The Bulldog

St. Augustine BBQ, garage sale on post Labour Day scene

Saint Augustine of Canterbury Anglican Church will have its annual barbecue Sunday. You must drop in. On Saturday, enterprising homeowners on Hillside Drive just across the Don will hold a street-wide garage sale starting at 8 a.m. You can bet some hunters will be flying around before that. Centre left, the midnight flit of Sport Clips from 1538 Bayview Ave. has permitted a modest barber shop shake up. Eli the barber at 1693A Bayview has posted a sign on the front of the Sport Clips storefront. Many men have taken their business to Lena Feng since the death of Leo Cornacchia last year. She’s in the little plaza at Millwood Rd. and Sutherland Dr. Bottom left, Deb Lace-Kelly snapped this Monarch butterfly hanging around a sunflower in her garden Sunday morning. Nice. At right, Deke Macdonald posted this 1964 clipping from the Leaside Advertiser telling of how private eyes were hired to make sure the Leaside hockey peewees had not cheated in their 11-0 thumping of Loretteville, Quebec. Very amusing. Finally, mark your calendar for the annual Rotary Club Corn roast. This year there will be a dog show too.

“Love your children” plea as boy found dead on Sask. beach

RCMP in Saskatchewan say they are treating the death of Greagan Geldenhuys, 7, as accidental. The lad’s body was found Sunday by a couple walking on the beach at a campground near Fort Qu’Appelle northeast of Regina. His mother, Tamaine Geldenhuys, was found dead, apparently washed up on a nearby beach, on August 24. The boy’s uncle, Darcy Pantel, posted the following to Facebook:

“There could be more details, but in reality, a mother and son perished after being at the beach on a windy, windy day. They were at the beach because they enjoyed being there together. Our plea to you is to love your children, teach them to be safe. Don’t turn our sadness into fear of the water, but rather to help them understand the seriousness of water safety,” he wrote, adding it’s also important to teach appreciation for first responders, police and firefighters. “I can’t think of any way that anyone could have been more supportive throughout the entire process. I could not have asked for more.”

Home Hardware ready to say goodbye to Sunnybrook Plaza

Home Hardware in the Sunnybrook Plaza has confirmed that the end is near for the store that has been an essential go-to place in South Bayview. An employee says that that owner Malcolm expects to be at the location until about November. There are apparently no plans to open another area store so far. Rents are high, it was noted. Malcolm owns three other Home Hardware operations, two on the Danforth and one at 2305 Queen East in the Beach. The closest Home Hardware store now appears to be at 1420 Yonge (at Pleasant Blvd). You will walk from the Green P garage on Pleasant up to Yonge and cross the street to patronize it. Dickson Home Hardware at 2028 Avenue Rd. is very good (and large) but it’s nearly at Highway 401. Most days, we would trade an LRT for a good Home Hardware.

Fan Expo drives 501st Garrison charity, Gen-Z Top Pop biz

Fan Expo is underway at the Toronto Convention Centre until Thursday. It’s appeal to widely diverse age groups as a source of make-believe, adventure and good old-fashioned commerce can make the mind spin. Here are a couple of videos which reveal this phenomenon. City News profiles people old enough to be parents who like to dress in Star Wars (and other) regalia and rent themselves out. They are the 501st Canadian Garrison and the money goes to charity. On the right, the astonishing YouTube business of a whirlwind personality named Michael, of Toronto (you guess his age). He talks about, discovers and generally lives a life of pop dolls made mostly by a firm called Funko. Here he visits Fan Expo.




Coca-Cola picks up UK’s Costa Coffee for $5.1 billion US

Coca-Cola has purchased the coffee brand Costa Coffee and has positioned itself to cash in on the stimulating market of high-margin lattes and pre-paid cards. That’s where customers fork over millions of dollars for coffee that they intend to buy — someday. What a deal. Anyway, Costa is a growing name in the UK and China. The price was $5.1 billion US. There is much speculation Coke will be launching storefronts to compete with Starbucks, Tim’s and McCafe. The coffee business is hugely profitable. In additon to getting many customers to pay months in advance for coffee, the margin on most Starbucks products achieves or exceeds 100 percent. Yes sir, that’s business.

No winning ticket in Saturday’s $5M Lotto 649 jackpot

No winning ticket was sold for the $5 million jackpot in Saturday night’s Lotto 649 draw. However, the guaranteed $1 million dollar prize was claimed by a ticket holder in British Columbia. The jackpot for the next Lotto 649 draw on Sept. 5 will be approximately $7 million.

Is Drake really a worthy representative for City of Toronto?

Police are speaking out after Drake, rap darling to many, is seen wearing a Hell’s Angels hoodie. Then, the amusing get-ups among dreamers and doers at Fan Expo. Below that, gird yourself for Germaine Greer’s candid view that boring sex with her husband is worse for an obedient wife than one-off forced intercourse (rape). Hey, we don’t make up this stuff. Finally, Indigenous culture rules and the purity of the product counts, you may have heard. Now there are too many white directors working on their films. Only in Canada.






Trump’s tweeted threats parade a naked disdain for Canada

President Trump has tweeted a volley of threats against Canada which parade his disdain for the country. If Canada doesn’t accept US terms on dairy products, the dispute resolution clause of NAFTA and the extension of patents on drugs from eight to ten years, he will cancel NAFTA outright. It is an outcome, if he is able to do it, which he calls “far better” than dealing with Ottawa. He tweeted that “there is no political necessity to keep Canada in the new NAFTA deal. If we don’t make a fair deal for the US after decades of abuse, Canada will be out. Congress should not interfere w/ these negotiations or I will simply terminate NAFTA entirely & we will be far better off…” CBC

No winning ticket for Friday $34 million Lotto Max jackpot

No winning ticket was sold for Friday night’s $34 million Lotto Max jackpot. That means the jackpot for the next draw on Sept. 7 will grow to approximately $50 million, and two Maxmillions prizes of $1 million each will also be offered.

Smoak 9th inning grand slam brightens lacklustre summer

Justin Smoak whacked a 9th inning grand slam home run in Miami Friday night to propel the Toronto Blue Jays to a 6-5 victory over the Marlins. It was a rare flash of sunshine in a lacklustre season for the Jays. Toronto trailed 5-1 heading into the ninth. The Blue Jays loaded the bases on Danny Jansen’s one-out infield single before the Marlins replaced Kyle Barraclough with Drew Steckenrider (4-4). Aledmys Diaz then struck out looking, but Devon Travis forced in a run with a walk and Smoak drove Steckenrider’s 0-2 pitch over the wall in right for his 22nd homer. It left the Miami crowd silent as they watched the Marlins lose the lead they had held throughout the game. Play-by-play announcer Dan Shulman was reduced to a simple “Wow!” Play by play.

Does plan to upload subways hint end of one-stop wonder?

The Ontario government said Friday it is pushing ahead with the takeover of how, where and at what cost subways will be built in Toronto. It has appointed Michael Lindsay, who has worked on several public infrastructure projects, to head a panel of up to three experts to make recommendations on the building and maintenance of new and existing subway lines, a statement said. The operation of the system will remain with the TTC and revenue from it will continue to flow to the City. “An upload of the subway would help the province to implement a more efficient regional transit system, reduce costs and build transit faster,” the PC government said. “It could also allow the province to fund and deliver additional transit projects sooner.”

ONE-STOP WONDER

The upload idea raises a clear question about the future of the notorious one-stop subway scheme, now estimated to cost $3.5 to $4 billion. The subway was endorsed by the previous Liberal government which had an enormous political vulnerability in Scarborough. The June election erased all Toronto support for the present government. Such freedom from politics both local and provincial plus its absurd cost, might see the one-stop plan changed or eliminated, some think.  Ford said during the election campaign he wanted to add two more stops to the one-stop Scarborough subway plan.

Catchy notion of ignoring boss’s email needs some context

Canadian Press says the Liberal government is considering changes to federal labour standards giving employees the right to ignore job-related emails at home. It’s law in France (of course). Stories Friday seems to lack context however as the notion of an employer in effect telling a salaried employee to do something outside his work hours may be open to interpretation. Emails are often widely ignored, as they should be. They call this possible revision the “right to disconnect” but it seems unlikely anyone will be shutting down the machine to avoid the boss. National Post