Hi all. I've been a year-long lurker, it's taken me this long to catch up, and I love the site!
I did a bit of guessing about what the mystery sign that the demolition of the World's Biggest Bookstore could be and I'm thinking the first two letters could be 'JU'. There's a reference in the Toronto Archives to William Junor Limited, China & Glass, 332 Yonge Street, from the 1950 collection of Yonge Street subway planning photographs. Plus, there's some no-pictures, request-only microfiche references to "William Junor, 332 Yonge, dinnerware, plates - March 21, 1934". That next-word-spaced 'C' could be 'China', so maybe its a billboard ad for the store. I know adding the 's' on 'Junors' kinda messes up the theory a bit, but maybe proper punctuation was less of a big deal, pre-war
This is the picture of the store from 1950.
View attachment 42180
Here's the link to the Archives page. I thought this would take you right to the page, but sadly, it's just the main page. If you type in 'Junor' into the search window, you'll get there.
https://gencat4.eloquent-systems.co...=City+of+Toronto+Archives&eloquentref=toronto
And they're actually still in business now, or some version of them...
http://www.junors.com/
I could, of course, be completely off-base. Any thoughts?