It is strange that a house would be built there during the ‘30s, in an out-dated Victorian style, instead of a store with apartment above (like all the others along Danforth by then).
Isn’t it odd that there’s a brick second floor on the building (furrier) next to the bank in 1930, yet it’s gone in the modern view and we can see an ?older? ?bay and gable? house behind? The ground floor is the same now as in 1930 (built onto the front of the house).