The Etobicoke Guardian, South, October 5, 2017

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TAKE A TRIP IN TIME WITH YOUR LOCAL COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER

Metroland Media Toronto

THURSDAY 5th OCTOBER 2017

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This year marks 100 years of community news service for the Etobicoke Guardian. To celebrate, we offer a commemorative edition exploring our past and the history of Etobicoke, its people and key events.


Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

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Community newspapers are a record of ‘life as it happens’ The Etobicoke Guardian marks 100 years of news service PEEL REGION ARCHIVES/photo

COURTESY/photo

(Above) Judging horses at the Claireville Agricultural Fair in 1933; (Below) The students of School Section No. 6 in Highfield, Etobicoke, located on east side of Hwy. 27, south of Rexdale Boulevard, in 1939. Nelson Moody is in the front row, fifth from the right. Teacher Dorothy Moody at rear left is Nelson’s aunt.

CYNTHIA REASON creason@insidetoronto.com “Newspaper fyles are the most authentic history of the community available. They tell the story of the community’s life as it happens.” As the Etobicoke Guardian celebrates its 100th anniversary this year, it is that quote – taken from a May 15, 1941 editorial printed in its predecessor, the Lakeshore Advertiser – that perhaps best sums up the enduring role community newspapers play in recording for posterity the hyper-local happenings of any given community. “But it’s beyond just the newspaper itself; it’s the distillation of the whole community and the way that people perceived what was going on in their town and what it represented – the highs, the lows, all that kind of stuff,” said Randy Boswell, a journalism professor at Carleton University

and former history beat reporter at the Ottawa Citizen. “That was all captured in your community newspaper, with a weekly reflection of the celebrations, the challenges and the controversies of the community.” From the “harrowing tale of the terror-filled night” Hurricane Hazel rolled through Long Branch in its Oct. 21, 1954 edition, to the call-out for volunteer woman workers to help with the war efforts in Mimico on Sept. 14, 1939 – the pages of the Lakeshore Advertiser from decades past are filled with just such historical records of events of local, national and even international note. Boswell, who was shortlisted for the Pierre Berton media award for popularizing Canadian history, said community newspapers like the Advertiser/Guardian were – and continue to be – integral to capturing “in-depth portraits of life” throughout history in the neighbourhoods they cover. “I think in a lot of ways, that role hasn’t changed much over the years. If you want to know what’s going on in your own

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

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COMMUNITY

Taking our readers back through time About this special commemorative edition These past few months as the Guardian news team prepared to mark our 100th year of news service, we literally brought the past into our newsroom. After a research trip to the Toronto Reference Library and its microfilm room, we saved and printed dozens of old Lakeshore Advertiser pages and hung them up around our desks. It began as a logistical move, to better absorb the old newspapers and see what stories once made press. But the pages soon became a subject of fascination for our journalists and sales staff, to see how differently they were designed, to imagine the process involved in producing them and to read the intriguing little bits of life from the 1920s and onwards. Even the advertisements are a window into a very different lifestyle. So we took inspiration from those pages for this commemorative edition, treating the entire

Staff/Metroland

Metroland Media Toronto multimedia consultant Lisa Roberts (left) and Etobicoke Guardian news editor Norm Nelson pore over vintage pages of the Advertiser in the Metroland newsroom; (Right) Front page of the Lakeshore Advertiser on Oct. 21, 1954 featuring coverage of the Hurricane Hazel aftermath. newspaper with a look that hearkens back to those early production days. This week’s Guardian features stories about life in the black and white news era, the people, places and events that helped

define a growing Etobicoke. It also includes ‘flashback’ news clips: stories reproduced as they were presented in the Advertiser all those years ago, so that you too can take a peek into Etobicoke’s

Toronto Public Library/Microfilm

past. Each flashback references the date that story first appeared in print. As you’re looking through this edition, if you’re inspired to share any memories you have

of the newspaper or Etobicoke’s history, please do. Email us at newsroom@insidetoronto.com or mail a letter to Metroland Media Toronto, Newsroom, 175 Gordon Baker Rd. Toronto, M2H OA2.

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What was life like in Etobicoke 100 years ago? Horse-drawn carriages and farmland dominated the landscape

| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

COMMUNITY

DENISE HARRIS denise.harris@sympatico.ca What was life like in Etobicoke in 1917? Although residents were far from any battleground, the First World War had an indelible impact on those at home. By 1917, everyone was fully aware of the dreadful impact this war was having on Canada’s young soldiers. Citizens scanned newspapers daily to read the list of Canadian casualties, praying that they wouldn’t know anyone on it. The Canadian Virtual War Memorial lists 47 men from Etobicoke who had died by the end of 1917, and many more had been wounded or imprisoned. The war dominated every action, every conversation, every prayer. Civilians at home wrote to their loved ones overseas, raised money for the war effort, and worked with organizations like the Red Cross to send soldiers needed supplies. In 1917, the population of the area was 5,822. 80 per cent of Etobicoke’s residents and virtually all bankers, merchants, manufacturers, and lawyers were of British descent. Three quarters of adults were Protestant and 15 per cent were Roman Catholic. Roughly 75 per cent of the land was being used for agriculture, and only 25 per cent was urbanized. Most of the industry was located in the south part of the township; however, Mimico and New Toronto had become independent villages in 1910 and 1913, respectively, with a corresponding loss in tax revenue for Etobicoke. (Long Branch would also become a village in 1930.) Personal transportation was still primarily by horse-drawn carriage. Islington resident

Dixon family/photo

Montgomery’s Inn/photos

(Clockwise from top left) Viola May Piercey visiting her grandfather, George Dixon. His farm was located between Hwy. 27 and Martin Grove Road, 1.2 km north of Dixon Road; Soldiers on a training exercise in 1916, marching north on Lambton Avenue (now Prince Edward Drive South) just north of Berry Road. Note the gun carriage in the centre of the entourage; Dundas Street West, west of Kipling Avenue, being paved with asphalt in August 1917; Residents of Islington Village wrap bandages and knit socks for soldiers in Jubilee Hall, located on the south side of Dundas Street West, opposite Burnhamthorpe Crescent, ca. 1917. Frank Shaver bought the first car in Etobicoke circa 1909 — a Studebaker-Flanders — but cars did not predominate in rural areas until after the depression. Dundas Street and Lakeshore Road were both paved in 1917, but other roads were gravel or even mud. There was good access to other towns by train — the CNR along the Lakeshore or through Weston, and the CPR though Islington. In 1917, the Toronto Suburban Electric Rail-

way opened passenger service from Keele Street to Guelph, passing through central Etobicoke. In 1917, there were no high schools in Etobicoke; any young people wishing to continue their education had to travel to high schools in Toronto or Weston. There were no local police stations as policing was the responsibility of the York County Police. There were no fire services — not even a volun-

teer brigade. There were also no social services available. Alcohol could not be purchased except by doctor’s prescription because prohibition had been enacted in Ontario in 1916. On the bright side, electricity and telephone service were available, and all women in Ontario were given the right to vote in 1917. Clothing was changing, partly as a result of the war. By 1917, skirts had risen well above the ankle. Corsets were replaced by

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lighter girdles with attached garters. Working women now wore shirtwaists, tailored suits, and tops with open necklines. Some women were bobbing their hair, while others let it hang down in ringlets, echoing Mary Pickford. For men, blazers, spats, straw boaters, and Panama hats were popular, as was short hair and wide, curled moustaches. And, of course, all of this clothing could be ordered through Eaton’s and Simpson’s catalogues!


PETER MILCZYN, MPP

Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

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Etobicoke-Lakeshore

Congratulations to the Etobicoke Guardian, celebrating its 100th year of news service in 2017! Looking back at my own Etobicoke history, we have shared some milestones along the way. I grew up in Mimico and am a lifelong resident of Etobicoke. My deep roots in the community include attending local schools St.Leo, David Hornell, Islington, ECI, and Mimico High. My architecture thesis at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Architecture was for an Arts Centre on the Lakeshore Hospital Grounds... a project I was able to realize as an Etobicoke City Councillor less than a decade later. I served as a councillor in the former City of Etobicoke in 1994, and continued to represent Etobicoke on Toronto City Council for fourteen years. In 2014 I was elected to the Ontario legislature as the MPP for Etobicoke-Lakeshore. The Etobicoke Guardian has covered local politics throughout the years – here’s wishing them many more years of news service to our community!

Constituency Office: 933 The Queensway, Etobicoke, ON M8Z 1P3 T - 416-259-2249 • F - 416-259-3704 pmilczyn.mpp.co@liberal.ola.org www.petermilczyn.onmpp.ca

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| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

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EDITORIAL | OPINION ABOUT US

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Community news is the ‘most authentic history’

The Etobicoke Guardian, published every Thursday, is a division of the Metroland Media Group Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Torstar Corporation. The Metroland family of newspapers is comprised of more than 100 community publications across Ontario.

The Etobicoke Guardian is a member of the National NewsMedia Council. Complainants are urged to bring their concerns to the attention of the newspaper and, if not satisfied, write The National NewsMedia Council, Suite 200, 890 Yonge St., Toronto, ON M4W 2H2. Phone: 416-340-1981 Web: www.mediacouncil.ca

O

nce, the community newspaper was “the only contemporary history” of one’s local area and became more valuable the older each edition got, as a historic document. This point was noted in a May 15, 1941 Advertiser editorial. And though things have changed, news and information are everywhere, we certainly understood the paper as a critical historic reference as we planned for this 100th commemorative edition. We couldn’t just Google the news from decades long gone. The only place to find old editions of the Advertiser was the Toronto library’s microfilm collection — and there, only back until 1925. Will we be able to find today’s edition of the Guardian with a simple search command in 100 years? What hasn’t changed is the value we feel exists in our work, and the service we hope to provide our readers. As an ode to the community newsroom of days gone by, here’s more from that 1941 editorial: “The newspaper fyles (sic) are the most authentic history of the community available. They tell the story of the community’s life as it happens ... Those of us who live in the modern surroundings are sometimes apt to forget the sacrifices of those who made the community what it is today. It is not so very long ago when the territory served by the weekly newspapers was virgin forest or prairie ... (T)oday we have every modern convenience, churches, schools, libraries, theatres, electric lights, sewers, sidewalks, paved streets and a hundred and one other conveniences our forefathers never dreamed of. These things did not come about by chance or by natural evolution. They came about because men toiled ceaselessly to leave behind them a better work than that into which they came. Their devotion, their struggles, their ideals, their initiative and determination should be an inspiration to succeeding generations. And the record of their achievements appears in the fyles (sic) of the local newspapers, and that is why they are such valuable records of the triumphs of the pioneers. “Few people who contribute to the news columns of the newspaper are aware that they are contemporary historians. They are chronicling the events of community life for posterity, and generations hence will read the story they have told, and from the struggles of their day ...(T)hose who contribute to the news columns of their local newspaper are therefore doing a valuable service for ‘those who follow in their wake.’”

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Etobicoke embraces shattered families Etobicoke. It is defined by its sense of community, and support for one another, especially in times of tragedy. The sun shone brightly on April 24, 2003 betraying a horror that would rock numerous families and the community when a devastating natural gas explosion at Six Points Plaza killed seven people and injured four others. A year later, dozens of mourners - families, friends and neighbours - gathered on a similarly sunny morning at 3885-3887 Bloor St. W. to remember. Later, a stone memorial would be built on the site to honour those who lost their lives: Dora Carambelas, 60, Tina Kirkimtzis (nee Carambelas), 32,

TAMARA SHEPHARD Columnist longtime resident Robert Fairley, 50, esthetician Irene Miyama, 52, who owned a vacant store in the plaza, and hair salon clients Adele Brown, 73, Elizabeth Roy, 74, and Lillian Guglietti, also known as Lillian Goulet, 73. Then mayor David Miller spoke of the families’ enduring love, and pain. “I know that the pain from this kind of loss never completely abates.

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when a suitcase explosive destroyed it over the Atlantic Ocean beyond the shores of Ireland on June 23, 1985. Most of the 329 people aboard the flight were from the Toronto area. “This memorial will be a place, not just for the families of the Air India tragedy, but for all Canadians to reflect and remember victims of terrorism,” Jayashree Thampi, head of the Air India Victims’ Families Association, had said.

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CONTACT US Etobicoke Guardian 175 Gordon Baker Road Toronto, ON M2H 0A2 Phone: 416-493-4400 Fax: 416-774-2070 Web: www.insidetoronto.com

Pain comes from love. And we never stop loving the people we’ve lost. Because that love never goes away, neither does the pain,” Miller had said. Four years later, another constituency of grieving, wounded families would be embraced by Etobicoke and its people, and offered a place to rest and remember. It was another sunny Saturday morning on June 23, 2007 when the families of victims of Air India Flight 182 gathered on a quiet inlet in Humber Bay Park East with the heads of three levels of government to dedicate the Air India Memorial. The Air India Boeing 747 had been on a flight from Canada to India

Delivery For all delivery inquiries, please e-mail customersupport@metroland.com or call 1-855-853-5613.

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Tina Klein continues pumpkin tradition

Councillor Vincent Crisanti congratulates The Etobicoke Guardian for completing 100 years and wishing them many more!! City Councillor Vincent Crisanti Councillor, Ward 1 - Etobicoke North 100 Queen Street West, Suite C54 Toronto, ON M5H 2N2 416 392 0205 • councillor_crisanti@toronto.ca

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After 25 years, real estate broker Tina Klein will continue to keep her Halloween tradition alive by offering donations to local schools to purchase pumpkins themselves this fall. In the past, Tina provided pumpkins to the local schools in Rexdale, but she has decided to take a different route by allowing the teachers and students to buy their own pumpkins. In addition to donating money for the pumpkins, Klein also contributes by giving back to her community. She actively supports the local legion, church and has worked with the Toronto Police to provide fraud protection seminars for seniors. “I believe Rexdale has helped me become a success and it is my pleasure to return the favour by giving back to the community. “If you’re successful, you give back.” Klein has been helping people in Rexdale sell their homes for years. She has worked through recessions, 21 per cent interest rates, real estate booms and a declining market, like today. She knows what to do and what not to do from her years of experience. Over the years, she’s found a passion for helping seniors sell their homes. She’s become a specialist in the field and knows the experts who can help clean, declutter and stage homes to get a higher price for sellers. She

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recommends movers, lawyers, handymen and ensures her clients are comfortable and informed throughout the process. “I believe in helping people where I can,” Klein says. Although, Klein has excelled in her field, she originally had no plans to become a Realtor. At one point, she was looking for a job with no luck when she saw an ad in the paper, advertising a job that guaranteed $21,000. She applied and was accepted into the Real Estate courses that started her lifelong career. “I like Rexdale,” she says. “I like the Rexdale community.” For more information, call Tina Klein’s office at 416-743-3832 or visit www.TinaSellsRexdale.com

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

12

COMMUNITY

Key events in Etobicoke’s storied past DENISE HARRIS denise.harris@sympatico.ca

FLASHBACK Â?Â?Â?

As Toronto’s most westerly community, Etobicoke’s had its share of major events since 1917, probably too many to mention them all here. We’ll offer up some highlights in Etobicoke’s journey from a burgeoning township to member of an amalgamated metropolis.

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1918 — Etobicoke’s residents rejoice as word is received early on Nov. 11 that the armistice has been signed, ending the First World War. 1918 — Etobicoke Township’s first volunteer fire brigade is established in Islington. Montgomery’s Inn/Photo

1922 — Etobicoke Township’s first police department is formed, consisting of one chief and three constables.

(Above) Islington Volunteer Fire Brigade in its new singlebay ďŹ rehall built in 1923, now a store at 4990 Dundas Street West; (Below) Cover of Etobicoke Township booklet from 1964. The phrase ‘Ontario’s ďŹ rst planned community’ was used since 1947.

1927 — The TTC assumes ownership of the Toronto and Mimico Electric Railway which operates along Lake Shore Boulevard West from the Humber River to Long Branch.

1953 — Etobicoke becomes part of the newly-formed Metropolitan Toronto.

1928 — Etobicoke High School, the first in Etobicoke, opens on Montgomery Road in Islington. 1929 — The Great Depression begins and, by 1936, 2,168 unemployed men in Etobicoke are collecting relief benefits. 1930 — Following the leads of Mimico and New Toronto pre1917, Long Branch becomes an independent village. 1930 — Gus Ryder establishes the Lakeshore Swim Club in New Toronto and over 200,000 children learn to swim during his 56-year tenure. 1939 — The Queen Elizabeth Way officially opens through Etobicoke.

Township of Etobicoke/photo

1939 — The Second World War starts. 1946 — The “Baby Boom� arrives as Etobicoke records an unprecedented $2 million in building starts. From a population of 18,973 in 1941, the population will increase 15-fold to 282,686 by 1971. 1947 — Etobicoke becomes the first municipality in Ontario to file an official plan with the Ontario Municipal Board, using the motto “Ontario’s First

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Planned Community�. 1949 — The Etobicoke Board of Education is established. 1951 — Rex Heslop starts to develop “Rexdale,� the first of many postwar residential subdivisions in northern Etobicoke. In an arrangement with the township, he is required to bring industry to the area to provide a tax base to service his new homes. This becomes the standard process in Etobicoke.

1953 — Etobicoke converts from a volunteer fire department to a larger, permanent force of 90. 1954 — Hurricane Hazel strikes, causing unprecedented death and destruction. 1955 — The Metropolitan Toronto Housing Authority is formed to administer low-rent housing projects. Despite Etobicoke’s objections, extensive low rent public housing is built in northern Etobicoke. 1958 — Etobicoke’s new Municipal Centre at 399 The West Mall officially opens.

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13 | Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

COMMUNITY O Continued from page 12 unusual and exciting Centennial Projects” in the Toronto area. 1967 — The Borough of Etobicoke is formed, with Mimico, New Toronto and Long Branch now part of Etobicoke again. 1968 — The Bloor Street subway line is extended from Keele Street to Islington Avenue (and then to Kipling in 1980). 1970 — Tom Riley is appointed commissioner of parks & recreation for Etobicoke and over his 28-year tenure creates a park system that experts call “the best in the country.” 1983 — Etobicoke is incorporated as a city. 1998 — Despite citizen protests, Etobicoke, along with Scarborough, North York, York and East York are incorporated into the City of Toronto.

FLASHBACK

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Toronto Archives/photo

(Clockwise from top left) Lake Shore Boulevard West looking east toward bridge over Humber River in 1929, two years after streetcar line taken over by TTC. Workers are changing the line from a single track on the north side of the road to a double track up the middle; Looking west at the eastern end of the Queen Elizabeth Way in Etobicoke, just west of Humber River, ca. 1950; Official opening of the Bloor Subway extension from Keele to Islington on May 10, 1958. Dignitaries gather at the Islington station, beside a smash-through sign.

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

14

Congratulations! Happy 100th Etobicoke Guardian.

City of Toronto Archives, Series 1464

12:00 AM May 13, 1961

Founder, Chairman and CEO Gordon Reid, opened the original Giant Tiger store in Ottawa Mr. Reid launched the business with a $15,000 investment and by the end of the first year, had rung up sales of $139,781. We were off to a great start!

History On Saturday, May 3, 1961, Gordon Reid, Founder and Chairman, opened his first Giant Tiger store in Ottawa, the Nation’s Capital. The business was launched with a $15,000 investment and first year sales were $139,781. The business was started with a very simple idea - keep the cost of operation low and sell a large volume of merchandise at everyday low prices. Giant Tiger has kept the cost of operation low by paying low rent and controlling expenses. There are now over 200 stores in eight provinces. In 1968, another simple idea was incorporated into the Giant Tiger formula – franchising. Today most Giant Tiger stores are franchised so that the company’s valued customer will be better served because the owner is in the store. Giant Tiger franchise owners become members of the community, sharing community concerns and serving community needs. In 1977, Giant Tiger added two Chez Tante Marie franchise stores, in Hull and Gatineau. Tiger Trucking began operation in 1987, with the introduction of Giant Tiger trucks delivering merchandise from a growing warehouse system to stores. On September 1, 1990, Giant Tiger established a clothing and footwear buying office in Montreal. The objective was to be closer to the suppliers and manufacturers in order to be in a position to pick up trends quickly and move merchandise to the stores faster. Giant Tiger offers a large assortment of casual clothing and footwear for the entire family including many of the latest fashion items at the lowest possible prices. In addition, everyday needs in groceries, confectionery, pet food, cleaning supplies, housewares, stationery, toys and health and beauty products are in stock at all times.

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David Lyle Streight: Islington community builder Born in 1842 near Kemptville, David Lyle Streight would go on to become one of the Village of Islington’s most influential businessmen, known for bringing a CPR stop to the area. Streight was a teen when he first arrived in Islington in 1856 to work alongside his uncle, who operated a contracting business in the village. Following his five-year carpentry apprenticeship, he struggled to find work as a journeyman in Etobicoke and moved to several different cities in the U.S. and Canada, before ultimately returning to Islington and starting up his own highly successful contracting business in 1868. A decade later, with the Credit Valley Railway (CVR) set to open a new line across Etobicoke, Streight began to consider starting up a retail lumber and coal business to augment his contractor work. In order

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Montgomery Inn/PHOTO

David Streight and his wife, Elizabeth, standing in front of the lumber yard office on the west side of Canning Avenue (now Cordova Avenue) just north of the CPR tracks. Their house can be seen on the right, on the east side of Canning Avenue. to do so, however, he had to convince CVR to build a stop in Islington – a request the railway agreed to after Streight approached CVR management directly to present his case. At Streight’s suggestion, Etobicoke’s council agreed that the arrival of the CVR presented an opportune time to open a new northsouth street connecting

Dundas and Bloor streets – today’s Cordova Avenue. When the new road was laid out, 1.5 acres of land was severed and sold to Streight at auction, and it was there that he built his family home in 1880. The Canadian Pacific Railway, meanwhile, purchased the financially-troubled CVR – as well as its Islington siding – in 1884.

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

16

COMMUNITY

Former publisher vowed to help Long Branch O Continued from front role hasn’t changed much over the years. If you want to know what’s going on in your own neighbourhood, with the places that you have easy access to, then community newspapers have continued to play a pretty important role,” he said. “What amazes me is what an incredible historical record (the Advertiser/Guardian) will be for so many communities across that whole southwest Toronto area.” In his research into the Guardian’s century-old history, Boswell dug up a Toronto Daily Star clipping from Nov. 18, 1966 covering the final Long Branch civic awards ceremony before the tiny community was absorbed into the “new borough” of Etobicoke on Jan. 1, 1967. During that ceremony, thenAdvertiser publisher B.J. MacMillan and his newspaper staff were named Long Branch’s Citizens of the Year. In his acceptance speech, MacMillan promised: “As long as I

(Clockwise from right) The Kingsway Theatre showing That Midnight Kiss in 1949,; A police constable monitors traffic along Malton Road in Etobicoke back in 1952; Loblaw Groceterias in New Toronto was located on the south side of Lakeshore Road, between Fifth and Sixth streets and unveiled a new concept of shopping - requiring customers to fetch their own groceries.

publish a paper, what happens in Long Branch will continue to happen in Long Branch. We will help Long Branch maintain a separate identity!” Boswell touted MacMillan’s vow that the Advertiser would help the tiny community – which at that point measured just ninetenths of a square mile – maintain its singularity despite its amalgamation into the larger borough of Etobicoke as “especially poignant.”

Courtesy/TORONTO ARCHIVES

Courtesy/TORONTO ARCHIVES

“It speaks to...the importance of community newspapers to community cohesion,” he said. “People can figure out what’s going on in international news from various sources around the world...but nobody else is going to cover what’s happening in Mimico, Long Branch and those kinds of communities that don’t, in a way, exist as municipal entities anymore – but that still do exist as places in people’s lives in a very real way.”

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Wishing The Etobicoke Guardian heartfelt congratulations on your centennial celebrations!

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

18

COMMUNITY

A brief history of community newspapers in Etobicoke The Etobicoke Guardian celebrates its 100th year of news service in 2017, and a history of coverage that began with The Lakeshore/Mimico Advertiser in 1917 and publisher Edwin Ealand. In a Guardian article published in 1992, his daughter Florence Lanchberry recalled her father’s early publishing days: “He set up a room in the house and that became the newspaper office... the labour was all done by hand. The handwriting of all the news and the ads.� Ealand immigrated from England in 1902 and went on to become a local councillor and a school board member. With no printer in south Etobicoke at the time, the paper was shipped to Parkdale to be printed, with a press run of about 100 in the first year. When asked what Advertiser readers liked to read, Lanchberry told the Guardian in 1992 that “they were interested in any activity where their name could possibly be included.� She recalled a fond memory when she was a teenager, “I had brand new high brown boots and my father asked if I would go to Holbendys and get a report of the wedding of one of the daughters.� Ealand reportedly sold the Advertiser in 1919 to Charters Publishing Co. under the stipulation that they retained the original name. By 1925, according to the microfilmed copies at the Toronto Reference Library, The Advertiser was published every Thursday, featured news from Mimico, New Toronto and Long Branch and was sold for 3 cents per copy. The south Etobicoke newspaper was purchased by media baron Roy Thomson in 1949 but then sold off quickly in 1950 to Vince MacMillan. He bought up several other local papers including the

O See MACMILLAN, page 19

FLASHBACK Â?Â?Â?

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Toronto Archives/photo

Ontario Archives/photo

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(Top) Beachgoers at Crowe’s Beach, circa 1926; (Middle) Famous Islington photographer, Walter Moorhouse and family who inspired the mural rendition on the west wall of the building at 4886 Dundas St. W. The family is pictured on their veranda at 34 MacPherson Ave; (Bottom) When the Etobicoke Creek ooded in March 1945, Roy Hilton (left) and Stanley Paton used a punt to deliver bread to 10 families stranded on Island Road.

Globe and Mail Archives/Photo


19

MacMillan’s empire sold to Metrospan in 1972 O Continued from page 18 Weston Times, the Woodbridge Times and in 1961, the Etobicoke Guardian from E.R. Mitchell’s Islington Publisher’s Ltd. He renamed it the Etobicoke Advertiser-Guardian and circulated it north of The Queensway while the Lakeshore Advertiser continued in the south. MacMillan also scooped up the Etobicoke Press before selling the whole empire in 1972 to the Toronto Star’s weekly newspaper division, then called Metrospan Community Newspapers. Inland Publishing Company started the Etobicoke Gazette tabloid in 1973, but it was acquired by Torstar in 1981 and the Etobicoke papers consolidated under the corporate name of Metroland – which now produces community newspapers and news websites all across Ontario, including eight here in Toronto.

| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

COMMUNITY

Richard Boehnke/Photo

Toronto Public Library/Photo

(Clockwise from top left) Folks in boats in 1922, along the east bank at the mouth of the Humber River; Leo Chard on his Etobicoke farm with his favourite bull ‘Curly’ in 1949; Members of the Islington Women’s Institute celebrate the Coronation of King George VI in 1937; A couple enjoy skating at Central Park, Etobicoke in the 1940s.

Montgomery’s Inn/Photo

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Montgomery’s Inn/Photo

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

20

GET A SUPER DEAL FROM THE SUPER FAN!

Ultimate model shown ♦

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2017 Elantra

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Finance for only

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At

For

69 0% 84 Weekly

Months with $1,745 down†

Finance for only

$

56 Weekly

At

For

0%

For 84 months

0

Down†

Finance for only

At

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For

$

Weekly

84

Months with $1,345 down†

Includes $500 in price adjustmentsΩ Selling price: $26,937

Selling price: $20,337

Selling price: $30,137

Delivery, Destination & Fees Included. Plus HST.

Delivery, Destination & Fees Included. Plus HST.

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LED Active and veteran Military personnel receive up to $1,500 in price adjustments.±

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5-YEAR/100,000 KM Powertrain Warranty

Heated front seats

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17” aluminum alloy wheels

5-YEAR/100,000 KM Emission Warranty

Bluetooth®

5.0” touch-screen with rearview camera

Heated front seats

5-YEAR/UNLIMITED KM 24h Roadside Assistance

The Hyundai name, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned or licensed by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2017 Elantra LE Auto/ 2017 Tucson 2.0L FWD / 2017 Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD models with an annual finance rate of 0%/0%/0%. Weekly payments are $56/$69/$79 for 84/84/84 months. $0/$1,745/$1,345 down payment required. Trade-in value may be applied to down payment amount. Selling price is $20,337/$26,937/$30,137. Cost of borrowing is $0/$0/$0. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination charge of $1,705/$1,805/$1,905, levies and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Finance offers exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees, and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. Price adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of $500/$1,000/$1,000/$1,000 available on finance and cash purchase only of new in stock 2017 Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD/2017 Elantra Ultimate/2017 Tucson 1.6T Ultimate/2017 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Ultimate models. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. ♦Price of models shown: 2017 Elantra Ultimate/2017 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Ultimate/2017 Tucson 1.6T Ultimate are $29,637/$45,637/$39,637. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,705/$1,905/$1,805, levies and all applicable charges (excluding HST). Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. †♦Offers available for a limited time and subject to change or cancellation without notice. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.I. and a full tank of gas. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. Visit www.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions. ±Certain restrictions apply. Customers must present their proof of Military relationship and I.D. at time of purchase to receive special price discount off their purchase. Program subject to change or cancellation without notice. Visit military.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details.


21

For all your Automotive Needs

| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

YOUR NEIGHBOURHOOD MECHANIC SINCE 1983

• Suspension Systems • Exhaust Systems • Tires and Alignment • Lube, Oil & Filter • Cooling/Heating Systems • Brake Systems • Fuel Systems

• Provincial Inspections • Provincial Emission Testing & Repairs • Required Manufacturer’s Service (including service during the warranty period) BLOOR ST W

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*Offer valid for departures between Feb. 3 to Apr. 1, 2018. Price is in CAD, p.p. based on double occupancy for new individual bookings, subject to availability and may change at any time and is inclusive of all taxes, fees and port charges. Price is based on the lowest available departure as follows and will vary by sailing: Inside Stateroom cat 12 $2,249 for Feb. 3, 17 & Mar. 31 sailings on Celebrity Equinox® and Feb. 4, Mar. 18 & 25 sailings on Celebrity Silhouette®. Veranda Stateroom cat 2D $2,449 for Feb. 24 sailing on Celebrity Equinox®. Other categories/occupancy types and sailing dates are available at varying prices. Classic beverage package applies to two guests (21 years and older) per stateroom and includes beer, wine and spirits up to $9, soda selections, fresh squeezed and bottled juices, premium coffees and teas and non-premium bottled water. Upgrades to other beverage packages are available for an additional charge. Gratuities applies to two guests per stateroom and provides for prepaid stateroom attendant, waiter, assistant waiter and head waiter gratuities. 3rd and 4th guests receive 40 min. internet package, gratuities and non-alcoholic beverage package which can be upgraded to an alcohol package for a fee. Max. total baggage allowance of 20 kilos (44 lbs.) per person. Flights are economy class. Ports of call vary by itinerary. This program is not combinable with any other offers. Space is subject to availability and change at time of booking. Please ask for details regarding terms and conditions concerning deposit, final payment and cancellation penalties. Restrictions apply. Celebrity Cruises reserves the right to correct any errors, inaccuracies or omissions and to change or update fares, fees and surcharges at any time without prior notice. © 2017 Celebrity Cruises, Inc. Ship’s Registry: Malta and Ecuador. All Rights Reserved.

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22 Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

PLACES

Better Hearing Event Wednesday, October 18th Hear for Life is celebrating 29 years of helping patients hear better, live better. Join us for the complete hearing experience: ✔ Free professional hearing screening with a Hearing Instrument Specialist ✔ Free demonstration of the latest hearing aid technology ✔ Free hearing consultation with a Doctor of Audiology Refreshments onsite and enter for a chance to win a gift basket.‡

Space is limited. Call 416.639.1094 to book today!‡ Plus, on select sets of hearing aids get

*

30% OFF

And, earn up to 1,000 AIR MILES® Reward Miles!^

Hospital for Sick Children Archives/Photo

The Country Branch of the Hospital for Sick Children in Thistletown is pictured here on opening day in 1928, showing the south-facing sleeping porches.

SickKids “Palace of Sunshine” offered helio-therapy for polio, tuberculosis Country Branch opened doors in north Etobicoke’s Thistletown in 1928 CYNTHIA REASON creason@insidetoronto.com

Vivienne Saba-Gesa Hearing Instrument Specialist Allison Wheatley-So BC-HIS Hearing Instrument Specialist Jerry Bennett Au.D. Doctor of Audiology

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Humbertown Shopping Centre, 270 The Kingsway

Visit our event and complete a ballot for your chance to win. No purchase necessary to enter or win. Contest closes October 31st, 2017. Odds of winning depend on number of entries received at each participating location. Rules and regulations at clinic.*Offer valid for one qualifying purchase. Not valid in conjunction with any other offer. Ask for details in clinic. Expires October 31st, 2017. ^This offer is non-transferable, applies to the purchase of ADP and private sales of select models of hearing aids, and valid until October 31st, 2017. This offer cannot be combined with other promotional offers for hearing aids. The number of Miles issued to the Collector depends on the model(s) purchased. Please allow 45 days for Miles to be posted to your Collector account. Limit one offer per customer per year. Some conditions may apply. Please see clinic for details. Offer not valid in Quebec. ®†™† Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. used under license by LoyaltyOne, Co. and HearingLife Canada Ltd.

A hidden gem once known as the “Palace of Sunshine”, the Hospital for Sick Children’s Country Branch was a mainstay in north Etobicoke’s Thistletown neighbourhood for 26 years. Built on 90 acres of farmland near Kipling and Finch West avenues in 1927, the three-storey, T-shaped satellite hospital was custom designed by the renowned Toronto architectural firm of Sproatt & Rolph to provide a “holistic de-institutionalized approach” to the treatment of child patients recovering from rheumatic fever, tuberculosis and polio, among other conditions.

The 112-bed building was perhaps best known for its 200-foot long, southfacing patient wing, whose rooms opened directly onto a boardwalk and upper balcony so that beds could be moved outdoors for “helio-therapy.” According to Denise Harris, chief historian for the Etobicoke Historical Society, the SickKids Country Hospital Branch officially opened on Oct. 24, 1928 – when members of the Toronto Automobile Club picked up 44 children at the Toronto Islands ferry dock and transported them to the new building in a celebratory “parade” – and closed its doors 26 years later, following a major power failure during Hurricane Hazel. The province then bought the property at 51 Panorama Crt. and turned into the first residential mental health centre for children in Ontario in 1957. The Thistletown Regional Centre for Children and Adolescents offered specialized services to young people with complex mental health,

behavioural or developmental challenges until 2014, when the province closed it. Toronto City Council voted to include the property on the Toronto Heritage Register Inventory on May 8, 2014 based on its “cultural heritage value.” “The design of the satellite branch for the Hospital for Sick Children (Country Branch) has historic and scientific value, because it contributes to an understanding of the principles and evolution of healthcare, both physical and mental, for children and adolescents in Ontario and Canada when it opened in 1927-28,” the 2014 report recommending its heritage designation reads. “Addressing issues of long-term recovery, tuberculosis, polio and autism specifically, the practical care and research embraced a variety of concepts and methods which were increasingly focused on a holistic de-institutionalized approach that consistently encompassed the benefits of a natural landscape setting.”


23 | Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

PEOPLE

Rex Wesley Heslop: The Father of Rexdale Born in 1905 on a farm just north of the subdivision that would be named after him, Rex Wesley Heslop would go on to become known as “The Father of Rexdale.” Heslop was in his 30s when he established Rex Heslop Homes Ltd. in the late 1940s, following stints as a successful car salesman in Michigan, and a not-so-successful miner in northern Ontario. Rex Heslop Homes Ltd. got its start building 400 homes on cheap land south of Evans Avenue and west of Brown’s Line in Alderwood that the township had acquired for non-payment of taxes. Next, Heslop purchased the 100-acre Wilbert Wardlaw farm on the east side of Islington Avenue, north of Hwy. 401 in 1951. By April the following year, he’d sold his first 40 homes in Rexdale to workers from nearby Malton’s fast-growing air-

Submitted photo

Rex Heslop Homes Ltd. was known as “The Father of Rexdale” for developing more than 3,600 homes and 70 businesses on 1,200 acres of land in the area. craft industry. Heslop also built Rexdale Plaza in 1956, most of the areas now referred to as New Rexdale and Sunnydale, and the even larger Delrex subdivision in Georgetown. Eventually, he developed

more than 3,600 homes and 70 businesses on 1,200 acres of land in the area – a feat for which Etobicoke’s thenReeve Bev Lewis described him as “the salvation of Etobicoke.”. Heslop died a millionaire in 1973.

insidetoronto.com


Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

24

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25

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| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

THORNCREST FORD

Congratulations to the Etobicoke Guardian for 100 Years!

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

26

PLACES

Applewood more than just a popular wedding backdrop CYNTHIA REASON reason@insidetoronto.com While most Etobians recognize Applewood for the picturesque porch upon which many a wedding photo has been snapped, too many remain unaware of the homestead’s position in history as the birthplace of an important pioneer of Canadian social policy. James Shaver Woodsworth, who was born at Applewood, the Shaver Homestead, on July 29, 1874, went on to become the first leader of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) — the democratic socialist party that preceded the New Democratic Party (NDP). The oldest of six children born to the daughter of Applewood’s original owner, Peter Shaver, Woodsworth was just a boy when his family moved from Etobicoke to Brandon, Man., in 1885. There, his father was named Western Canada’s superintendent of Methodist missions — Woodsworth would ultimately follow in his footsteps with his own ordainment as a Methodist minister in

Courtesy/Montgomery’s Inn

Applewood’s original owner Peter Shaver – the grandfather of James Shaver Woodsworth - is pictured here in this late-1880s photograph in front of his circa-1852 home, built by architect William Tyrrell of Weston. 1896. After settling in Winnipeg following studies at Victoria College in the University of Toronto and at Oxford University in England, Woodsworth began working with

that city’s immigrant slum dwellers. Shaped by that experience, Woodsworth became an ardent democratic socialist whose ideals made him a popular figure

in Winnipeg politics, which led to his election as the member of Parliament for Winnipeg North Centre in 1921 — a riding he held until his death in 1942. As an MP — first for the Inde-

pendent Labour Party, then, in 1932, as the founding leader of the newly formed CCF — Woodsworth fought for labour rights, improved social welfare measures and democratic socialism. Today, the circa-1852, red-andyellow brick homestead Woodsworth was born in still stands in central Etobicoke — albeit in a new location at 450 The West Mall. After the land upon which it sat on the northeast corner of Burnhamthorpe and The West Mall was sold in 1980, the 465ton building was relocated to in Broadacres Park, suffering severe cracks in the process. The James Shaver Woodsworth Homestead Foundation — a not-for-profit organization formed to head up Applewood’s rescue — raised the funds necessary to repair and restore the Georgian-style homestead to its original beauty. The foundation still operates Applewood today, renting the house out for weddings, parties and meetings as a source of income to keep the historic house open and in a state of good repair.

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| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

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Royal LePage Real Estate Services Ltd., Brokerage

416

232-9000 716-8326

FREEHOLD TOWN HOME IN SPECTACULAR ENCLAVE!! WOW!

An Exceptional And Inspired Living Space Tucked Away In www.martiphilp.com A Coveted Enclave In Prime Etobicoke. Beautiful Interior Design. Contemporary Finishes. 3 Generous Bedrooms. 2.5 Tastefully Updated Bathrooms. Family Room w/ Fireplace & W/O To Private Garden Retreat. Minutes To Fine Area Amenities, Transit & Downtown. Put This One On Your Re/Max Professionals Inc., Brokerage Independently Owned and Operated List - It Is Decadent, Functional & An Outstanding Value!!

416

OPEN HOUSE SAT/SUN 2-4PM

OPEN HOUSE SAT/SUN 2-4PM

0

,00

9 79

$

JOANNE GLUDISH

JOANNE GLUDISH

CELL

CELL

416

416

817-3747 416 231-3000

CENTENNIAL PARK

OFFICE

Sun-filled 3 bedroom, 3-bath home on a

www.joannegludish.com premium lot backing onto green space.

Royal LePage Real Estate Services Ltd., Brokerage

MARTI PHILP

Sales Representative

Sales Representative

Fantastic location close to excellent schools, Centennial Park, Recreation & Transit! 14 LAFFERTY STREET

Sales Representative

817-3747 416 231-3000

CENTRAL ETOBICOKE

OFFICE

Spacious and bright 3 bedroom bungalow www.joannegludish.com a westerly 56’ x 100’ lot. Large windows, entertainment-sized living & dining rooms and full basement. Located on a demand street in family friendly neighbourhood. 6 Kuhl Avenue Royal LePage Real Estate Services Ltd., Brokerage

416 416

232-9000 716-8326

PREMIUM COURT LOCATION! VERY NICE...

Tucked Away In A Quiet Little Enclave, This Inspired Space Is A www.martiphilp.com Rare Gem. Master Bdrm Features A Walk-In Closet, Ensuite Bath & Lovely Hardwood Flooring. The Quietly Elegant Living & Dining Rooms Walk Out to A Tranquil And Fully Fenced Rear Garden With Sundeck. The Lower Level Offers A Warm & Inviting Recroom w/ Large Wood Burning Fireplace & 2-pc Bathroom. Great Condo Re/Max Professionals Inc., Brokerage Independently Owned and Operated Alternative - Suits Many Lifestyles!! Come And See For Yourself!!

IMAGINE LIVING HERE...

OPEN HOUSE SUN OCT 8 & MON OCT 9 1-4 PM

OPEN HOUSE SAT. & MON. 2-4PM

00

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6 1,6

$

SHEILA BARR Sales Representative

416

779-7282

www.sheilabarr.ca

Royal LePage Real Estate Ltd., Brokerage

820 BURNHAMTHORPE RD 1407 $479,900 Terrific Opportunity at ‘Millgate Manor!’ Bright Two Bedroom plus Den suite awaits your personal touch! Open-concept Living & Dining Room With Walk Out To Balcony and wonderful West views! Spacious Eat-In Kitchen open to Den. Large Master Bedroom has Wall-to-Wall Closet & 3-piece Bath. Approximately 1350 sq.ft. Ensuite Locker plus Underground Parking. Terrific location--Steps to Shopping, Schools, Parks with Bus at your Door!

Providing Professional Service with a Personal Touch!

SAM CHOPRA

Sales Representative

MARTI PHILP GORGEOUS DETACHED HOME IN HIGH DEMAND AREA OF HUMBERWOOD. 39 ARBORVIEW CRES Total Pride Of Ownership, Hardwood

416 817-2553 Floors, New Kitchen Counter Top And Double Stainless-

Steel Sink, 2 bedroom Basement Apartment With Separate Side Entrance For Extra Income Already Rented Will Like To Stay If Possible. Move In Condition 4 + 2 bedroom, 4 bathrooms Quite And Safe Neighbourhood. Close To Hwy RE/MAX Professionals Inc., Brokerage 427, Schools, Humber College, Hospital, Shops And All Independently Owned and Operated Amenities. $1,250,000

OPEN HOUSE SAT 2-4 PM 0 9,0

WESTWAY VILLAGE

OVER 2900 SQ FT OF LIVING SPACE 3+1 Bdrm Bungalow, Large Living/Dining Rm, Eat-in Kitchen, Hwd Flrs Under Broadloom, 416 www.JeffMacko.com Sep Ent to Newly Fin. Bsmt, F/P in Family Room, 4th Bdrm, Also Large Cantina Two Baths, Thermal Windows, Cen/Vac, Cen Air, Double Car Garage, Fenced Lot with Patio, Walk to Parks, Shopping, TTC, Call For Private Showing! 47 NORTHCREST RD.

565-3332

0

,90

$8

9 89

$

JEFF MACKO

Sales Representative 31 Years Experience

MARTINGROVE GARDENS

AMAZING LAYOUT 1,461 SQ FT RARELY AVAILABLE! 416 3 Bdrm Bungalow, En-Suite In Master Bdrm. Main Floor www.JeffMacko.com Family Room, 2 Fireplaces, 2 Baths, Large Principal Rooms, HWD Flrs, W/O To Deck, Gold Fish Pond. Bsmt Recreation Rm Ready To Finish R/I For Wet Bar. Bsmt Also Has 3Pc RoughedIn And R/I For Kitchen. Amazing! Call For Private Showing!

565-3332

JEFF MACKO

Sales Representative 31 Years Experience

PRINCESS MARGARET/GLEN AGAR

65FT FRONTAGE CHILD SAFE CRES. 3+1 Bedroom Bungalow with Enclosed Sunroom, Eat-in Kitchen, 416 www.JeffMacko.com Large Living-Dining Room with New Hardwood Floors, 2 Baths, Thermal Windows, Finished Basement with Recreation Rm, and 4th Bdrm. South Facing Fenced Yard! Walk to Ravine, Park and Walking Trails. See You At 5 COTMAN CRES

565-3332

insidetoronto.com

Sales Representative 31 Years Experience

THIS HOME IS THE FULL PACKAGE! SIMPLY WOW!!

OPEN HOUSE SAT/SUN 2-4 PM

00

3

JEFF MACKO

232-9000 716-8326

Exquisite From Start To Finish!! Custom Built To Perfection On An www.martiphilp.com Incredible 386 Ft. Deep Lot! 4850 Sq Ft (incl Bsmt) Of Luxurious Living Space. Impeccably Maintained & Fastidiously Renovated Thru Out. Brilliant Layout. Inspired Gourmet Kitchen, Spa-Like Bathrooms, 4+1 Generous Bedrooms, Walk Out Basement w/ Separate Suite And Outdoor Lounge Area Leading To The Breathtaking Gardens and Re/Max Professionals Inc., Brokerage Pristinely Manicured Lawns Beyond. Your Own Private Oasis...A Rare Independently Owned and Operated Gem. Your Family Will Live & Thrive Here...Treat Yourself. It’s Time.

416

,9 24

0

$8

Sales Representative

416


28 Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

FRANK LEO 00

00

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HUGE INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY! Rare 3.72 Acre corner parcel of land. Two Lots combined with 2 detached ranch bungalows & two 2 car Garages & Garden Center Nursery. 30 Car Parking. Zoning allows Commercial. Huge Future Subdivision Potential!

RESTORED MANSION STEPS TO YONGE ST!!

SPECTACULAR 85FT X 269FT LOT! Magnificent Custom Estate! Open Concept 4+2 Bdrm 2 Stry, 10ft Ceilings, Bright Sunlit Gourmet Kitchen, Quartz Counter, Built-In S.S. Appl., Formal Dining Room, Plank Hrdwd Flrs, Mstr Bdrm Retreat, W/ Luxurious Ensuite & W/I Closet, 7 wshrm, Fin. Bsmnt, Opulent Finishes thru-out.

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Spectacular Property built in 1803, gorgeous original wood floors, baseboards & trim, over 5600 sq ft, Magnificent huge kitchen, centre island, 6 fireplaces, 5 bdrms, 4 baths, prof. Landscaped lot, & double garage.

0

BROKER

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99

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Sponsor of

Children’s Miracle Network & Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation SPECTACULAR MAjESTIC RESIDENCE!

1 ACRE ESTATE!!

ESTATE SALE!

Absolutely stunning 5 bdrm 2 stry situated on premium pie shaped lot. Over 5000sqft of luxury living, Custom kit w/ granite counters, B/I S S Appl, skylight, library, crown mouldings, , walk out to huge deck and professionally landscaped lot, high demand neighborhood

Luxury 2 Storey in prestigious Nobleton. 4 1/2 car garage, 5 bdrms with 2 mstrs, prof. Renov’d w/ lrg addition. Gorgeous gourmet custom kit, crown mouldings, main flr fam rm, office, laundry. Prof fin bsmnt, prof. landscaped, hot tub plus much more.

Premium 185’ deep pie shaped lot on one of Etobicokes finest streets. Amazing Huge 5 bdrm sidesplit opportunity. Massive open concept living , and formal dining rm, gas fireplace, fabulous family rm, and wonderfully finished Basement, 1st time on the market must be seen.

00

00

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$9

50 FT LOT OPPORTUNITY! Invest in this 4 bdrm, 2 wshrm detached brick home. Spacious layout with 2 Kitchens, Separate entrance, Large fenced lot, Proximity to schools, shops, Hwy, and all conveniences.

$

STUNNING CONDO AT THE ICONIC IMPERIAL PLAzA 1000 Sq Feet of Living Space Overlooking the Park. State of the Art Amenities, Parking and Locker included. One of the best Neighborhoods In The City. Steps Away to Transit, Shops, Restaurants, Schools and Much More. A Must See!

insidetoronto.com

STOUFFVILLE 2 STOREY! 2800 Sq Ft Renovated Masterpiece with Rare 3 Car Garage on a Lrg Lot Steps to Downtown. Over $300k in Upgrades. Chef’s Kitchen. Jaw Dropping Master Ensuite. Full Basement Apt. Private Backyard Retreat with Pool, B/I BBQ and Patio.

STUNNING YORKVILLE CONDO!

MASSIVE 54 X 190FT LOT!

BACKING ONTO GOLF COURSE!

Amazing one of a kind opportunity. Lrg 4 bdrm w/ Huge eat-in kit. Open concept liv/din rm w/ bay window. Master w/ ensuite + w/i closet. Fin bsmnt w/ kit + sept entr. 2 car garage + triple wide driveway. Excellent location.

Beautiful 4 bdrm home with full privacy+ no neighbours behind!. Huge eat-in kitchen with breakfast area and walkout to yard. Open concept living & dining room. Master with 4pc ensuite + walkin closet, Double car garage. Great location.

00

0

SPACIOUS SPLIT-LEVEL!

!

,00

50

$7

Beautiful 4-Level Backsplit Located On Quiet, Child Friendly Court!! Tastefully Updated! Lrg Liv/Din Rm, Eat-In Kit, Lrg Master Bdrm, Sept Fam Rm, Gorgeous Backyard Retreat And Much More! Great Location Close To GO Station.

,90

49

$5

LUXURIOUS SUB-PH STEPS TO HIGH PARK

LIVE & EARN!!

A RARE FIND IN PRIME LOCATION!

Beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 wshrm corner unit in, amenity-loaded NXT II! Floor to ceiling windows w/ breathtaking panoramic views of the lake and High Park, soaring 9 ft ceilings, spacious eat-in kit with s.s. appl., 4 piece ensuite in master. Walk score 88! Simply move in and enjoy the lifestyle!

Lrg fully tenanted 5+1 Bdrm, 4 wshrm, Income Producing Property. Ideal for Investors or Lrg families. Many updates throughout. Steps to Public Transit, GO Train, Downtown Brampton.

Upgraded Detached 2 Storey Featuring Luxurious New Bathroom With Slate Flooring, Pocket Doors & Deep Soaker Tub, Prof Painted, Fin Bsmnt. Steps to All Amenities, and Much More.

0

,90

99

$6

RENOVATED DUPLEX! Detached raised bungalow perfect for first time buyers or investors. Chef’s kitchen w/ gas stove, new roof, finished basement with separate entrance. Private drive, landscaped private fenced yard.

BRIGHT, SPACIOUS, FREEHOLD GEM! 3+1 Bdrm Townhouse Nestled in Sought After Area. Open Concept Design With W/O To Fenced Backyard. Lrg Mstr W/ Ensuite, Full Bsmnt W/ Sep Entr. All Amenities In Walking Distance.

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Magnificent 1200 Sqft layout with unobstructed views, floor to ceiling windows. Gourmet kit w/ top of the line s s appl. Gorgeous open concept liv & din rm w/ hrdwd flrs. Mstr w/ ensuite & his/hers closets. 2 full baths. + Den, Lrg terrace with SW view. Award winning building.

5 $7

TRENDY CORKTOWN!! One the hottest areas in the city. Gorgeous totally Renovated, Spectacular Architectural Design, bright sunlit detached home, Large deck, Cathedral Ceilings, W/O to balconies, 3 washrooms, Sauna and much more.

00

,99

99

$8

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8,8

HUGE 50 X 201FT LOT!! Incredible spacious 4 level backsplit with gorgeous landscaped lot. 4 bdrm, 3 wshrm. Open concept liv/din rm w/ bay window. Eat-in kit w/ skylight. Huge fam rm w/ walk-out to backyard. Amazing fin bsmnt. Double car garage + 7 car pkg! A must see for $1,188,000!

9

00

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99

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INCREDIBLE STONEHAVEN BEAUTY!

00

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$

4 $9

SPACIOUS SIDESPLIT ON LARGE LOT Huge 4bd home on large 52.75X108 ft lot. Open concept lr/ dr. Hrdwd flrs. Big kitchen. Bsmt has separate ent., kitchen, bath + 3 bdrms. Lots of parking + built-in garage. Very high demand location.

8 1,1

Huge 4+1 Bdrm. Modern Eat-In Kit W/ S S Appl., Breakfast Area & W/O To Deck Overlooks Stunning Backyard Oasis W/ Salt Water Pool. Fam Rm W/ Fireplace, Surround Sound + W/O Main Floor Den. Gorgeous Fin Bsmnt W/ Wine Cellar, Rec Rm, 5th Br + W/O To Yard.

00

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• #1 in Toronto (Central, East and West combined) By Units of Listings Sold for All Companies of All Brokers and Sales Representatives for 2015 and 2016.* • #1 Individual Re/Max Agent in Canada** • #2 Individual Re/Max Agent World Wide***

00

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$4

HEART OF LONG BRANCH! Gorgeous New townhome, Thousands spent on upgrades, 1+1 bdrm, bright sunlit, open concept layout, upgraded laminate floor, granite counter tops, s/s appl., w/o to balcony. Amazing Value.

0

,90

69

$3

WEST VILLAGE CONDO!! Stunning 1 + 1 Bdrm, desirable West Exposure! Spacious Layout, Open Concept Kitchen W/ Quartz Counters & S S Appl, Lrg Liv/ Din Area, Den, Ensuite Laundry/Storage & Much More!! Close To Amenities, Highways & Downtown!

FREE PROFESSIONAL BUYER SERVICE:

WEST REALTY INC., Brokerage Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated

• Find out about the newest homes on the market that meet your needs • Get more informed about the specific areas and how to get the best price • Find out how to get the best mortgage rates and saving programs, plus much more - Call today!! *According to a study of MLS data prepared by an independent auditor of Real Estate Statistics. **for # of Transactions 2015. ***for Dollar Volume 2015 and 2016.


SELL Your Home FASTER and for MORE MONEY! • Your Home Advertised 24 Hours a Day Until Sold • Your Home Advertised to Millions on www.GetLeo.com • Learn the Secrets of Selling your Home, without ineffective Open Houses

• Your Home Listed in Full Colour Print Ads Until It’s Sold • Our team of Professionals for the same price as hiring a single broker • Get up to $10,000 no interest for 60 days**** • Total service guarantee in writing

• Your Home Sold Guaranteed, or I’ll Buy it**** • Competitive Rates, Exceptional service • Award Winning Results! • In Depth Neighbourhood Report for each Property We Sell

FREE Confidential Home Evaluations. $

9 1,9

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00 ,9 $1

50

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60

,00

0 ,7 $1

50

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MINUTES FROM GTA

100’ X 260’ LOT!!

AMAzING NEIGHBOURHOOD!!

KLEINBURG CROWN ESTATES

Large Completely Renovated 2-Storey Home Nestled On Gorgeous 12+ Acre Property in Caledon!! Must Be Seen.

Beautiful 4 Bedroom Ranch-Style Bungaloft Situated On A Gorgeous Lot!! Large Eat-In Kitchen, Spacious Living/Dining Areas, Separate Family Room, Finished Walk-out Basement, Inground Pool, Pizza Oven & Much More! Close To Highways, University & New Subway - Excellent Opportunity!

Beautiful 4 Bdrm, 2-Stry Home, Premium 58’ Lot In High-Demand ‘Parkwoods’!! Open Concept Liv/Din Rms, Gourmet Kit W/ Granite Counters, Lrg Master Bdrm W/ Ensuite, Fin Bsmnt, Amazing Backyard Retreat! Close To Top-Rated Schools, Transit & Highways!

Prestigious upgraded 4 bedroom 2 storey, approximately 4300 sqft of opulence, situated on 55ft lot. 20 ft ceiling in family room, gourmet kitchen with granite countertop, 5 bathrooms, ensuites in all bedrooms, 3 car garage, simply breathtaking.

0 ,00 49 0 , $1

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$

RESIDENCES OF LAWRENCE PARK! Rarely offered, beautiful and extremely quiet unit with over 1,500 sq ft. 2 Large w/o balconies, prime parking and locker. Huge master with 6 pc. Ensuite. Don’t hesitate, won’t last.

4.6 ACRE ESTATE HOME! Large Raised Bungalow on Secluded Private Estate with flat land surrounded by gorgeous forest and stream. Sunroom with Wrap Around Deck. High w/o Basement. Double Car Garage. Caledon/Bolton.

9 $8

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STEPS TO LAKE!

TORONTO DETACHED! Lrg Well Maintained Detached 3 Bdrm Home Located In HighDemand Toronto Neighbourhood! Spacious Layout Features Comb. Liv/Din, Oversized Kitchen/Breakfast Area, Master Bdrm W/ Walk-In Closet, Huge Private Backyard Retreat & Much More! Amazing Corso Italia Opportunity.

ATTENTION INVESTORS!

GORGEOUS CHURCHILL MEADOWS 2 STOREY!

RARE OPPORTUNITY IN PRIME LOCATION!

Spacious 3-Bedroom Raised Bungalow On Large 75 x 200 Ft Ravine Lot! Open Concept Main Floor, Separate Entrance To Full In-Law Suite, Parking For 6 Cars. Private, Mature Lot. Future Development Opportunity! Located Close To Transit (GO Station) & Hwy 404. Amazing Value.

3 bdrm, 3 wshrm on a quiet family street. Updated hrdwd flrs thruout, crown moulding, beautiful mstr bdrm retreat w/ spa-like ensuite, lrg w/i closet, formal liv & din rms, fam rm w/ gas fireplace, updated kit w S S Appl, w/o to patio & lrg private yard. Close to all amenities.

Spacious 3 Bed, 2 Bath. Same Owner For Almost 50 Years! Hardwood Throughout, Private Cul-De-Sac, Steps To Subway Station, Highly Rated Schools. And Plenty Of Parking. Live-In or Invest.

$

9 69

,90

0!!

9 $6

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00

VALUE PLUS!!

PRESTIGIOUS YONGE CORRIDOR

Lrg 3 Bdrm Semi Situated On A huge 52’ x 180’ Lot! Open Concept Liv/Din, Eat-In Kitchen, Lrg Bdrms, Fin Bsmnt W/ Kit, Attached Garage, 3-Car Driveway & many extras! Close To all conveniences.

Bright and Spacious 2+1 Bdrm Corner Unit With a Split Layout. 2 Full wshrms, Eat-In Kit, Lrg Liv & Din Areas, Ensuite Laundry, Many Updates thru-out. 2 Parking Spaces and oversized Locker. Wonderful Amenities just Steps to Transit and All Conveniences.

9 CAR DRIVEWAY IN THE CITY!

Great Alderwood location has two garages with hydro. 135ft depth. Hardwood floors thru-out. Eat-in kitchen with stainless steel appliances and walkout to back porch/yard. Open concept living/dining room. 3 bedrooms. Finished basement with bath. Close to TTC, hwy, shopping, etc.

$3

69

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0 $3

STUNNING KING’S TERRACE CONDO Fully Reno’d Condo Overlooking the Ravine. Brand new S.S. Appl., Hardwood Flrs throughout, Parking & Locker, just steps to amenities, shops and restaurants. A Must See!

0 ,00 99 6 $

49

,90

0 $3

ROYAL YORK & EGLINTON! Home ownership in prime location!! Spacious 2 bdrm corner suite Co-op, open concept liv/ din rm, w/o to balcony, low maintenance fee includes all utilities & prop taxes, transit, school, church & shopping all just steps away.

47

,00

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TRIDEL CONDO! Spacious layout 2+1 bdrm suite in demand location. Solarium overlooks rooftop patio, open concept liv rm, formal din rm, mstr w/ full ensuite, steps to transit & close to all amenities.

,00

0

DEMAND WESTBROOK ESTATE Luxury built by Trinity, Stone & Brick Exterior, 4+2 Bdrm. Dble dr entry to lrg foyer, spacious principal rms, custom Cherry Barzotti Kitchen, fab Mstr bdrm retreat, gas fireplace, 6 pc ensuite, prof. Finished bsmnt, landscaped lot.

0 ,90 49 9 $

Stunning 2800 sq ft 4 year old 4 Bdrm 2 Storey with $150K in Upgrades. Facing Conservation Area With Beautiful Views. Chef’s Kitchen with Quartz. Corian Bath. 9 Ft Ceilings. Backyard Retreat. Walk to Beach and GO.

0 ,00 50 $8

00

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| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

GUARANTEED HOME SELLING SYSTEM

29

GORGEOUS CENTURY HOME Rarely offered 3 bed, 2 bath, detached 2.5 Storey brick/ stone home. Old world charm with designer decor & renovations. Wrap around porch, finished basement, fenced yard. Must be seen.

0 ,90 99 7 $

0 ,90 99 7 $

RARE DOUBLE LOT! Stylish 3 Bdrm West T.O. 2-Storey, Situated On Rare 80’ Wide Lot!! Lrg Open Liv Rm, Sept. Din Rm, Fin W/O Bsmnt. Amazing Retreat In The City!! Build/Develop, Great Investment Close to Transit & Stockyards.

0 ,00 78 $6

STUNNING RENOVATED BUNGALOW Premium 81’ lot, open concept layout, gleaming hrdwd flrs, custom reno’d kitchen, granite countertop, bkfst bar, s s appl, originally 4 bdrm, converted to 3, master with sitting area, sept. Ent. To fin bsmnt, fully fenced lot, garage & many extras.

0 ,00 59 $6

VIBRANT KING WEST!! Spacious & Well Appointed 2+1 Bdrm In Trendy King West Village!! Updated Split-Layout w/ Lrg Liv & Sept Din Areas, Modern Kit W/Huge Pantry, Master W/ Spa-Like Ensuite, w/Solarium. just Steps To Transit, Restaurants, Theatres & Downtown!!

AMAzING VALUE!! Large & Beautifully Maintained 2-Storey Semi. Updated And Move-In Ready, Features Spacious Living/Dining Room Combo, Eat-In Kitchen, Spacious Master With W/I Closet, lrg Garage & Much More! Close To York U, Parks & Transit.

0! ,90 49 2 $

0 ,00 89 $2

HIGH PARK SUPER VALUE! Bloor West Village completely renovated studio across from High Park. Short walk to subway. Low maintenance includes taxes, utilities, cable, parking and locker. Fantastic opportunity to live in vibrant area with access to downtown.

FANTASTIC VALUE! Renovated 2 Bdrm Unit, spacious open concept layout. Gorgeous kitchen with granite counter tops, upgraded light fixtures. Well maintained with Hrdwd flrs thru-out. Lrg ensuite laundry room with plenty of storage space. + huge parking spot. Close to all amenities!

****Certain Conditions may apply. Not intended to solicit persons under contract. ReMax West Realty Inc. does not guarantee the sale of your home. Exclusively offered by Frank Leo.

Copyright© 2009 Frank Leo

insidetoronto.com

SEE MORE PHOTOS: www.GetLeo.com Call Today 416-917-LION (5466) and Start Packing!


Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

30

Real Estate ANABELA SERRA Sales Representative

416 400-5825 anserra@trebnet.com

Royal Lepage Porritt Real Estate, Brokerage

270 SCARLETT RD. UNIT # 804

Independently Owned and Operated

www.homefinder.ca

Beautiful & Sun Filled. One Of The Larger End Units Condo Apt Located In Exclusive Lambton Square. Tastefully Reno’d With Sunny S/W Exposure. Condo Features 2+1 Br (Den W/ Closets, Easily Converts Into 3rd Br). Large Kitchen, Living & Dining Area, 2 Baths (1 Is Ensuite In Master Br) & Ensuite Laundry. This Condo Apt Is Located In A Great Location & Close To Many Amenities (Public Transit, Hwys, Faces The Golf Course, Humber River).

OPEN HOUSE SUN 2-4 PM ON

CTI

ICE

U ED

R

PR

KATHY CZULINSKI Sales Representative

212 KERR STREET # 606, OAKVILLE

Welcome to “Arbour Glen” in Trendy Kerr 416 949-7653 Village. 2 Bed condo, close to 1000 Sq ft, 1 parking spot. Renovated, hardwood floors, short walk to Old Oakville, boutique shops and the lake. Commuter’s dream, close to GO station. Royal LePage Real Estate Services Ltd. $425,000

GAIL SAXON

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 2-4 PM

Sales Representative

416 232-9000

BEAUTIFUL GARDENS - 8 PARMALEA CRES.

Re/Max Professionals Inc., Brokerage Independently Owned and Operated

$1,395,000. Super Spacious 4bdrm/3baths, Sep-LR-DR-FAM RMS. Gourmet-Island Kitchen. Kingsize Mstr.. F/Basement. Child Safe Cres.

DETACHED!

0

,00

5 44

$

HOT LOT! 95 DORCHESTER DR • D SECTION

MARION GOARD

Detached 4 bdrm home in sought

Sales Representative

after D section! Huge private lot! No neighbours on sides or in front! 6-car

KIM CAPPER

parking! Immaculately kept! Move

D: 647-229-4589 O: 905-456-1000

in ready! Freshly painted, hardwood

Sales Representative

www.kimcapper.com

UNIT 210-9 MICHAEL POWER PLACE

330-5201

Fabulous updated, west-facing, 1 bedroom + den mariongoard@kw.com in Port Royal Place. Dark wood floors, stainless steel appliances, granite kitchen counter & breakfast bar. Master bedroom with ensuite bath and walk-in closet. Underground parking and locker. Keller Williams Edge Don’t miss out on this move-in-ready suite! 905

Realty Inc., Brokerage

www.unit210-9michaelpowerplace.com

Independently Owned and Operated

floors, Finished bsmt with wood

$648,800

Realty Services Inc., Brokerage†

burning fireplace! Take the tour!

REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY GUARANTEED SOLD or I will Buy*

PATRICIA A. BREWITT

RAV

Sales Representative

Working for you with professionalism, honesty, and integrity 416 620-0070 DIRECT: 416 294-9016 www.etobicokerealestateagent.com OFFICE:

HomeLife/Response Realty Inc., Brokerage* *Each Brokerage Independently Owned & Operated

Elaine Pearson

MURADIA

Real Estate Broker

LY NDA K NAGGS SALES REPRESENTATIVE

647-282-3773 • 416-745-2300 lknaggs@trebnet.com Re/Max West Realty Inc., Brokerage Independently Owned and Operated

Happy Thanksgiving

Neetu Arora insidetoronto.com

BROKER

Sales Representative Loving Helping People Buying and Selling their Homes for 25+ years!!

416-745-2300 • 416-721-5145 www.elainepearson.com RE/MAX West Realty Inc Brokerage

Remax West Realty Inc. Brokerage

416 898 5160 info@neetusell.com www.neetusell.com

GAIL RODRIGUES Sales Representative

Market Evaluation

www. SaleGuarantee .ca

416 234-2424 Servicing Etobicoke and West Toronto for 35 Years!

Sutton Group Old Mill Realty Inc., Brokerage

LUISA PICCIRILLI Sales Representative

416-760-0600

1-888-247-0277 Realty Specialists Inc., Brokerage Independently Owned And Operated *Some conditions may apply.

Independently Owned and Operated

To advertise in this section please call

Brian Watts 416-774-2238


MOVING & RENOVATION

SALE

After 52 years, the flagship Brook & Braddock Opticians location at 2917 Bloor St. W. has moved and amalgamated with their other location at 3101 Bloor St. W. RENOVATION

CHURCH ON THE QUEENSWAY Sunday Mornings at 9:30 a.m. and 11:11 a.m

theChurch.to

SALE

Renovation sale on frames, sunglasses and much more.

31 | Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

1536 THE QUEENSWAY, TORONTO • 416-255-014

3101 Bloor Street West 416-233-2611 & 416-233-4030 www.brookandbraddock.com

Real Estate

Knee Brace, Back Support, Walker, Scooter, Electric Wheelchair, Bath Chair, Tub Safety Rail, Bed Safety Rail, Electric Bed, Orthotics, Pressure Socks For Swollen, Tired And Achy Legs

Etobicoke Guardian t 1SFTT 3VO t t homefinder.ca

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

32

SOCIAL

Anniversaries

Weech Family/Photo

Lee Family/Photo

William and Elizabeth Weech marked their diamond wedding anniversary on Sept. 14, 2017. They were married at St. Teresa’s Catholic Church at 100 Tenth St. in 1957. Following the ceremony they had brunch and speeches at the Mayfair Restaurant at 1184 The Queensway (now KB Sushi and Asian Kitchen). Afterwards, the guests went to a hall for sandwiches and for dancing. The couple departed that night on their honeymoon ight to New York City.

Gerald Lee and Georgette LeBlanc Lee celebrated not only their wedding anniversary on July 20, 2017 but also Georgette’s 90th birthday on March 5, 2017. The Etobicoke couple met in 1956 in Toronto and were married the year after at Holy Family Church on King Street West. Gerald was a technical producer for CBC for 35 years and retired in 1987. They have three children and seven grandchildren and still live in the Rexdale home they purchased the year they were married.

FLASHBACK Â?Â?Â?

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33

Lawn bowling club marks 100 years

The James Garden Lawn Bowling Club celebrated 100 years this August with a special centennial tournament, dignitary remarks and plaque presentation. City councillor John Campbell and MPP Yvan Baker were in attendance and participated in a ceremonial bowl to kick off the tourney. The club actually began as the Old Mill Lawn Bowling Club in 1917 where it thrived for almost 50 years before moving to James Gardens when the city appropriated the Old Mill lands for the expanding TTC subway line. James Gardens was purchased in 1955 from the James family as part of the Humber River flood plain acquisition program. After members petitioned council, part of the new park was set aside for lawn bowling. The James Gardens Lawn Bowling Club officially opened on June 14, 1969.

| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

SOCIAL

Staff/Metroland

insidetoronto.com

(Clockwise from top left) James Garden Lawn Bowling Club’s Sue Hathway dresses for success during James Gardens’ 100th anniversary lawn bowling tournament held at the Edenbridge Drive grounds on Saturday, Aug. 19; Earl Nixon puts a ball into play against the Etobicoke Lawn Bowling club; The Club’s Julia Nixon (left) and Helen Bonnyman talk it over between ends against the Etobicoke Lawn Bowling Club.


Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

34

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35

David Ernest Hornell: Victoria Cross recipient Born in Toronto on Jan. 26, 1910, Mimico’s David Ernest Hornell would go on to become the Royal Canadian Air Force’s (RCAF) first ever Victoria Cross (VC) recipient for his Second World War heroics. After enlisting in the RCAF in 1941, Hornell quickly earned his flight wings and was commissioned by the following year – completing 60 operational missions and 600 hours flying during his time as a flight lieutenant. It was for his brave actions during his final mission on June 24, 1944 that Hornell was recognized with the United Kingdom’s highest award for “gallantry in the face of the enemy.” Hornell was flying a Canso amphibian aircraft over the North Atlantic when a German submarine U-1225 was spotted 120 miles north of the Shetland Islands in Scotland. Despite the fact that his

Department of National Defence/ Canadian Forces

Mimico’s David Ernest Hornell was the Royal Canadian Air Force’s first-ever Victoria Cross recipient for the Second World War heroics that claimed his life in June 1944. starboard engine was crippled by anti-aircraft fire from the U-boat, Hornell “decided to press home his attack, knowing that with

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| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

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As one of the oldest assemblages of buildings in the city, the Lakeshore Psychiatric Hospital grounds also boast perhaps one of Toronto’s most fascinating — and storied — histories. Originally built as a branch of the Toronto Asylum for the Insane, the hospital officially opened its doors in 1890 as the Mimico Asylum — the first such institution in Canada to be built on the cottage system. According to the New Toronto Historical Society (NTHS), then-Toronto Asylum superintendent Dr. Daniel K. Clark worked closely with provincial architect Kivas Tully to create a “villagelike setting” on the 52-hectare site. Most of the asylum’s buildings, including the Assembly Hall and many of the facility’s famous “cottages,” were built by

the patients — although none were paid for that labour, nor, for that matter, any other carpentry, cooking, cleaning or farming labour they performed until the late 1950s. According to City of Toronto records, the Assembly Hall was constructed in 1897 to provide the patients with a recreational facility: “As such, it served as a place of healing, celebration and worship,” reads a city report from 1998, which notes that the second floor of the Assembly Hall was used for weekly dances, while on Sundays it was utilized as a chapel. The patients also constructed a cricket pitch on the grounds in 1896, and soon after established the Mimico Asylum Cricket Club — which, according to the NTHS, was the “team to beat” in the early 1900s.

By the late 1930s, the hospital had fallen into such a state of repair, the NTHS said it was described as a “fire trap” during a routine inspection. Real revitalization, however, wasn’t undertaken until Dr. H.C. Moorehouse took over as superintendent in 1959. Renamed the Lakeshore Psychiatric Hospital in 1964, the facility ultimately closed its doors in 1979, but many of its buildings remain on the site — which was designated a heritage property in 1988 — today. While much of the site forms part of Humber College’s Lakeshore Campus, the Assembly Hall is still in use as a City of Toronto cultural community centre, The Gatehouse is an assistance centre for victims of childhood abuse, and Cumberland House is used by the Jean Tweed Centre.


37

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| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

38

COMMUNITY

Newspaper staff rallied to cover Hurricane Hazel Edition following the disaster full of tragic, heroic stories NORM NELSON nnelson@insidetoronto.com Hurricane Hazel hit Toronto hardest in the overnight hours of Oct. 15-16, 1954. And on Oct. 21, the Advertiser (the forerunner to the Etobicoke Guardian) put out its regular Thursday edition. Needless to say, coverage was extensive, including the entire front page. Here’s just a small sample of what was documented. ACTIVE ROLE: The Advertiser staff did more than just document the tragedy, and the heroism is evidenced by the first paragraph of this front page story: “In this time of great need the Advertiser together with the Lakeshore councils and almost every business firm and service organization has contributed to the Hurricane Relief Fund and will assist in the collection of funds.” SCOUTS AND ROVERS ASSISTED: That was an actual subhead in the paper which recounted, “A total of more than 900 hours duty was chalked up by Lakeshore Scouts and Rovers in the devastated areas of Long Branch and Lakeview over the weekend.” Their volunteer contribution culminated when “Twenty Rovers were sworn in Monday night for service in Etobicoke as police deputies. They served eight hours each.” The paper quoted E.F. Brennan, assistant district commissioner of Lakeshore Rover Scouts, as saying, “Rover crews will continue to serve as long as they are required.” THE GRIM SEARCHERS: That was the headline over a photo showing rescue workers, with this quote from one of them: “The aftermath is worse than the flood. I will continue searching for bodies but I am terrified that I shall find one.” RESIDENT IGNORED WARNING: That’s the actual subhead in the paper, and here’s the story recap: “Although he had been asked to vacate his home, Robert Bulmer of 43rd Street,

O See CHILDREN’S, page 39

Edwin Feeney/Toronto Star Archive

Jean Hibbert/Toronto Star Archive

Edwin Feeney/Toronto Star Archive

(Clockwise from top) Thirty-eight residents of Raymore Drive were killed when raging flood waters of Hurricane Hazel swept away 14 homes; Safe, but homeless, this family finds shelter in Long Branch high school. Roads were impassable in Etobicoke and motorists, unable to tell where road was, ran their cars into water-filled ditches. Hundreds of families are homeless; Lifting a huge log in cleaning debris from the Humber flood basin are three members of the 48th Highlanders. Photo caption at the time noted: “Armed with flame throwers, bulldozers and an amphibious “alligator,” more than 800 soldiers are in the midst of an all-out, and perhaps final search for the bodies still missing since the area was devastated by Hurricane Hazel.


39

Children’s Aid scrambled to track down wards O Continued from page 38 having survived other floods, failed to realize the danger of his position until their house left its mooring and carried him and his wife down 43rd Street.� The story goes on to say that the house “by a stroke of good fortune� hit a large vehicle stalled in the street and became wedged. As the story notes, “The Bulmers spent the entire night in the water-filled house.� At dawn they were rescued, and Mr. Bulmer was quoted in the Advertiser as saying, “We gave thanks to God for our deliverance.� CHILD LOST: The Children’s Aid Society had to scramble to track down children in their care, and not all made it, as this story sadly indicates: “The Children’s Aid Society has located 400 of their foster children who had been placed in families whose homes were wrecked by the flood waters. Only one child, in Woodbridge, was lost. In the Lakeshore, 17 families had 50 foster children under their care. All are safe.� EDITOR’S NOTE: The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) was formed directly out of the aftermath of Hurricane Hazel which actually did most of its dam-

age not with the winds (which just managed to qualify as ‘hurricane’ status) but through the extensive flooding. A TRCA history says 210 mm of rain fell in that 12-hour period over night: “For our region, hurricane Hazel

remains the most severe flood in recorded history. In total, 81 lives were lost and thousands of people were left homeless.� Visit the TRCA’s dedicated website on the weather event at http://www. hurricanehazel.ca.

FLASHBACK Â?Â?Â?

| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

COMMUNITY

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R. C. Ragsdale/Toronto Star Archive

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Courtesy/TRCA

insidetoronto.com

(Top) A motorist gets stranded during Hurricane Hazel’s downpour. 1954; (Middle) circa Oct. 19, 1954: Truck loaded with refugees is pulled out of a ooded area at Long Branch by a tractor. Bungalows were shifted and tossed like building blocks. A gaping, water-ďŹ lled hole on Lake Ontario’s waterfront marks the spot where one house and an auto stood. The destructive forces also doomed two small communities whose residents had long deďŹ ed the threat of oods to live alongside the creek. Today “condemnedâ€? signs are posted on front doors of homes. (Bottom) The Humber River spilled over its banks during Hurricane Hazel in 1954 - a rain storm that forced many people out of their homes and left thousands in southern Ontario homeless. This year is the 10th anniversary of the river’s heritage designation.


Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

40

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41 | Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

COMMUNITY

Happy Anniversary!

Justin Greaves/Metroland

Metroland Media Toronto staff from editorial, sales, circulation, distribution and customer service gather on the lawn at 175 Gordon Baker Rd. to honour the Etobicoke Guardian’s 100th anniversary. The entire Guardian team thanks you for your support and patronage of our product. Here’s to another 100 years.

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42 Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

Barwood Concierge is a customer service business that offers an extra set of hands. Owner and operator Caroline Barrett saw a growing aging market and the need for help, so she opened up Barwood Concierge in June of 2015. “I was always the go-to girl for my friends, the reliable and responsible one,‘The mother.’ I took care of my friends, my friends’ pets & homes while they were away,” she says.“It’s in my nature to help and with my customer service background this business all worked out. I saw people struggling to keep up with every day chores and I knew that I could and I wanted to do it for them especially growing seniors market.” A lot of seniors need help getting around or house cleaning and they can get lonely. Barwood Concierge is here to take care of all of that for you. 647-895-7079 caroline@barwoodconcierge.com www.barwoodconcierge.com

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43

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

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45

Remembering the teen who swam Lake Ontario Local newspapers not only covered the historic first crossing of Lake Ontario on Sept. 9, 1954 by 16-year-old teenager Marilyn Bell and her coach Gus Ryder – both from Etobicoke – they also chipped in support. As noted in the article below, first to chip in with “a small fund

for her� was the local Advertiser. The big city newspaper – The Toronto Daily Star (now apart of our present day company) – then became an important major sponsor. All that was necessary because of the big controversy of the day when the Canadian National Exhi-

bition (CNE) offered famed American distance swimmer Florence Chadwick $10,000 upon completion of the first lake crossing. Bell, already an acclaimed marathon swimmer (who had just become the first woman to finish the well known 26-mile Atlantic City Marathon), decided to under-

take a simultaneous swim. To make a long story short, Chadwick had to drop out and it was Bell who completed the crossing in just under 21 hours, welcomed by literally thousands of fans at Toronto’s Sunnyside Beach. The CNE, in a classy move, ended up giving Bell the $10,000.

If you want a quick recap of either Bell or Ryder (who was also renowned in his own rite as a coach of both elite and grassroots athletes), check out their profiles in the Etobicoke and Canadian sports hall of fame. They’re both there! Here’s the story from back in the day.

| Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

COMMUNITY

FLASHBACK Â?Â?Â?

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Toronto Public Library/Image

James Gordon/Toronto Star Archive

(Clockwise from top left) Former Toronto Mayor Nathan Phillips (right) presents swimmers Cliff Lumsdon and Marilyn Bell with merit awards in 1957; (Right) In 1955 Marilyn Bell swam across the English Channel. Here, Gus Ryder points through fog to goal, six miles away; This illustration published in the Sept. 16, 1954 edition of the Lakeshore Advertiser. /][ ZM^MITML PQ[ \Z]M OZMI\VM[[ _PMV QV X]JTQK NWZ ITT \W PMIZ PM NWZOI^M \PM +6- NWZ \PMQZ QV[]T\ \W PQU[MTN 5IZQTaV IVL W]Z W\PMZ OZMI\ 4ISM[PWZM [_QUUMZ +TQNN 4]U[LMV ,76Ĺ“< ;-44 +)6),1)6; ;07:< /][ TWWS[ I\ 5IZQTaVĹ“[ OZMI\ IKKWU XTQ[PUMV\ I[ IV WJRMK\ TM[[WV VW\ WVTa NWZ \PM LQZMK\WZ[ WN \PM +6- J]\ NWZ ITT +IVILI Ĺ”<PM = ; PI[ OZMI\ I\P TM\M[ IVL PQOP [\IVLIZL[ J]\ _M U][\ VW\ [MTT +IVILQIV[ [PWZ\ Ĺ• PM [IQL )[ UW[\ WN ][ [I\ Ja W]Z ZILQW[ WZ _IQ\ML I\ \PM _I\MZNZWV\ JZMI\PTM[[Ta _M TQ\\TM \PW]OP\ WN \PM OZMI\ LMKQ [QWV[ UILM Ja /][ :aLMZ I[ 5IZQTaV JMOIV \W [PW_ [QOV[ WN M`PI][\QWV

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insidetoronto.com

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Frank Teskey/Toronto Star Archives


Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

46

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Radios, automobiles, electric lights mark the 1920s TAMARA SHEPHARD tshephard@insidetoronto.com The Canadian economy grew rapidly in the 1920s after a short, but severe, recession in the immediate postwar years. The 1920s saw an unprecedented rise in Canadians’ standard of living. Luxury items like radios, automobiles, electric lights and flush toilets became commonplace. Electrical household goods and appliances made life easier. The auto industry grew with an increase in public demand for cars. Car sales stimulated secondary industries, like gas stations, service stations and highway construction. The Etobicoke Guardian’s predecessor, the Lakeshore Advertiser, published advertising for everything from women’s clothing and toiletries to radios and automobiles. A late 1920s gyrator washing machine carried a cash price of $81.50. A 1926 Hoover Electric Cleaner, or vacuum, cost $38.95 in cash. Statistics Canada reported prices for a Canadian family budget of staple foods, fuel, lighting and

Toronto Public Library/Microfilm

(Top) An ad for a Rogers radio and cabinet by Stannah - The Radio Man at 1335 Lakeshore Rd. Published in the Advertiser on Sept. 14, 1939; (Above) This ad by Toronto Bargain Stores Ltd. at 813 Lakeshore Rd. was published in the Advertiser on Sept. 28, 1939. rent throughout the 1920s. In 1920, a pound of sirloin steak cost $0.39 a pound; a dozen eggs cost $0.70, milk was $0.15 a quart, butter cost $0.63 a pound, plain white bread was $0.09 a pound. A weekly food budget fell from $15.99 in 1920 to $11.34 by 1929, Statistics Canada reported. In 1920, a month’s rent

cost $24.80 and rose to $27.92 by decade’s end. The T. Eaton Co. Limited Fall and Winter Catalogue 1920-21 prominently advertised the retailer would pay the shipping to an Ontario or Quebec customer’s nearest post office or railroad station on all orders of $5 or more. “Did it ever occur to you — the many wonderful facilities this Eaton Shopping Book affords,” the 612-page catalogue begins. “You — who may live far from any big city, or far from the opportunity of having displayed for your selection an extensive assortment of merchandise to suit your whims or purse — did it ever occur to you how close this book really brings such an opportunity?” The catalogue advertised myriad items of women’s clothing, including 35 pages of full-length dress coats. Phonographs started at $75 with a page of Victor Records starting at $1 each. Eaton even sold its name-brand house paint for $6.30 a gallon in the catalogue: “Fall atmosphere will allow the paint to adhere slowly and thoroughly,” the ad read.


47 | Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

COMMUNITY

REAL LAKESIDE GRANDEUR

Justin Greaves/Metroland

Denise Harris, chief historian for the Etobicoke Historical Society, (left) and Jaan Pill, amateur historian and Long Branch resident who runs the Preserved Stories website, sit inside Montgomery’s Inn on Tuesday, Sept. 12.

Local historians preserve Etobicoke’s past for future generations CYNTHIA REASON reason@insidetoronto.com

in New Toronto, my parents grew up here and I grew up here. And I just want people to know that New Toronto has a history we can be proud of,” said Gamble, the founding president of the New Toronto Historical Society (NTHS). “Our mission, as a society, is to preserve and publicize the town, because it’s a wonderful place.” To those ends, the 25-member NTHS just recently published the third printing of its selfdirected – and highly popular – walking tour of New Toronto. But for Gamble, Pill and Harris, bringing stories about Etobicoke’s past back into the day-to-day lives of local residents is about more than a walk down memory lane. The history of Etobicoke, Harris said, reveals as much about its present as it does its past. “When you really start learning about what it was like back then and how far we’ve come, it helps to place where we are today,” she said. “It also makes you think about what our legacy is going to be, and what people in the next 50 years are going to think looking back at what we’re doing now. It’s fascinating.”

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When it comes to the important business of preserving Etobicoke’s history, one of the biggest challenges faced by the subject’s most prolific local chroniclers is, ironically enough, time. Be it the questions that flood her inbox following the bi-weekly publication of her History Corner column here in the Etobicoke Guardian, or the requestfor-information calls she fields as heritage officer for the Etobicoke Historical Society, Denise Harris’ research often elicits more enthusiastic feedback than she has hours in the day to respond to. “I get a lot of calls and emails from people asking everything under the sun – from my help finding out about long lost relatives, to questions about the name of a hotel they vaguely remember on such-andsuch street,” the life-long Etobian laughed. “It’s great fun. The research is what really appeals to me, and most of the time I can dig up something for them. Other times, people just call me up to talk about their memories of the places I’ve written about.”

Recording such oral histories down in Long Branch is a project recently taken on by Harris’ fellow amateur historian, Jaan Pill. “These are the kinds of stories which are ephemeral – they simply come and go. Often in families, there are all kinds of memories there, but unless they’re recorded and preserved, they disappear,” said Pill, who runs the website PreservedStories.com “In recent years, I’ve made a point of speaking to people in their 80s and 90s in Long Branch and elsewhere and recording them, with the intention of one day putting together a book.” A retired school teacher, Pill’s interest in local history was first piqued back in 2011, when he got involved in a successful letter-writing campaign protesting the potential sale to a developer of the former Parkview Public School – located on the site of the archeological remains of Col. Samuel Smith’s homestead on Forty First Street. While Pill is a relatively new Etobicoke history enthusiast, for third-generation New Torontonian Wendy Gamble, it’s been a life-long passion. “My grandparents lived

Actual view from Vita


Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

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Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017 |

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PEOPLE

Celebrating 150 years of Canada’s history Join us monthly for a celebration of Canada’s sesquicentennial. Our guest speakers will share the rich history and traditions of a different province or territory each month. Get to know your Canada and collect Delmanor Passport stamps. Wednesday, October 25th at 2:30 pm - Yukon Wednesday, November 15th at 2:30 pm - Northwest Territories Wednesday, December 6th at 2:30 - Prince Edward Island Refreshments and desserts from the featured province will be served. This special event is FREE. Space is limited! RSVP (416) 233-0725

(416) 233-0725 4180 Dundas St W, Etobicoke

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Edmund Peachey: West Deane Park and Valhalla Inn developer After falling into the home building business having acquiring two vacant lots in North York from a friend in 1929, Edmund Peachey would go to become one of Etobicoke’s most noted housing and hotel developers. After selling a home he’d built on that original piece of land — a house he’d initially intended for his mother and sister — for a modest profit, the Canadian National Railway telegrapher used the proceeds to build and sell another. By 1944, Peachey had quit his job at CN to make a go of home building full time. His first major development was Etobicoke’s Chestnut Hills community at Dundas Street West and Islington Avenue. He went on to build more than 1,500 homes in westend Toronto. Peachey’s last major housing development — West Deane Park — was

Etobicoke Historical Society/Photo

Edmund Peachey built more than 1,500 homes in west-end Toronto. built in the early 1960s and named after his wife, Deane. Shortly thereafter, several of Edmund Peachey Homes Ltd.’s airport-area land holdings were rezoned,

compelling him to delve into the hotel business. Considered the crown jewel of his career, the Viking-themed Valhalla Inn opened to much fanfare in 1963.

Join the TTC Advisory Committee on Accessible Transit The TTC Advisory Committee on Accessible Transit (ACAT) drives ongoing public participation in decisions affecting accessible public transit in the City of Toronto. The Committee is comprised of volunteer members and reports to the Board of the TTC. Five (5) volunteer positions on the committee are open for a three-year term. Interested applicants must attend an information session at Toronto City Hall, 100 Queens Street W., Committee Room 2: • Tuesday, October 10 from 1 to 2:30 p.m., or • Tuesday, October 17 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Application forms will be distributed only to attendees after the seminars. Please note that closed captioning, as well as an ASL interpreter, will be available for both sessions.

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For more information, please call TTC Customer Service. Phone: 416-393-4636 (INFO) TTY: 416-393-4555 ttc.ca


51 | Etobicoke Guardian | Thursday, October 5, 2017

The City of Toronto holds public consultations as one way to engage residents in the life of their city.Toronto thrives on your great ideas and actions. We invite you to get involved.

Baby Point Wastewater Pumping Station Forcemain Municipal Class Environmental Assessment Study Notice of Study Comencement and Public Drop-in Event Study Overview The City ofToronto has initiated a Municipal Class Environmental Assessment (EA) Study to explore opportunities to improve reliability of an aging forcemain that serves the Baby Point Wastewater Pumping Station. The existing forcemain is located within Étienne Brûlé Park along the route indicated on the map within the Baby Point area, City ofToronto (see map).

team will be present to answer questions and discuss the next steps in the process.The second PIE will present the results of the evaluation and the selected preferred alternative. Notification of the PIEs will be advertised in the local community newspaper and notices will be mailed to residents within the study area.

The Process The study follows Schedule “B” of the Municipal Class Environmental Assessment (MCEA) process. The MCEA process provides members of the public and interested parties with opportunities to provide input at key stages of the study.The study will define the existing problem, consider and evaluate alternative solutions, assess impacts of the preferred solution, and identify measures to lessen any adverse impacts. The City invites you to learn more about the EA study and speak with the project team at our first Public Drop-in Event. Details are as follows: Date: Thursday, October 12, 2017 Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location: Humbercrest United Church, 16 Baby Point Rd.

Public Consultation

Michelle Louli Consultant Environmental Planner WSP Canada Group Limited 610 Chartwell Rd., Ste 300, Oakville, ON L6J 4A5 Tel.: 905-823-8500 Toll Free: 1-877-562-7947 Fax: 905-823-8503 Email: michelle.louli@wsp.com Visit: toronto.ca/babypointstudy Issue Date: September 28, 2017

Information will be collected in accordance with the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. With the exception of personal information, all comments will become part of the public record.

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Early discussions with the community will be critical to identify ways to reduce the impacts of this project on adjacent property owners, park users and pedestrians, while evaluating options and selecting the preferred solution.Two Public Drop-in Events (PIEs) are planned for this Class EA study. PIE 1 will present the problem opportunity statement, alternatives under examination, and the criteria used to evaluate alternatives.The project

We want to hear from you Public consultation is an important part of this study. Visit the project website for more information or contact us if you want to be placed on our mailing list for updates.


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