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encourage anyone who spots anything suspicious to speak to them."Lonni's creator opens Loon Lake Cafe in TampaWEST SHORE Not long after moving to Pinellas County from her beloved Minnesota in 1987, Lonni Whitchurch opened a small cafe in Dunedin. She quickly gained a loyal following for her super fresh sandwiches, piled high on signature wild rice bread and served with a side of Minnesota kitsch.Lonni's grew to five locations over the years. In July she sold them after receiving an offer "out of the blue" for the entire business. "My name is still on it," she said. "I wish the new owners all kinds of success."Whitchurch said she had no plans to run a restaurant again. "But people know me and know what I do, and somebody came to me and said, 'We found this little place.' And the people who owned the building are from Minnesota "And so Loon Lake Cafe was born. In January Whitchurch and her husband, Ron, opened a 1,000 square foot eatery in the Lincoln Center building at 5401 W Kennedy Blvd., catering to the 700 or so people who work there.Some items are similar to what she served at Lonni's, though the names and some ingredients have changed. Other favorites are missing the wild rice bread and wild rice soup, for example, stayed with Lonni's.Whitchurch said she developed new recipes, many of them heartier fare, such as meatball hoagies, Cuban sandwiches and corned beef.Specialty items include the True Bleu Salad with walnuts, Mandarin oranges, crumbled bleu cheese, Minnesota dried blueberries, tomato and cucumber on Romaine, drizzled with bright blue citrus flavored dressing; and the Nuthatch sandwich with bleu cheese spread, pistachios, turkey and roasted red peppers. Everything, including breads and soups, is made from scratch, Whitchurch said. Monday through Friday.Consignment shop caters to kids 6 to 18When her two children were younger, Christina Hendry loved browsing local kids' consignment stores, but she found that most of them catered to the preschool set.Last month Hendry, a former lawyer and mom to 6 and 8 year olds, launched her own store selling consignment clothes and other items for kids 6 to 18. The 650 square foot store, Not Too Shabby Kids, is in a