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The South Etobicoke News

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Young man hit by gunfire fighting for his life in hospital

March 18, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

THE COMMUNITY was stunned when more than 80 shots were fired by gunmen last summer.

POLICE searching for clues.

Police searching for shooter who shot man in New Toronto

A young man is in hospital fighting for his life after being shot in broad daylight on March 17.

There was a large police presence in New Toronto as police searched for a shooter.

The victim was shot around 3 p.m. near Lake Shore Blvd., and Ninth Street, according to police.

The person was found by others laying on the roadway.

The victim was taken to a local trauma centre in serious but non-life-threatening condition.

That same night another youth was shot in the Scarlett Road and Lawrence Ave. area around 7:30 p.m. after residents reported the sounds of gunshots.

A teenage boy was found with a gunshot wound and was taken to hospital.

Police do not believe the incidents are linked.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Mimico’s Cavell Avenue named after valiant woman killed by German firing squad

March 15, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

CAVELL Avenue was named after nurse Louisa Cavell. Archival photo.

NURSE and Hero Cavell with her prized pets.

 

One of Mimico’s top travelled roadway was named after English nurse, Edith Louisa Cavell, who was killed by a firing squad for saving the lives of hundreds of Allied soldiers by smuggling them out of Nazi-held Belgium.

Cavell, was 49, when she was killed by a German firing squad in October 1915 for saving the lives of some 200 Allied soldiers by helping them escape from Germany-occupied Belgium during the First World War.

She was arrested by the Germans and charged with treason, found guilty by a court-martial and sentenced to death.

Despite international pressure for mercy, Cavell was shot by a firing squad one early morning. Her execution received global condemnation and extensive press coverage.

The night before her execution, she said, “Patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone.” These words were later inscribed on a memorial to her near Trafalgar Square.

Cavell was already notable as a pioneer of modern nursing when killed.

Her bravery was admired by people worldwide and there are dozens of buildings, parks, statues and roads, like Cavell Avenue in Mimico, named after the valiant nurse. There are pages of events and things named after Cavell.

She became a nurse while taking care of her father at the age of 30. She worked as a travelling nurse and worked her way through a number of hospitals.

Cavell was sent to assist with the typhoid outbreak in Maidstone during 1897. Along with other staff she was awarded a Maidstone Medal.

She took a temporary post as matron in 1906 of the Manchester and Salford Sick and Poor and Private Nursing Institution and worked there for about nine months.

She then launched the nursing journal, L’infirmière” and within a year, she was training nurses for three hospitals, twenty-four schools, and thirteen kindergartens in Belgium.

By November 1914, after the German occupation of Brussels, Cavell began sheltering British soldiers and funneling them out of occupied Belgium to the neutral Netherlands.

Wounded British and French soldiers as well as Belgian and French civilians of military age were hidden from the Germans and provided with false papers and led by guides to hosts who would furnish them with money to reach the Dutch frontier.

The German officials began to suspect her movements and activity.

Cavell was arrested in August 1915 and charged with harbouring Allied soldiers. She admitted that she was instrumental in ‘conveying about 60 British and 15 French soldiers, as well as about 100 French and Belgian civilians to the frontier.”

Sixteen men, forming two firing squads, carried out the sentence on her and four Belgian men at the Tir national shooting range in Schaerbeek, at 7 a.m. on October 12.

Eyewitness accounts of the shooting said Cavell was shot by eight soldiers.

The nurse was at one time the best-known woman in the world. Her death by firing squad turned her into a propaganda icon, with her name gracing schools, bridges, parks and roads right here in Mimico.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Objections filed against some local 7-11 stores to prevent the sale of booze

March 15, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

 

Area residents are doing a double take after reading posters in the community and social media that a number of 7-Eleven convenience stores in South Etobicoke and elsewhere have applied to sell alcohol at some locations.

A Liquor Licence Application has been filed, and being proudly displayed, by 7-Eleven for its store at 3260 Lake Shore Blvd. W. , at Twenty Sixth Street, for an indoor area.

The deadline for submission was March 11, which has expired.

“All objections will be shared with the applicant,” the poster state. “Anonymous objections are not accepted.”

The massive company, with 70,200 stores worldwide, has confirmed they have applied to sell booze at some stores in Ontario.

“We are excited to announce that we have applied for a liquor licence for this store,” the company said. “We want to continue to be the neighbourhood store that our customers rely on for all their needs.”

They pledged safety and responsibility writing “SmartServe training combined with our rigorous age-verification program will keep our stores and customers safe.”

Some 61 of the stores have applied for liquor application licences in various municipalities, according to an Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario website.

The company plans to have a small selection of Ontario-made beer and wine for sale. The applications, according to 7-Eleven, were filed after the Ontario government decided to extend beer and wine retailing to convenience stores.

A 7-Eleven statement said the beer and wine would be offered during limited hours in designated consumption areas of some Ontario stores.

It said the alcoholic beverages would complement its push into fresh and hot food, and would build on the chain’s long history of controlling access to age-restricted products.

An Ontario government official said under the current regulations, a dedicated space must be created inside the store “for the sale, service and consumption of alcohol with food inside the store.”

The coming of booze to 7-Eleven has received mixed comments online as readers discussed the benefits.

“They’re basically applying to open a bar inside the store,’ Tamara Sinead writes on social media. “Unless they’re selling very cheap booze I don’t see many people stopping in at 7/11 for a glass of wine.”

Pierre Denis says no way.

“This place is already trouble as it is,” Denis states. “No need for boozehounds on top of this.”

“No one would care really if they were selling it, the issue here is they want to serve it, as in be a bar,” notes Sonya Lynn.

Katrina Carey says area residents have to get involved.

“The application process allows for neighbors to share their concerns,” Carey says. “If too many people object, they may be denied their licence.”

There has been a number of objections filed by local groups against some of the proposed locations that will sell liquor in South Etobicoke

Decisions are still pending.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Stick up almost 100-years ago of now-gone Royal Bank at Mimico and Station Rds.

March 15, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

THERE WAS a police manhunt in June 1933 after this bank at Mimico and Station Rds. was robbed by two gunmen. Toronto Star photo.

THE FORMER Royal Bank as it looks like today almost 88-years later. 

The more some things change in Mimico, the more they remain the same.

It would be 88-years in June when the Royal Bank of Canada, at 86 Mimico Ave., at the corner of Mimico Ave. and Station Rd., was heisted by two gunmen in a 1933 noon-time caper.

Police and newspaper reports said the crooks managed to slip into the bank and one shoved a sawed-off shotgun in the face of teller L.D. Taylor, and forced the staff into a vault.

The other gunman was waving around a revolver as staff were threatened.

The thieves fled in a getaway car and escaped with $2,325, according to The Toronto Star. The bank workers were rescued by police.

The newspaper reported on June 16, 1933 that one of the thieves aimed a shotgun at employees corralled in a vault, while another with a handgun went to the manager’s office.

A getaway driver waited outside ready to roll, police said.

“It all took place so quickly that we didn’t know what was taking place,” one bank customer said. “It all took a few minutes.”

Another man told The Star ‘a gun was struck in my face and I was told to get into the vault fast.”

It is not known if police made any arrests in the case. They were searching for three men.

This sturdy and impressive building was built in 1924 as the Mimico branch of the Union Bank of Canada.

The community was in the news and there was much excitement on that June day when the headline in The Toronto Star heralded “Two Armed Thugs Rob Mimico of $2,325.”

“When word was received at Toronto Police headquarters all cruiser cars were notified and sent to the suburban district to block all main highways entering the city,” police dispatched.

The Union Bank of Canada first established itself in Mimico in 1910 on Cavell Ave. In 1923 the bank bought the lot on Mimico Ave. and built its first branch in 1924.  The following year the Union Bank merged with the Royal Bank of Canada.

The bank appears to have closed the branch in 1936 after which the building remained vacant until 1939 when it was sold with the north end of the lot going to the Silverwood Dairy. It still stands today.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Social

 Rotary Community Heroes Awards in April for volunteers who are making a difference

March 14, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

COMMUNITY HEROES Awards winner David Lockett.

COMMUNITY HEROES Awards winners Constables Julie Rowe and Leanna Gill. Courtesy photo.

COMMUNITY HEROES Awards winner Dr. Eric Bouffet.

Toronto Police Constables Julie Rowe and Leanna Gill help mentor and keep in school some 60 high-risk elementary school students as part of 43 Division’s school liaison team.

The two, in addition to Rotarian and social entrepreneur David Lockett and Toronto SickKids Director of Neuro-oncology Dr. Eric Bouffet, are being honoured on April 23 for their volunteerism with Community Heroes Awards presented by The Rotary Club of Toronto West.

“The Rotary Community Heroes Awards is a continuation of the Rotary Club’s Rotary Youth Impact Awards event that was held for 20 years,” said Community Heroes Award chair, Stephen Thiele. “We are very proud to be able to honour the four recipients for their fantastic contributions to our community, especially youth and families that face incredible challenges.”

This year’s virtual event will be hosted by CTV Queen’s Park Reporter Colin D’Mello.

Dubbed the ‘dynamic duo,’ Officers Rowe and Gill for the past six years have delivered many presentations to those from Grades 1 and 8 on topics which include community helper, safety, bullying, peer pressure, youth and the law and Internet safety.

“They have delivered their presentations to parents and teachers and have become pillars within the school system,” according to the Rotary Club. “Through their mentoring, many youth have realized their potential and have been able to make positive decisions which ultimately, indirectly changed the course of their path toward a brighter future.”

The pair have conducted follow-up school checks and have made home visits, where necessary, to connect families with numerous agencies for assistance and referrals to the 43 Division FOCUS table.

FOCUS is a community safety and well-being initiative co-led by Toronto Police, United Way and City of Toronto that aims to reduce risk, harm, and victimization, and improve well-being with support from community resources and agencies.

Lockett, who is described as a visionary, leader and true social entrepreneur has spent half of his working life volunteering to identify, design, develop and fund innovative and cost effective programs to address issues that lead to family and domestic violence, poverty and youth crime in Toronto.

He co-founded The Redwood Shelter 30 years ago and was the driving force in the building of its crisis care centre. The Redwood offers safety, healing and opportunities for growth for women and their children escaping abusive and violent environments.

Lockett is a co-founder and President of PACT and its parent organization, the Canadian Foundation for the Prevention of Family Violence. His passion, dedication and perseverance has made it possible for the charity to continue to serve thousands of underserved and at-risk youth, as well as low income and vulnerable families, individuals and seniors each year.

Under PACT’s Urban Peace Program, Lockett has helped at-risk youth referred from the courts, schools and other partner agencies across Toronto to remain crime free, to reach their potential and engage productively with their communities.

In response to the COVID pandemic, he pivoted PACT’s Grow to Learn urban farming schoolyard program to continue to feed over 350 low income individuals, families and seniors-in-need in the Lawrence Heights community and deliver 3,400 bags of produce and ready-made meals weekly from May to October 2020.

Dr. Bouffet came to Toronto’s SickKids as Director of Neuro-oncology to develop and lead a multi-disciplinary neuro-oncology program. He is the Garron Family Chair in Childhood Cancer Research, a Professor of Paediatrics at the University of Toronto and Chair of the Canadian Brain Tumour Consortium.

Dr. Bouffet is well-respected internationally and with colleagues from several countries around the world, including China, Ukraine, Malaysia-Singapore, Jordan and Pakistan, he is able to consult monthly regarding patients.

He is an avid and engaged supporter of Meagan’s Hug and its mission since 2001. As a volunteer, he is often a featured keynote speaker on behalf of the organization, and participates in its annual Walk & signature HUG, as well as other events, such as the Meagan’s Hug Crane Ceremony.

People can attend the event by making a minimum $50 donation per person. You will receive a tax receipt. You can also participate in the Club’s virtual silent auction. The donation can be made through the Rotary Club of Toronto Club website at www.rotarytorontowest.ca. The silent auction is accessible at www.biddingowl.com/RotaryClubofTorontoWest.

Proceeds from the event will be used to support paediatric brain tumour research through Meagan’s Hug, as well as programs targeting vulnerable youth to reduce harm and victimization. Funds will also help the Rotary Club of Toronto West to support local community organizations including food banks, shelters, mental health programs.

For more information, please contact Stephen Thiele at 416-559-3424.

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Many residents still recall the Hotel Sagamore – the first cocktail bar in Mimico

March 14, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

HOTEL Sagamore in Mimico.

THE HOTEL Sagamore was the first cocktail bar, or lounge, in Mimico. City Archives.

The Hotel Sagamore in Mimico is still talked about in some circles as an iconic place of many years ago where friends met to lift a glass or two.

The landmark hotel made history when the owners in 1943, who is identified as a Mrs. Doughty, put in a petition to make the Hotel Sagamore the first cocktail bar in Mimico.

She received a license and the Sagamore was operated as a hotel and bar for more than 40 years, from 1943 until its final days about 1984.

For generations it was a popular spot where the community met and drank. Little is documented of the well-known hotel, and fewer people still are with us today who frequented the bar, which closed at least 36 years ago.

It was in the 1940s that the Hotel Sagamore made its name. Its owner was among the first to successfully apply for a cocktail bar or lounge in the community.

Under liquor laws brought in by the Ontario government in 1945, municipalities under 50,000 people can decide by plebiscite whether they want cocktail bars or lounges in their region.

The governing body of Mimico soon gave the thumbs up for booze at the hotel.

The establishment is located at 2472 Lake Shore Blvd. W., at Mimico Ave, for generations. In the early 1980s it was sold to the TD Bank, but remains in the same spot today, next to the Beer Store.

 

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

Local realtor to offer free Guinness to mark St. Patrick’s Day on Wednesday

March 13, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

A Mimico realtor will literally be handing out beer to some community residents to mark St. Patrick’s Day on Wednesday, March 17.

Mike Majeski, or ‘Mimico Mike,’ of  Re/Max Specialists Majeski Group Inc., says he will be in the community on Wednesday wishing residents a happy St. Patrick’s day and presenting them with a four-pack of Guinness to celebrate.

“These are challenging times and I just want to wish people a happy St. Patrick’s Day,” Majeski says. “This is something that I look forward to.”

He and his helpers will be driving in the community and will select those who want to celebrate.

Majeski plans to purchase about 100 four-packs of Guinness, on his own dime, to distribute in the community to ‘cheer up’ residents.

He says he and his team are ‘embedded in the community.’ He not only lives in Mimico, but is president of the Mimico Resident’s Association.

“He loves this lake-side wonder of a town and … and is always giving back and putting Mimico first,” according to his website. “He is the most trusted listing salesperson for Mimico and holds several sales records throughout the area.”

He says motorists speeding through the area and the preservation of old homes are priority items.

Majeski also distributes pies and other goodies to residents during the year.

He can be reached at 416-988-3425 or mike@realestatelove.ca

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

George is dubbed the King of New Toronto for his tasty, homemade sandwiches

March 13, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

GEORGE of Lakeshore Super Submarine

George Kozaris has been dubbed the ‘King of New Toronto’ for serving generations of families going back almost 50 years at his popular Lakeshore Super Submarine shop.

Back in the day it took three people, George and his two brothers, to serve the many customers lined up outside their door at the iconic Lake Shore Blvd. W. and Islington Ave. restaurant.

The brothers purchased the shop in 1974 after arriving in Montreal from their native Greece.

They made their way to Toronto, where George worked at Cara Operations as a dishwasher and cook.

He purchased the thriving business from his brothers over the years and is the sole owner.

“Nobody gave us anything when we came here,” Kozaris recalls. “We worked hard for everything that we have.”

Kozaris knows residents by their first name and they religiously return for his tasty, home-made subs.

He makes an assorted sandwich for a young man, who says he was short on cash this week, but promised to repay him on pay day.

“I love it here,” he says. “I love the people.”

He chose the area because it was in the 1970s and the area was booming, with many of the large companies as Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., Campbell’s Soup, Anaconda American Brass, Reg. N. Boxer Co., Ritchie & Ramsey Ltd., W. & A. Gilbey’s Distillery and others thriving.

“This was the place to be,” he recalls. “We had two movie theatres and there were lineups around the block to see movies like The Exorcist.”

Kozaris points to an area where Lastman’s Bad Boy Furniture store, Woolworths Supermarkets, two rival movie theatres and a well-known bowling alley used to stand.

“Those were the golden years and the community was booming,” he smiles. “Things were good back then. There is not much here to attract people now.”

The business and residents have also been good to Kozaris, 67, who with wife, Helen, are the parents of two grown daughters and a son.

He is a devoted Toronto Maple Leafs fan and has never missed a day’s work, or been on a holiday. A big hockey fan, he has autographed photos of Sidney Crosby, Brad Marchand and Mike Keenan.

“The furthest I have been to is Niagara Falls since I arrived in Canada,” the sub-maker says proudly. “I would rather be here than at home.”

He is compassionate about the job and has no plans to retire.

“I just can’t retire and sit at home,” Kozaris stresses. “I still have a lot of things to do yet.”

At the pre-COVID days, customers used to visit his brightly decorated shop to have a bite and watch the Leafs play.

Now they pass by in masks to say hello and pick up their food to go.

The sub shop does have a large following on social media from locals who love the good, old fashioned sandwiches.

“I come by this place whenever I’m in the area,” Pavel wrote. “The subs are great and George is great guy. Definitely worth it.”

“This place is a great way to support hardworking Lakeshore folks and be hugely satisfied in the process,” said another sub lover.

“This place doesn’t look like very much but it’s one of those old school family-owned sub shops that is actually really good,” stressed Jason. “The food is delicious, fast, and not very expensive.”

Lakeshore Super Submarine is located at 2939 Lake Shore Blvd. W., or phone 416-252-4371.

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social, Sports

Former NHL referee owned Bert’s Turkey Palace where the the turkey was king

March 13, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

BERT’s Turkey Palace was a hot spot back in the day where teens hung out enjoying turkey burgers and fries. Archives of Ontario photo.

By DAVE KOSONIC

Bert’s Turkey Palace was a place to dine back in the day and is fondly remembered by South Etobicoke baby boomers who went there from 1951 and 1965.

I was one of them and my father Edward frequently took me to Bert’s in his Buick station wagon. When we arrived my pet dog, Cookie, sat in the back seat begging for some leftovers after we enjoyed our turkey burgers and milkshakes. We always accommodated her.

Bert – Albert ‘Bert’ Hedges – had a large picture of a turkey perched on his restaurant roof and another front sign that read: ‘Turkey, Anyhow’ and the Bert’s Turkey Palace designation. His premises were down-to-earth and nothing fancy.

Bert’s was located on a 50-acre farm at the northeast corner of the former two-lane Highway 27 and Richview Side Road, which is now Eglinton Avenue West.

A former NHL referee, he attracted many patrons due to the convenient access provided by the highway.

Turkey burgers and milk shakes were the most popular menu items ordered at the Turkey Palace.

One former customer posted: ‘Over the years, I’ve tried to duplicate Bert’s turkey burgers but somehow they were not the same.

Residents recall teenagers going there after Friday evening high school dances to enjoy Bert’s fare and hang out while having a fun time with buddies well into the evening.

Families flocked to Bert’s on weekends so that parents and kids could have fun and enjoy the Turkey Palace treats while in the farm-like country atmosphere.

The front parking lot could be full of classic cars from the ‘50s and ‘60s including Chevies, Pontiacs and occasionally, a now-defunct Studebaker sedan.

Some patrons preferred to enjoy their turkey burgers and shakes while sitting in their vehicles as others dined inside.

Bert married Gerilda McCullough in 1921 and did other things before getting into the turkey business. He started his career as a bookkeeper and was later employed as a referee by the Ontario Hockey Association and the NHL for 20 years.

He and his wife bought the farm about 1945, added buildings including the restaurant and more barns. The couple also raised and sold chickens, geese and ducks to their patrons either alive or prepared to customers’ specifications.

Hedges also bred race horses on his farm with names including Bronze Turkey, Silver Turkey and a stakes winner named Gold Turkey according to archives.

He passed away in 1965 and his unique restaurant and farm was closed and sold. During 1967 the property was cleared to make way for the Highway 401/ 427 interchange.

Hedges was born in 1898 and passed away prior to his wife’s death in 1974. Both of them rest at Park Lawn Cemetery.

A nearby roadway was named Hedges Boulevard in their memory.

 

Filed Under: Campaigns, Community, Issues, Music, Politics, Social

Writer Harvey  Currell loved the community and wrote books hailing Etobicoke

March 11, 2021 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Author Harvey Currell wrote a number of books about Etobicoke.

By DAVE KOSONIC

Harvey Currell had a thirst for gathering news and information and a knack for keeping South Etobicoke residents in the know about important local topics and issues.

Currell was well-known in the Mimico community where he lived most of his life with wife, Josephine. He was actively involved in the area and his contributions included serving as a member of the Mimico Public Library Board.

He was a reporter for The Daily Telegram newspaper and made a name covering the Etobicoke and  Lakeshore areas.

Currell was promoted to a Suburban Editor at The Tely and continued to promote coverage of South Etobicoke. It was quite an accomplishment considering that he was first hired as a young copy boy by the paper that shut down in October 1970, resulting in the loss of jobs of hundreds of newsfolk that resulted in the birth of The Toronto Sun.

Currell authored six books including, Where The Alders Grow, for the Mimico Conservation Authority. It was based on the Lakeshore watershed and this publication was also used as a text book in Etobicoke elementary schools.

He also wrote a 170-page book that was released in 1967 called The Mimico Story, which is filled with  information about Mimico dating back to the early days of the community. Historical topics include how Mimico got its name, the First Methodist Church and early families such as the Murrays and the Van Everys.

Currell authored DEDICATION, which at the beginning of this book stated: ‘To the men and women of Mimico who served King and Country in two world wars and Korea – in many instances giving their lives so that the democratic way of life might survive.’

He was also employed as information officer by the former Etobicoke Board of Education prior to the amalgamation of Toronto. Currell was right on track when he answered trustees’ questions during Board meetings held at the Etobicoke Civic Center. He always sat at the front of the room.

I was a part-time reporter for The Toronto Star at the time assigned to cover Board meetings.

Whenever I required additional information to dig deeper into a story and beat the deadline for next day’s paper Currell went out of his way to provide me with additional support because he understood ‘newspaper pressure’.

He cherished the outdoors and Currell was one of the founders of Ontario’s renowned Bruce Trail. To promote our province’s beauty he wrote a weekly newspaper column for 50 years titled Town And Country Trips.

Currell passed away in August 2020 at age 98 in Sault Ste. Marie. Josephine pre-deceased him and he is survived by his children Linda, and Robert, in addition to his five grand children and as many great grandchildren.

He was respected by all those who knew him as exemplified by condolences posted on his funeral notice and obituary site. When Bootsie Sammut recalled Currell she wrote: ’Harvey was a very warm kind cottage neighbor. I loved his stories and could listen to him for hours.’

 

Filed Under: Business, Campaigns, Community, Issues, Politics, Social

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