The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1954, Qupperneq 40

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1954, Qupperneq 40
38 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Spring 1954 WHAT MAKES TORONTO TICK ? by J. RAGNAR JOHNSON, Q.C. J. Ragnar Johnson, Q.C. Toronto is probably the most maligned community in North Amer- cia. Known to its critics alternately as Toronto the Good or Hog Town, it is the butt of more cartoon, gibes and calumny than any city of its size. The feeling has apparently existed for a long time, for in the days of the Fam- ily Compact, John Galt, the Scottish immigrant poet, called it “one of the worst blue-devil haunts on the face of the earth.” More recently, the Honour- able Mr. Justice Maybank of the Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench, when he represented South Centre Winnipeg in the House of Commons, vehemently shouted: “The City of Tor- onto has more grasping, greedy, unctuous people in it than any other city in the world.” One would scarcely quarrel with the sagacious verdict of a man who has become a high court justice, but one might reasonably wonder what would impel a man in public life to utter such fearful words. Even a casual observer does not have to be in Toronto long to come to a realization that here is a busy, energet- ic and bustling metropolis, the com- mercial and industrial heart of Can- ada— quiokly supplanting Montreal as its financial headquarters; an import- ant seat of learning and culture; and the nerve centre of the artistic, literary and theatrical life of our great country. Here scientific and medical contribu- tions to the world have been made, great business enterprises directed, books written, national magazines published, and television and radio programmes arranged and produced. Toronto is the headquarters of the Meteorological Service, the mailing centre of Canada, the home of the greatest mining Stock Exchange in the world, the air-hub of Eastern Canada with ultra modern airport facilities; and its citizens use nearly half a mil- lion telephones. It is the national head- quarters of several churches and ser- vice clubs and such institutions as the Canadian Red Cross, the Health League of Canada, the Canadian Na- tional Institute of the Blind, the Institute of International Affairs and many others. Located on the north shore of Lake Ontario, almost opposite the mouth of the Niagara River, Toronto was in the 15th and 16th centuries the south- ern end of the most important of the Indian trails connecting Lake Huron and Lake Ontario and the site was called “The Toronto Carrying Place”.
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