million lawsuit with Loblaw Companies Ltd., and an especially sad plea on YouTube for Loblaws to do the right thing, have earned her a meeting with the Loblaw chief this week.
Trader Dave
Ms House said no settlement offers came out of the hour-long meeting with Loblaw executive chairman Galen Weston Jr. But she was hopeful that communication will remain open between her company YoPRO Treats Inc. and the supermarket chain. “It was a step in the right direction,” said 35-year-old Ms. House, who attended the meeting at Loblaw headquarters in Brampton with her lawyer. The thing is, Loblaws can readily argue that it has done nothing wrong here. It just decided not to buy the YoPRO product and instead do what it’s been doing since the day of the fabled Loblaws President, Dave Nichol, and make its own. It was Nichol, kindly known by many customers as Trader Dave, who engineered the first jaw-dropping scheme to make Loblaws very own soft drinks.
A million stories
In the process, he kicked Coca-Cola to the back of the store. Did we say there are a million stories about President’s Choice? You have to know that every big brand name firm from Kraft to Maple Leaf got indigestion over Loblaws private label program. In the end, however, success sells. The public has embraced this concept even though some customers continue to complain that time-honoured brand names have been removed from Loblaws shelves for good. In the meantime, we can only hope that there is sympathy at Loblaws for Ms House and her colleagues. They seem like decent people.
Dollarama to open in January says Bulldog reader
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•The Flower Nook is back at 1542 Bayview
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•Tannis and Michael flanking Jen |
The Flower Nook at 1542 Bayview Ave has been an institution on our street for decades. It is owned by the solid family of Mom (Agnes) Dad (Grant) and Daughter (Jen). They are celebrating a return to the Bayview shop which has housed the business for so long. The family bought The Flower Nook in 2010 but they barely got started before the store was ravaged by smoke damage during the fire that destroyed Leaside Cleaners in October 2011. It was necessary to move out for eight months but now they are back and the place is humming. That’s good news for all South Bayview and especially nice for The South Bayview Bulldog because The Flower Nook is our newest advertiser. So welcome back to Bayview to the Flower Nook and welcome to the pages of The Bulldog.