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  1. Happenings on the October calendar
  2. The legend of the phoenix
  3. Spicing up an election
  4. Land transfer tax — provincial party leaders’ answers receive a “realty” check
  5. Roseau River Reserve surrender — Dominion City newspaper said land should be put up for sale
  6. Provincial political parties respond to four election issues
  7. Miscellany to test your memory
  8. How do you pronounce “mic?”
  9. Our city’s “Mr. Winnipeg”
  10. Over-reliance on school property taxes
  11. Oak Hammock Marsh — legislature passed amendments to Wildlife Act to allow projects in protected areas
  12. Buchwald 38th inductee into Citizens Hall of Fame
  13. Wonderful world of whimsy
  14. Accidents will happen
  15. Land transfer tax — a burden on home buyers that is far from revenue-neutral as was first intended
  16. Substance defeats critics
  17. Oak Hammock Marsh — by the late 1960s, the bog had shrunk to a mere 60 hectares
  18. A few zingers and laughs, but leaders rarely strayed off-message
  19. A nostalgia trivia quiz
  20. A name for willful destruction
  21. 9/11 anniversary
  22. A downtown housing strategy
  23. Buffalo hunt — great slaughter by hide hunters was “stupendous” and short-sighted
  24. Real estate market doing significantly better than predicted at start of 2011
  25. Happenings on the September calendar
  26. Are you a baby boomer?
  27. Appeasement led to war
  28. Manitoba Education Financing Coalition — fighting unfair school property tax on behalf of all Manitobans
  29. Buffalo hunt — cows were selected for their extensive fat deposits, while bulls were generally considered as uselesss
  30. letspayfair.com campaign calls for removal of school taxes from property
  31. Slices of life on the golf course
  32. Names on the weather map
  33. Remembering “Smilin’ Jack”
  34. New residential offer to purchase — three recommendations made following review by real estate lawyer
  35. Buffalo hunt — early aboriginal hunters used jumps, pounds and traps to harvest bison’s bounty
  36. Report calls for clarification of knob and tube issue by insurers
  37. Trivia quiz
  38. Newspeak, bureaucracies or just jargon?
  39. Restoration of “royal” prefix
  40. Winnipeg in Bloom contest — Curb Appeal award went to entry on Masson Street
  41. Buffalo hunt — twice-annual hunt involved hundreds of Métis from Red River and White Horse Plains
  42. National association revises housing forecast for 2011 and 2012
  43. Word surprises — take this quiz and discover the thrill of correct word spelling
  44. Puzzling pair: flammable/inflammable
  45. Buzzing terrors absent
  46. Adverse effect of the land transfer tax
  47. A different way of voting — proportional representation system was once used in provincial elections
  48. MLS® housing market showed great strength last month
  49. Some clues that you’re getting older
  50. Readers query usage and spelling
  51. The saviours of Barber House
  52. Temporary signs — city cracking down on their placement and how long they can remain up
  53. Happyland riot — Shrubb vs. Longboat was a highly-anticipated race between two of the world’s best professional runners
  54. Fourth Provincial Leaders Forum to be televised live
  55. Happenings on the August calendar
  56. Enforced language usage change
  57. When the world was shattered
  58. We know mortgage rates will go up, but international factors are now preventing them from doing so
  59. Happyland riot — newspaper wondered why the race wasn’t cancelled due to muddy track manure covered track
  60. Channel approved between lakes to reduce likelihood of more flooding
  61. “Answer Man” provides the answers
  62. When a song won’t go away
  63. Hot, hotter, hottest
  64. CIBC report: positive momentum for Winnipeg
  65. Happyland riot — the lights went out, the runners couldn’t race and the rampage began
  66. Resilient and optimistic used to describe Prairie residents
  67. Catching up with readers’ letters
  68. Wonderful world of whimsy
  69. Booming vacant lot sales
  70. Monsters in our rivers
  71. Raging prairie fire — CPR express literally travelled through fire “raging on all sides”
  72. Solid June performance shows housing market remains strong
  73. Strange tales from the fairway
  74. Epidemic of language abuse
  75. Return to “barbarous” past
  76. Downtown is generating excitement
  77. Raging prairie fire — flames spread eastward to attack the buildings in the village of Bagot
  78. New affordable housing agreement between Manitoba and Ottawa
  79. Gods of old on the calendar
  80. Happenings on the July calendar
  81. Getting accustomed to being Canadian
  82. Benefits of using a REALTOR® — invaluable access to professional real estate expertise
  83. Raging prairie fire — “horrible holocaust” outran swiftest horse in fall of 1897
  84. Input sought for proposed new home warranty legislation
  85. English is a very strange language
  86. The gods of Norse mythology
  87. Our intimate village
  88. A grateful smile of thanks
  89. Taming the St. Andrews Rapids — after a decade of construction, the dam and locks were finally completed
  90. WREN celebrating 30 years
  91. Once again taking a gamble
  92. The "Answer Man"
  93. Shouldn't be a surprise
  94. City council-imposed condominium conversion moratorium not the answer to province’s troubling rental unit shortage
  95. Taming the St. Andrews Rapids — Winnipeg businessmen pressed Ottawa to fund the dam and locks project
  96. Widow grateful that volunteers added colour to her home
  97. Mediterranean holiday — cruise ship know-how and planning visits to European destinations
  98. No control over acts of God
  99. A name for city’s NHL team
  100. Land transfer tax penalizes home buyers
  101. Private vs. public telephones — Bell fights back, but is accused of spreading misinformation
  102. After a disappointing April, MLS® sales rebounded last month
  103. Private vs. public telephones — Bell company criticized for not providing adequate phone service
  104. Happenings on the June calendar
  105. No news is good news
  106. Real estate market and the NHL
  107. “Thank you” Mark Chipman
  108. “Drive to 13,000” to show that community supports return of NHL
  109. Wonderful world of whimsy
  110. “Wascally wabbits” in literature
  111. No great surprise
  112. Winnipeg’s West End changing for the better
  113. Winnipeg Beach — Barbour book relates resort was place where rules and boundaries were challenged
  114. Manitoba homes still among the nation’s most affordable
  115. Student heritage fair featured hall of fame inductees
  116. Ancient lake’s legacy
  117. Lord of the con — Munro came from Toronto with two warrants to arrest the bogus aristocrat
  118. Bronze sculpture of Terry Fox now on display in park
  119. Errant golf balls and sports trivia
  120. The origin of Adam’s apple
  121. Manitoba’s “romantic origin”
  122. Political action — members met with politicians in Ottawa and at the legislature to discuss important real estate issues
  123. Lord of the con — bogus aristocrat kidnapped at Deer Lodge; abductors stopped and arrested at Pembina
  124. Flooding in Manitoba will likely affect housing forecast
  125. Words derived from fictional characters
  126. Kids say the darndest things
  127. Rental shortage an issue across Canada
  128. Lord of the con — notorious swindler hides out in Winnipeg to elude pursuers
  129. End the suspense
  130. New regulations governing province’s mortgage brokers
  131. Happenings on the May calendar
  132. May 5 was liberation day — PoWs struggle through freezing rain and snow during forced Death March
  133. Royal pomp and pageantry
  134. NIMBY — new affordable housing projects require undertaking collaborative efforts between developers, neighbours and governments
  135. Political mudslinging — Nor’Wester called alleged scheme “wicked invention” of the Manitoba Free Press
  136. Eleven children receive new sledge hockey equipment thanks to promotion
  137. Off with their heads!
  138. Mixed-up and mangled metaphors
  139. The youth vote
  140. NIMBY affects multi-family development
  141. Political mudslinging — partisan newspapers viciously attacked each other during the1874 provincial election
  142. Another $20 million in incentives to build housing downtown
  143. What exactly is a husting?
  144. Best retorts from history’s best
  145. How would John A. do?
  146. Canadian Museum for Human Rights — REALTORS® from across Canada throw support behind the project
  147. Strong price appreciation across all housing types in Winnipeg
  148. Shanty Town — Hobbs wrote about the “appalling story of destitution and undeserved poverty”
  149. Reckless word usage
  150. Tax punitive to home buyers
  151. Shanty Town — Coolican made daily tours of the shanties in the city’s North End
  152. Local real estate market setting a record pace
  153. Gimme Shelter raises $49,000 to help provide people in need with safe, clean, affordable shelter
  154. Shanty Town — families began to build one-storey homes on the “wrong side of the tracks” after the CRP arrived
  155. A passion for Liz Taylor
  156. Homeowners say debt reduction remains a top financial priority
  157. Howard Pawley and CF-18 fiasco
  158. Partners in the home-buying process
  159. Shanty Town — many newcomers to Winnipeg built their first homes on the Hudson’sBay Flats
  160. Royal Bank launches first annual REALTOR® Appreciation Week
  161. 1899 Stanley Cup fiasco — the referee went home
  162. Local real estate professionals are intimately aware of market factors and conditions
  163. Stupid is as stupid does
  164. Citizens Hall of Fame began 25 years ago in March
  165. Ken Watson "Mr. Curling"
  166. Aggressively advocating consumer issues
  167. 1899 Stanley Cup fiasco — Winnipeg Victorias refuse to continue game after Gingras slashed
  168. Story of two women explains commitment to shelter-related causes
  169. In like a lion
  170. Tax incentive helping downtown revitalization
  171. Execution of Thomas Scott — Red River “refugees” enlist Orangemen to organize “indignation meetings”
  172. Discussion paper offers solutions to rental housing shortage
  173. Perilous ice jams
  174. Four homes saved and the University of Winnipeg builds a state-of-the-art science complex
  175. Execution of Thomas Scott — one shot struck him in the shoulder another hit him in the upper chest
  176. Demand for new homes will remain strong this year and next year
  177. One great fort
  178. Foundation supports shelter-related charities
  179. Execution of Thomas Scott — Riel refuses pleas from Smith and Rev. Young to parden prisoner
  180. Brisk national home sales reflect mortgage changes coming in March
  181. Pests from hell
  182. Report says Winnipeg had fifth highest average residential price increase between 2000 and 2010
  183. Execution of Thomas Scott — used by Riel’s enemies to tarnish his achievements in Manitoba
  184. Association expects strong local housing market to continue into 2010
  185. Analyst says home price increases will continue well into 2011
  186. Winnipeg’s commercial real estate market — momentum going forward into the year
  187. The Battle of Seven Oaks — Pritchard was only survivor from Semple party taking part in the skirmish
  188. Attack mode
  189. January important to Manitoba women
  190. Good news for city in annual forecasts
  191. Prelude to Battle of Seven Oaks — Semple foolishly leads 28 men out of fort to confront Métis
  192. New president says it’ll be another busy year for real estate
  193. Whining about the cold
  194. Prelude to the Battle of Seven Oaks — a “private” war imperils Red River
  195. Tightening of mortgage rules will have little impact on local market
  196. Titanic exhibit
  197. December homes sales establish new record
  198. James H. Ashdown — appointed chairman of the committee seeking to incorporate Winnipeg as a city
  199. Winnipeg housing market forecast to lead the nation in 2011
  200. “Going viral” with words
  201. Fund-raising social for Dubois family
  202. James H. Ashdown — legendary rise from poverty to become a leading businessman in the West
  203. Good news more immigrants arriving, but where will they live?
  204. Rental vacancy rate at historic low
  205. An odd Christmas gift — local newspaper sent out packages of the food that fueled the fur trade
  206. Christmas adventure
  207. Weather defies prediction
  208. Inaccuracies plague coverage of consent agreement
  209. A case of mistaken identity following Cormack flogging
  210. Flogging of Cormack — attorney general sues newspaper for criminal libel to extract some vengeance
  211. Strong November sales help to establish new annual dollar volume record
  212. Litany of hardships
  213. City receives national award for revitalization
  214. Flogging of Cormack — attorney general claimed lashing was intended to deter further escape attempts
  215. New private-sector economic initiative says yes to Winnipeg
  216. Huddled masses
  217. Real estate agents undergo extensive education
  218. Flogging of Cormack — Winnipeggers take to the street to protest the “barbarous act”
  219. Promotion raises money for sledge hockey equipment for deserving children
  220. Most important man
  221. Deadline for Citizens Hall of Fame nominations December 15
  222. The day the ground shook — first-hand accounts from Manitobans who survived the 1906 San Francisco earthquake
  223. New home construction expected to reach 3,300 units by end of year
  224. Anniversary of last spike
  225. Anniversary of last spike
  226. MLS® remains a member-to-member service
  227. Tuxedo Park silver cup — a memento of another era when Heubach wanted to create the “Suburb Beautiful”
  228. Manitoba housing sales expected to record gains, according to revised forecast
  229. Hell's let loose
  230. Rent controls cause rental unit shortage
  231. Winnipeg’s Great War — Blanchard’s new book is compelling narrative of how the war years affected the city
  232. Ten consecutive months of record dollar volume sales so far in 2010
  233. Ghost of legend
  234. Advantages of working with a REALTOR®
  235. Era of jaunty jalopies — Oldsmobile Trophy endurance run became a victim of the First World War
  236. Agreement confirms organized real estate’s commitment to competitive services
  237. No-holds-barred civic election
  238. National articles recognize Winnipeg housing market as being one of the strongest in Canada
  239. Era of jaunty jalopies — residents of La Rivière started huge bonfire to light approach to steep hill for the cars
  240. Manitoba’s booming economy factor in keeping housing market buoyant
  241. Another U.S. mortgage crisis
  242. Mayoral forum on downtown issues
  243. Era of jaunty jalopies — first annual endurance run to Brandon was a competition for the Oldsmobile Trophy
  244. Manitobans have the lowest consumer debt load in Canada
  245. Thanksgivings of yesteryear
  246. Top-10 reasons to use a REALTOR®
  247. Era of jaunty jalopies — first local races were dictated by finicky automobiles and nearly impassible roads
  248. Candidates trade barbs during mayoral forum
  249. Lighten up, America!
  250. Forums an opportunity to hear candidates discuss issues
  251. Early local tractor factories — Henry Ford’s new tractor was the death knell for the Big Bull
  252. Report: price increases only place moderate pressure on home buyers
  253. School taxes and trustees
  254. by Bruce Cherney (part 2) In 1910, the Gas Traction Company of Winnipeg, a branch plant of the Minneapolis-based Gas Traction Company, was established. The Minneapolis company started out as the Transit Thresher Company in 1906, but was re-organized as th
  255. Early local tractor factories — Gas Traction Company manufactured popular“Big Four” tractors
  256. Manitobans not cheap when it comes time to buy a home
  257. No U.S.-style housing collapse in Canada
  258. Early local tractor factories — the first-ever “agricultural motors competition” was held in 1908 to test “traction engines
  259. So far, ho-hum
  260. Strong home sales earlier in the year “borrowed from sales this summer”
  261. Bargain city weekend
  262. Citizens Hall of Fame — “Terry never wavered in his conviction that what he was doing would ultimately make a difference in someone’s life”
  263. Early days of golf — Birds Hill course was the fifth built by the members of the Winnipeg Golf Club
  264. Moderating home sales will moderate average home price increase
  265. Mayoral forum
  266. CREA ad campaign a “face-changer”
  267. Early days of golf — Winnipeg club built the Roblin Boulevard course but never played a round at the links
  268. Terry Fox latest inductee into Citizens Hall of Fame
  269. The links at St. Charles
  270. This year’s curb appeal award winner
  271. Early days of golf — Winnipeg club decided to relocate to property purchased along Roblin Boulevard
  272. National and local ad campaigns focus on benefits of using REALTORS®
  273. Early days of golf — club’s first course at Norwood described as “very picturesque”
  274. Fishing stories
  275. Must halt the current rental crisis
  276. Steep decline in Ontario and B.C. housing markets skews national statistics
  277. Make social housing more livable with flowers
  278. How green is our lake?
  279. Early days of golf — the first course in Manitoba was laid out by Stony Mountain’s warden
  280. July home sales down, but market is still at a steady pace
  281. Stadiums past and future
  282. A successful career in real estate
  283. Manitoba bucks national trend toward declining home sales
  284. Harvest Excursions — Great Depression played role in ending great seasonal migration of harvesters
  285. Another piece of the puzzle
  286. Concerns about residential development in new plan
  287. LRT will benefit residential and commercial development, says mayor
  288. Harvest Excursions — mechanization brings an end to a colourful era in the history of the prairies
  289. Harvest Excursions — annual invaders sometimes looted their way through communities during westward journey
  290. Why it pays to use a REALTOR®
  291. Old soldiers fade away
  292. Central bank’s rate hike won’t significantly affect housing market
  293. Three consecutive months of over $300 million in MLS® Sales
  294. Winnipeggers bullish about housing market
  295. Alien drifting toward Manitoba
  296. Harvest Excursions — prospect of earning good wages attracted thousands to prairie wheatfields
  297. Significance of Magna Carta
  298. Mortgages holders in strong position
  299. Harvest Excursions — army of farm labourers board trains to invade prairie wheatfields
  300. First-time buyers take their time when purchasing a home
  301. Bait and switch
  302. Downtown opportunities for home buyers
  303. Collision on the Red — ramming of the Manitoba by rival
  304. More workers needed to meet demands of strong economy
  305. Collision on the Red — rival steamboat company implicated in numerous setbacks suffered by the Manitoba
  306. Tiny vampires
  307. Local homeowners who renovated last year spent an average of $8,000
  308. School tax deferral bill — comments show cottage owners oppose the provincial government’s proposal
  309. Time unfair to Barber House
  310. “We’ve had it!” — the story of the last streetcars to ride the rails in Winnipeg
  311. Province’s school tax deferral plan for cottage owners makes little sense
  312. Greater balance being restored to local real estate market
  313. Back to the future
  314. “We’ve had it!” — the story of the last streetcars to ride the rails in Winnipeg
  315. Blooms and a good brush up
  316. Homeowners unlikely to experience U.S.-style home value decline
  317. Roblin's legacy
  318. “We’ve had it!” — the story of the last streetcars to ride the rails in Winnipeg
  319. Living in a greener home
  320. A brave agent
  321. Real estate investment market requires stability
  322. “We’ve had it!” — the story of the last streetcars to ride the rails in Winnipeg
  323. CMHC forecasts MLS® home price and sales increases this year and 2011
  324. Britain’s coalition nothing new
  325. Markets in Canadian cities are not similar
  326. Sunday streetcar service — vote to approve called “foregone conclusion” by newspaper
  327. Survey: Canadians in strong position to weather higher mortgage rates
  328. 90-year-old edifice to the future
  329. Changes proposed for Home Buyers’ Plan
  330. Sunday streetcar service — petition was signed by prominent residents opposed to its implementation
  331. Real estate industry “highly competitive,” according to agents
  332. Centennial of Canada’s navy
  333. Tax change to aid rental property reinvestment
  334. Sunday streetcar service — opponents claimed the moral fibre of the community was at stake
  335. Survey indicates Canadians ready for home-buying spree
  336. 1906 streetcar strike — company lost the public-relations battle for the hearts and minds of the people
  337. Luxury home sales exceptionally strong in Winnipeg
  338. Speculation rampant on when Bank of Canada will announce interest rate increase
  339. Death of a madman
  340. Iceland's revenge
  341. Iceland's revenge
  342. Iceland's revenge
  343. REALTORS® in Britain successfully lobby to raise exemption on tax similar to one now hurting Manitobans
  344. 1906 streetcar strike — mayor fired the Thiel detectives and had police chief hire special constables
  345. WREN promotion’s first sledge received by aspiring paralympian
  346. Industrialization of written words
  347. Rebuilding neighbourhood one house at a time
  348. 1906 streetcar strike — “special constables” from United States were used as strikebreakers
  349. Survey shows real estate market remains highly competitive
  350. Our lake shaped world
  351. Innovations for fast-paced real estate industry
  352. 1906 streetcar strike — “We walk” declared Winnipeggers in support of the strikers
  353. The rush to buy homes before interest rates increase
  354. A new kick-off
  355. Education property taxes — neighbouring Saskatchewan implemented reform by setting standard mill rate
  356. Millions of dollars for downtown residential development
  357. CPR’s new railway station — it survived one fire only to succumb to the flames of another
  358. Painful deficits
  359. Website about land transfer tax
  360. CPR’s new railway station — Van Horne instructed architect to design a brick passenger depot
  361. Missed opportunity in budget to help first-time home buyers, says Cook
  362. Green with envy
  363. MHBA’s Home Expressions Show
  364. Manitoba Hotel fire — firefighters forced out of hotel after battling the blaze for two hours
  365. Local housing market remains among the nation’s most affordable
  366. Annual Teddy Awards
  367. A REALTOR®’s edge is code of ethics
  368. Manitoba Hotel fire — smoke and flames originally observed in the hotel’s grand dining room
  369. President says strong housing market activity expected to continue
  370. Defining moment
  371. A tribute to Bill Burns and his commitment to the Citizens Hall of Fame
  372. Manitoba Hotel fire — “gigantic structure” lost to the “fire fiend” during an extremely cold February morning
  373. New report indicates lower housing inventory home buying factor
  374. Tragic Winnipeg Theatre fire — hundreds attended special tribute to the four firefighters who lost their lives
  375. Symbol of a generation
  376. Change land transfer tax and give home buyers a break
  377. Tragic Winnipeg Theatre fire — playhouse began its existence as Victoria Hall in 1883
  378. Financial stability and low interest rates expected to boost Canadian home sales activity in 2010
  379. CREA rules governing MLS® not anti-competitive, says president
  380. Accentuate the positive
  381. Black History Month
  382. Carney praises province’s resilient economy and our stable housing market during recent chamber luncheon
  383. British adventurer — the Nile expedition ends in failure and “Manitoba Boys” return home
  384. For the first time January sales crack the $100-million barrier
  385. U of W campus redevelopment
  386. British adventurer — Butler reprimanded for leaving voyageurs and boats of the River Column
  387. Sitting mayors rarely lose
  388. Another good year ahead for housing market, says new president
  389. Royal Canadian Legion — 1925 founding in Winnipeg designated national historic event
  390. British adventurer — Butler joins voyageurs in attempt to conquer the Nile to rescue Gordon
  391. Canadians prudent mortgage borrowers
  392. Responsible government
  393. Bank of Canada maintaining rate good news for home buyers
  394. Not an easy task
  395. Analysts say Winnipeg and Manitoba in good economic position to have strong housing market this year
  396. British adventurer — Butler advised Wolseley to enlist Canadian voyageurs for Nile campaign
  397. MLS® sales last year in like a lamb and out like a lion
  398. A magazine’s titilation
  399. Land transfer tax had an adverse effect on the first-time home buyers’ segment of the market
  400. British adventurer in the New World — Butler was Wolseley’s agent in Red River
  401. New MLS® dollar volume sales record set last year
  402. Prairie residents express consumer confidence
  403. Olympic moments
  404. Manitoba, Saskatchewan residents confident about economic prospects
  405. Christmas spirit
  406. Passionate about serving the community — REALTORS® strive to make a difference by helping people
  407. Winnipeg’s first council meeting — Mayor Cornish said council was laying foundation for civic government in the west
  408. A “thuggish petro-state”?
  409. Expansion of the convention centre
  410. November MLS® sales and dollar volume increased dramatically
  411. Winnipeg’s first council meeting — held on the upper floor of the Bentley Building
  412. Keep the “C” in the CFL
  413. National association revises its housing market forecasts for this year and next year
  414. Winnipeg Cenotaph controversy — Wood’s winning design rejected by organizations
  415. Less anxiety means more presents around the Christmas tree
  416. Unfriend very unfriendly
  417. Use a pro when listing your home
  418. Winnipeg Cenotaph controversy — Hahn’s winning entry was unanimously selected by judges
  419. Survey says first-time younger buyers tend to favour older homes
  420. Demolition for rebirth
  421. Website considered one of the best in Canada
  422. Winnipeg Cenotaph controversy — women’s club wanted a permanent memorial to the fallen
  423. Canadians are optimistic about their local housing markets
  424. Continue to rememberFred Bender was typical of the thousand of Canadians who enlisted during the Second World War — he was young and had no military experience. Canada’s armed forces were filled with Freds; men and women whose lives were deeply affected b
  425. Low interest rates maintain affordability
  426. A photographic journey — images of the Sixties Generation when youth tried to create a world in harmony
  427. Dollar volume increases despite slight drop in home sales
  428. First Armistice Day
  429. Greatest misconception: downtown isn’t safe
  430. Free Press Ghost Case — Manitoba justice said
  431. Free Press Ghost Case — Manitoba justice said
  432. Canadian executives see positive trends in commercial real estate
  433. World not ending in 2010
  434. Free Press Ghost Case — tale of spectre comes back to haunt local newspaper
  435. Teach your children pedestrian safety when trick-or-treating
  436. Local history’s importance
  437. The “real” experts in real estate
  438. 90th anniversary of Shoal Lake aqueduct — route went over swamp, muskeg, sand and rock
  439. More young Canadians financially ready to purchase home
  440. Crerar changed federal politics
  441. Selling Winnipeg to the world
  442. 90th anniversary of Shoal Lake aqueduct — first phase was construction of GWWD Railway
  443. Survey says key to quality of life good neighbours and green places
  444. 90th anniversary of Shoal Lake aqueduct — Winnipeg’s early drinking water was neither clean nor safe
  445. Honour McClung
  446. Many factors contributing to stronger housing demand
  447. My house is not your house — reports on average home prices are of dubious value
  448. Their vision was foundation of HOP
  449. Hatton murder mystery — prosecution uses 15-minute time discrepancy when presenting its case
  450. Sputnik spawned Space Age
  451. Report says housing market supported by strong foundation
  452. Fear tiny invader
  453. Rent controls — said to be the most efficient way of destroying a city
  454. Holland murder mystery — young man’s arrest denounced by residents of the community
  455. Kanee most recent inductee into Citizens Hall of Fame
  456. Great bargain weekend
  457. Rent controls hamper apartment construction
  458. “Finest playhouse in the Dominion” — Walker Theatre called a “beautiful temple of the drama”
  459. Low interest rates and affordability boosting housing sales
  460. Plunged into war
  461. Preserving our precious elm trees
  462. “Finest Playhouse in the Dominion” — C.P. Walker said “town deserved a better theatre.”
  463. “Finest Playhouse in the Dominion” — C.P. Walker said “town deserved a better theatre.”
  464. “Finest Playhouse in the Dominion” — C.P. Walker said “town deserved a better theatre.”
  465. Million-dollar-plus home sales provide boost toward $2-billion total
  466. Opportunities seized
  467. Sculptures honour outstanding citizens
  468. Manitoba’s first legislative building — December 3 fire destroyed A.G.B. Bannatyne’s home
  469. National association adjusts housing market forecast upward
  470. Local market avoids booms and busts
  471. Manitoba’s first legislative building — Bannatyne’s home on McDermot a little east of Main Street
  472. Reversal of fortunes?
  473. Difference in national market from year ago “night and day”
  474. Jaw-dropping untruths
  475. Winner of curb appeal award
  476. Election riot of 1872 — the ringleaders inciting the mob were lawyer Cornish and editor Mulvey
  477. Gender makes a difference when it comes to home buying
  478. Cautionary tale
  479. Diversified economy allowed Manitoba to avoid worst of recession
  480. Election riot of 1872 — polling station attacked and newspaper offices ransacked
  481. Diversified economy allowed Manitoba to avoid worst of recession
  482. A fitting choice
  483. Vision and hope for tomorrow
  484. Vision and hope for tomorrow
  485. Stock market crash of 1929 — start of the “Lost Decade” and the hardships of the “Dirty Thirties”
  486. July MLS® sales set new dollar volume record
  487. Water woes
  488. Perfect garage marriage of function, aesthetics
  489. Red River Expedition — Riel fled to St. Boniface as troops approached Fort Garry
  490. Healthier housing market than U.S. helping Canadian recovery
  491. Put the wind in your sales — choose your crew from 1,700 real estate professionals
  492. Red River Expedition — Colonel Garnet Wolseley led troops through “wilderness of forests and water”
  493. Learn from Duff
  494. Central bank says strong housing market helping economic recovery
  495. Battle of Fort Whyte — confrontation was at site where Portage extension crossed CPR tracks
  496. Explosion of life
  497. Many reasons to be optimistic
  498. National home sales gaining momentum entering second half of 2009
  499. Lasting legacy
  500. Helping police through Amber Alert
  501. Battle of Fort Whyte — Manitobans pressured provincial government to end CPR monopoly
  502. Home buyer “enthusiasm” returning to real estate market
  503. Living with polio
  504. Homeowners have solid equity positions
  505. Spanish Flu epidemic of 1918-19 — public gatherings were banned throughout Manitoba
  506. Manitoba’s construction companies in a hiring mode
  507. Poor history report card
  508. Real estate pro provides sound support
  509. Great polio epidemic of 1953 — 2,318 cases and 85 deaths “exceeded all known Canadian and world figures”
  510. Survey shows deep emotional attachment to homeownership
  511. Great polio epidemic of 1953 — King George Hospital was “focal point of province’s polio attack”
  512. Housing demand varies by neighbourhood
  513. Fishing challenge
  514. Forecast says Manitoba will have positive economic growth in 2009
  515. Marketing house from 2,164 kilometres away
  516. Great polio epidemic of 1953 — anxiety and fear bordering on panic was widespread
  517. Eerily familiar
  518. Most Canadians view homeownership as good long-term investment
  519. 1919 Winnipeg General Strike — Bloody Saturday was the beginning of the end
  520. Meaning of average selling price
  521. Boy Artist of Red River
  522. Housewarming Party “contest was made for us,” says winner
  523. Optimism reigns in Manitoba
  524. Lives changed
  525. 1919 Winnipeg General Strike — returned soldiers added degree of credibility to the strike
  526. Network of real estate agents joins Amber Alert
  527. The Arborg tax revolt — reeve manhandled by women who stripped him of his clothing
  528. The Intrepid Road
  529. Revised forecast shows confidence in Manitoba
  530. New home construction forecast revised to reflect declining market
  531. 1919 Winnipeg General Strike — workers called for “living wage” and right to collective bargaining
  532. The Arborg tax revolt — 22 men were charged with unlawful assembly and inciting a riot
  533. New home construction slowed during April
  534. May 12 or July 15?
  535. Hundreds participated in downtown tour
  536. Demise exaggerated
  537. Perfect garage unites function, aesthetics
  538. This year’s flooding affected April housing market
  539. Living Tour of city’s downtown
  540. Shankland's medals
  541. Prelude to Arborg tax revolt — Farmers’ Army leaves
  542. Study shows economic impact of resale housing industry
  543. New city reassessment — mass appraisal system uses sophisticated models to analyse property values
  544. The path to fairness
  545. Low mortgage rates contribute to housing affordability
  546. 1861 flood — first newspaper account of local flood reported by Ross and Coldwell in Nor’Wester
  547. Moberly land swindle — townsite lots were sold during great land boom of 1881-82
  548. Canadians receive moderate rating for greening their homes
  549. Votes of confidence in our province
  550. Re-thinking American Dream
  551. Increased confidence in housing market in Manitoba
  552. Third and goal
  553. Advantages of using REALTOR® to sell home
  554. Manitoba Legislative Building scandal — Kelly paroled early due to “severe nervous breakdown”
  555. Third and goal
  556. Advantages of using REALTOR® to sell home
  557. Manitoba Legislative Building scandal — Kelly paroled early due to “severe nervous breakdown”
  558. Increased confidence in housing market in Manitoba
  559. Citizens Hall of Fame’s guardian angel
  560. Manitoba Legislative Building scandal — lawyer accuses Norris of participating in $50,000 deal
  561. Praise for Roblin
  562. Outreach program helps homeowners with mortgage problems
  563. Manitoba Legislative Building scandal — lieutenant-governor forces government to appoint commission
  564. Warm Winter-peg
  565. Manitobans should be optimistic
  566. One-third of divisions ignore incentives and hike property taxes
  567. Floods create legends
  568. Helping first-time home buyers
  569. Manitoba Legislative Building scandal — suspicious tendering process led to Kelly receiving project
  570. Association calling for changes to land transfer tax
  571. Weather outside frightful
  572. Education funding shell game
  573. Money, money, money — early Winnipeg banks
  574. Balance returns to the local real estate market
  575. Black history — U.S. Consul-General John E. Jones wanted assurances black immigrants would be treated fairly
  576. Bank rates and Parade of Homes
  577. Westward ho!
  578. Candidate’s campaign calls for end to division’s taxation powers
  579. February is Black History Month — agents try to stop “The Black 1000” at Emerson border crossing
  580. "Plains" nonsense
  581. Reality of Canadian real estate is not all markets alike
  582. Lack of enthusiasm
  583. Common-sense genius of Canadians
  584. Politics in Manitoba — Adams shows how parties, leaders and voters shaped our system
  585. Cold weather factor in new home construction decline
  586. Museum presentation at Commercial REALTORS® breakfast
  587. The story of voyageurs — festival is a celebration of fur trade’s history
  588. New January MLS® Dollar Volume Record
  589. Trade retaliation
  590. The Whitewater murder mystery — witnesses testify that Gordon confessed to crime
  591. Home Buyers’ Plan withdrawal limit increased in budget
  592. Positive outlook for Manitoba in 2009
  593. Ignatieff had no choice
  594. The Whitewater murder mystery — the law finally catches up to Walter Gordon
  595. Association president optimistic real estate will flourish in 2009
  596. Obama must succeed
  597. Federal changes to mortgage rules
  598. The Whitewater murder mystery —Daw and Smith disappear under suspicious circumstances
  599. National association seeks inclusion of housing proposals in federal budget
  600. Goodfellow: house more than roof over your head
  601. Winnipeg’s earliest ice-skating rinks — first facilities built on frozen river then on firm land
  602. Was Juba crazy?
  603. December stats show no slowdown in local housing market
  604. Romancing the bridge
  605. Housing market highlights from 2008
  606. Starting the New Year — in 1912 music filled the grand ballroom of Royal Alexandra
  607. New report says Winnipeg housing market in good shape entering 2009
  608. Reason for optimism
  609. There’s no place like home
  610. Christmas 1912 — purchases sent home on sleigh drawn by horse with jingling bells
  611. Changing dynamics in real estate
  612. An interview with Louis Riel — the Métis leader would not admit mistakes made in 1869-70
  613. Partisan
  614. Two consecutive years of over $2 billion in MLS® sales
  615. 60th anniversary Universal Declaration of Human Rights
  616. An interview with Louis Riel — Métis leader’s last poems purchased at auction
  617. Backed into a corner
  618. Outlook predicts 2009 market more balanced with slow, steady growth
  619. New homes in east Elmwood for five Métis families
  620. Great progress made in West End
  621. Year there wasn’t a white Christmas — unusually balmy winter of 1877-78 in Manitoba
  622. Transformation of Santa Claus
  623. Building a better community
  624. New park named after former premier — recognizes flood protection provided by “Duff’s Ditch”
  625. “Texas tea” in Manitoba
  626. Neither cold nor snow can stop demand for new homes
  627. Archibald said beatings were so frequent Métis virtually existed in a “state of slavery”
  628. A success story in the inner city
  629. Not mean-spirited
  630. New MLS® records continue to be established
  631. New Hudson’s Bay Company Archives donation — mostly records from 20th century
  632. Young home buyers gain valuable insight into local real estate market conditions
  633. Dire situation in U.S.
  634. U.S. housing market in crisis while Canada’s thrives
  635. Reforming the Senate — Manitoba abolished its upper chamber in 1876
  636. Confidence in Dinwiddie
  637. Winnipeg condominium lifestyle gaining in popularity
  638. First ever $2-billion year
  639. Winnipeg’s North End — neighbourhood’s story told through photographs
  640. Contentious land sale
  641. Home construction still ahead of last year’s pace
  642. First Downtown Trends tour
  643. Remembrance Day — the sacrifice made by Canadians at Passchendaele
  644. Break the cycle
  645. MLS® sales top $2 billion for the first time
  646. Sub-prime credit crunch in U.S.
  647. Cross-border football rivalry — Shamrocks played University of North Dakota in 1903
  648. Back of the bus
  649. CMHC predicts increased local new home construction
  650. New bylaw only as good as people behind it
  651. Value of REALTOR® in current market
  652. “Willie Chaffeur” vs. Tommie Horseman” — earliest automobiles on Winnipeg’s streets
  653. More than polar bears
  654. Another record month for the Multiple Listing Service®
  655. The key to aboriginal homeownership
  656. Ghost scene at the fort — “nightly vigil of sentries made hideous by apparition”
  657. “True North” message
  658. New bylaw only as good as people behind it
  659. Railway comes to Gimli — “will totally alter features hitherto of quiet and primitive community”
  660. Mixed signals given on signage
  661. It’s serendipity
  662. Economic conditions remain upbeat for real estate market
  663. Hall of Fame sculptures completed
  664. Plaque recognizes “herculean task” of building Bay line — railway took decades to complete
  665. Homespun knowledge
  666. Chipman inducted into Citizens Hall of Fame
  667. 70th anniversary of MHBA
  668. Fire! 1904 conflagration destroys major downtown businesses and threatens many others
  669. Name has meaning
  670. Canadian resale housing market expected to remain strong
  671. Information on real estate courses
  672. Union Tower and Scott Fruit Co. warehouse — heritage buildings receive federal funds
  673. Casualty of war
  674. Report says most centres categorized as sellers’ markets
  675. U.S. subprime mortgage crisis
  676. Early banking in Winnipeg — first was McMicken’s Bank and second was Merchants Bank
  677. Life of Brian
  678. For upscale home purchasers money is no obstacle
  679. Humour drives point home
  680. Winnipeg’s “Shoe King” — Thomas Ryan built new warehouse on King Street in 1895
  681. Back to basics
  682. First time August MLS® sales surpassed $200 million
  683. Dedicated to making Winnipeg beautiful
  684. Minnesota’s Canadian connection — state capital St. Paul founded by Red River settlers
  685. Marvellous Milt
  686. Four straight months of national housing market records
  687. Whatever happened to the Winnipeg Industrial Exhibition?
  688. Mixed signals given on signage
  689. Superhighway to Hell?
  690. Revised forecasts predict record-breaking home sales
  691. Revised housing predictions for 2007
  692. The Buffalo Wool Company — “The scheme became a laughing stock in England
  693. Risk vs. reward
  694. Triple-digit increase in multiple-family construction
  695. Land sales could fill city’s coffers
  696. Not a “12-year republic” — claim called an “insult to their intelligence and pride”
  697. The beautiful game
  698. MLS® real estate market on track to top $2 billion
  699. Hot markets not always healthy
  700. Treaty Five — commissioners met with native leaders in communities along Lake Winnipeg
  701. Worst of the worst?
  702. Association calling for national housing strategy
  703. Technology upgrades benefit consumers
  704. Canada’s wheat king — the life and times of Seager Wheeler
  705. Dismal result
  706. June showed no let up in MLS® market strength
  707. Real estate sales reach new heights
  708. Harold Parsons — Neepawa lad surprise winner of Canada Day long-weekend road race
  709. Invasion of Canada
  710. 10th annual Winnipeg in Bloom contest entry deadline
  711. Downtown living at its best
  712. The bells tolled for Archbishop Tache — “no ordinary man — he was a man among millions”
  713. Heritage river
  714. Home buyers get more bang for their buck in Manitoba
  715. Annual Winnipeg in Bloom contest
  716. Totogan called the “New Chicago” of Manitoba — little remains to show it even existed
  717. Angling adventure
  718. Home sales major contributor to national economy
  719. There’s real value in using REALTORS®
  720. Not the answer
  721. Monthly MLS® sales continue to shatter records
  722. Tour downtown condos and attractions
  723. Tragic sinking of SS Princess — called first major maritime disaster on Lake Winnipeg
  724. Building a community
  725. Home-buying trend affecting nation’s rental market
  726. Another record-setting month for MLS®
  727. 125 years of professional fire protection — until 1882, volunteers manned the pumps
  728. Building a community
  729. Rags-to-riches tales played out in best neighbourhoods
  730. Letspayfair.com lawn sign campaign
  731. Conquering hero returns to hometown — Roblin greeted by “a perfect storm of cheering”
  732. Chicken in every pot
  733. New home construction forecast to increase in 2007 and 2008
  734. Nominate one good Winnipegger
  735. Conquering hero returns to hometown — Roblin greeted by “a perfect storm of cheering”
  736. Election Skulduggery
  737. Three parties release education funding platforms
  738. Education funding election issue
  739. Hugh John Macdonald pulls off election upset — called “plucky fight against the odds”
  740. 10 years after flood
  741. Provincial Leaders Forum to highlight election issues
  742. On-reserve aboriginal housing program
  743. First city hall and civic market — from the outset there were structural problems
  744. Election no surprise
  745. Winnipeg to be site of first “national” museum outside Ottawa
  746. Coalition challenges Premier Doer
  747. Red River Fever — typhoid epidemic led to improved water and sewage systems
  748. The “bear” facts
  749. Housing minister announces major change in strategy
  750. New real estate challenge
  751. 90th anniversary of famous battle — “I think myself that was where Canada was born”
  752. The big idea
  753. Another impressive month for Multiple Listing Service®
  754. Issues affecting real estate
  755. First export of wheat — it was only 857 bushels but it was a start
  756. World’s wallflower
  757. Consumer confidence fueling real estate sales
  758. Manitoba School Question — controversy threatened to tear nation apart
  759. Significance of April 9
  760. City passes motion calling for school tax change
  761. Federal budget disappoints association
  762. Western Canada’s population boom — Sifton re-organized department to increase immigration
  763. In the money
  764. Report says local housing market among most affordable
  765. Immigration engine of population growth
  766. The Irish in Manitoba — St. Patrick’s Day was an important celebration
  767. Canada’s VC
  768. Strong MLS® housing market continued in February
  769. The power of MLS® in the housing market
  770. Manitoba’s first execution — “deed . . . committed by a demon in human shape”
  771. Bones of contention
  772. Manitobans believe it’s better to buy home now than later
  773. New national advertising campaign
  774. William Hespeler — played key role in bringing Mennonite settlers to Manitoba
  775. Licence to steal
  776. Another round of school tax increases now underway
  777. Shift education taxes off property
  778. University of Manitoba special collection — Dr. Hamilton’s research into paranormal featured
  779. Star power
  780. Association predicts housing sales increase for Manitoba
  781. MLS® listings increase but more still needed
  782. On the Portage Road — 1861 trip from Fort Garry to Portage la Praire
  783. Two heroes
  784. New magazine showcases commercial real estate
  785. Forecasts affected by the unexpected
  786. Cold snap of February 1876 — winter’s icy grip continued throughout month
  787. Two heroes
  788. MLS® sales continue winning ways in January
  789. National housing market setting records
  790. Nor’Wester pushes for Crown Colony status — “Red River settlers will . . . be pleased
  791. “Diplomatic” solution
  792. CREA wants cancelled home retrofit program reinstated
  793. Burning of the Gimli ballot box — partisan politic’s first appearance in a provincial election
  794. Burden of education property taxes
  795. Pay fair
  796. Coalition says way education now funded is unfair
  797. New stadium? — since 1930 Blue Bombers have played in several stadiums
  798. Funding sports venues
  799. President says all market indicators are positive
  800. The tools. The team. The trust.
  801. “Bloody Jack” Krafchenko — armed with pistol escapes from jail on January 10, 1914
  802. New name’s strength
  803. The Numeric Code — local MLS® real estate market by the numbers
  804. Lake sturgeon a species at risk
  805. Winnipeg not Singapore
  806. Cold hasn’t chilled real estate market’s record-setting pace
  807. REALTOR®’s code of ethics
  808. Historic house not protected from demolition
  809. Notion of Nation
  810. Most Canadians aspire to live in the lap of luxury
  811. Not recent
  812. Transit oriented development
  813. The 1935 Grey Cup — “stage set for most electrifying run in Canadian football history”
  814. New homes in east Elmwood for five Métis families
  815. North American Buffalo saved from extinction — two Manitobans played a major role
  816. Last veteran
  817. Create warmth and spirit of holiday season with lights
  818. What a REALTOR® does for you
  819. Grey Cup’s hallowed history — showcase of Canada’s unique brand of football
  820. Multiple-family construction best in last 20 years
  821. It’s human nature
  822. A Remembrance Day tribute — young Stonewall man earns Victoria Cross over Western Front
  823. Rev. Lehotsky’s legacy
  824. Impressive October MLS® sales establish new record
  825. Westward ho! – misfortune is turned into a New World success story
  826. Association says housing helps productivity
  827. Winter holiday
  828. Harper says government not planning to privatize CMHC
  829. Early UFO sightings? “ . . . it’s form appeared globular” in the moonlit sky
  830. No utopia
  831. Trends and opportunities emerging for downtown housing
  832. 100 years ago big issues dominated mayoralty race in Winnipeg
  833. Need to keep a lid on property taxes
  834. Four for mayor
  835. Winnipeg among centres setting year-to-date sales records
  836. 100 years ago big issues dominated mayoralty race
  837. Spray-applied foam insulation
  838. No political parties
  839. Revised forecast calls for record house sales this year
  840. October 12 mayoralty forum update
  841. Manitoba’s first thanksgivings — only proclaimed following bountiful harvests
  842. Civic boosterism
  843. Impressive MLS® sales year continued in September
  844. What you should know about wood
  845. Tree-lined setting a site to behold
  846. Manitoba’s first locomotive — the Countess of Dufferin arrived to bells, whistles and cheers
  847. They said, fix them
  848. Board to again host civic election mayoralty forum
  849. Manitoba’s first locomotive — the Countess of Dufferin arrived to bells, whistles and cheers
  850. Minor repairs solve concrete surface damage
  851. Five-year conventional mortgage has peaked
  852. Fighting over water
  853. “Winnipeg’s First Citizen” — Ashdown inducted into 2006 Citizens Hall of Fame
  854. Honouring Winnipeggers
  855. Two new inductees into Winnipeg Citizens Hall of Fame
  856. NHLers invest in local rental market
  857. Two votes, two different results — Peguis land compensation still unresolved
  858. U.S. market different
  859. Mortgage rates, high employment stimulate new home investment
  860. “Terrorists” threaten Manitoba — “collecting on our border for . . . plunder, robbery and murder”
  861. The value of using a REALTOR®
  862. Roads and elections
  863. REALTORS® to discuss the “big issues” at Winnipeg meeting
  864. “Terrorists” raid Manitoba — threat from “murderous band” generates patriotic response
  865. Soaring home prices impact Calgary, Vancouver
  866. Outlandish gimmick
  867. National MLS® sales remain on track to set new record
  868. The Country Guide — in 1933 it provided articles on Canadian and world affairs
  869. The dog days of summer
  870. Gasohol old idea
  871. Western Canada nation’s hotbed of new home construction
  872. The “Ghost of Charron Lake” — “It was the first type of aircraft purchased by my father”
  873. Board hires Commercial Division manager
  874. Mantario revisited
  875. Manitobans want education taxes to be election issue
  876. How to prevent lime scale build up
  877. The “Ghost of Charron Lake”
  878. What if . . .
  879. July MLS® activity maintains a steady pace
  880. Two cities with similar real estate stats
  881. Canada lacrosse world champions — Winnipeg in1904 first to claim title
  882. Foundation is there
  883. “Pocket suites” — comfort, safety for low-income Winnipeggers
  884. MLS® not just at work locally
  885. Naming a province — “it is Manitobah . . . enshrines a very romantic legend.”
  886. “Birds of passage”
  887. Housing boom contributing to province’s economic growth
  888. Confidence shown in real estate
  889. “Scarlet-clad warriors” head west
  890. “Birds of passage”
  891. More listings means more choice for home buyers
  892. REALTORS® know the market
  893. Conscience of Canadians aroused
  894. Cooler bears
  895. Robust demand for housing across the country
  896. More than bricks and mortar
  897. Winnipeg’s early July 1 celebrations — internal conflicts still evident
  898. Village of Canada
  899. Increased upper-end sales driven by good economy
  900. Housing renewal in the heart of the city
  901. A replica Upper Fort Garry? — forlorn gateway may soon have company
  902. New resilient outdoor deck surface
  903. Heritage river
  904. CREA releases recommendations for aboriginal housing
  905. REALTOR® aboriginal housing forum
  906. Historic Thistle levelled by fire — flames claim memorabilia of Manitoba’s second oldest club
  907. Monster catfish
  908. Winnipeg among nation’s leaders in home sales records
  909. Home buying and the Internet
  910. Golden age of local soccer — years between the two world wars
  911. Defend precious legacy
  912. May MLS® dollar volume sales set all-time record
  913. Homage to Hall of Fame inductee
  914. Promises made, not every one kept — Treaty 1 negotiations dragged on for several days
  915. Little has changed
  916. Multi-family construction continues to increase
  917. MLS® continues to set records
  918. Refuses to submit
  919. Plants from garden centres
  920. Prices rising but still plenty of affordable homes
  921. Historic artifacts returned to Canada — Carnegie was early tourist in the West
  922. Lead into gold
  923. N.Y. City crime reduction methods to be used here
  924. Foundation celebrates 85 years of community service — started with Alloway’s gift
  925. Tour for downtown condo buyers
  926. Sealed windows add to home comfort
  927. Giuliani’s pep rally
  928. Exceptional month for board’s Multiple Listing Service®
  929. 60th HOP home nearing completion
  930. After the real estate bubble burst — optimism still strong in 1883
  931. Port of Winnipeg
  932. New home buyers will benefit from GST reduction
  933. Misconceptions about Winnipeg
  934. Good news for local real estate market
  935. The 1935 Grey Cup — ’Pegs travelled east to take on the mighty Hamilton Tigers
  936. It’s now a more balanced local real estate market
  937. Point of return
  938. Consistent demand for local housing
  939. Hell on earth — the huge shell holes were often reddened with human blood
  940. Property investment report says U.S. woes don’t extend to Canada
  941. The fog of war
  942. Meltdown criteria found in the U.S. doesn’t exist in Winnipeg’s housing market
  943. Hell on earth — Canadians defy the odds and capture Passchendaele Ridge
  944. Report forecasts strength in new home and resale home markets
  945. Long-leggety beasts
  946. First successful applicants for Manitoba Tipi Mitawa
  947. Technology conference at trade show
  948. St. Boniface Cathedral fires — basilica fire in 1860 started when tallow spilled on stove
  949. First successful applicants for Manitoba Tipi Mitawa
  950. From politics to MLS® statistics
  951. Urban prophet
  952. Need two outstanding people for Hall of Fame
  953. Product prevents basement leaks
  954. Red River again overflows its banks — historical record tells of past devastations
  955. CMHC reports three solid months of new home gains
  956. It’s all lemonade stand economics
  957. Metis land claim in court — scrip snapped up by 1870s speculators
  958. Transitional “fishapod”
  959. Stats show Winnipeg’s confidence in higher-end real estate
  960. Tips for exterior house painting
  961. Commercial division accepts award
  962. Metis land claim in court — based on historical documents
  963. Newspapers live on
  964. Only 12.9 per cent pre-tax income going to homeownership costs
  965. Wiring, circuit breakers and panels
  966. Hot, cold and somewhere in between Climate change actually quite common
  967. Olympic rewards
  968. Property owners struggle to keep up with school taxes
  969. Direct vent gas fireplace
  970. 100 years ago “Mac” Braden’s rink won “The Big Bonspiel’s” grand aggregate
  971. The new development in city’s southwest
  972. Another election soon?
  973. Central bank raises its rate; competition will keep mortgage rates down
  974. 2006 starts off with a bang
  975. Vics reclaim Stanley Cup — beat Montreal hold off challenge by Toronto
  976. Why vote?
  977. Candidates endorsed who support principles of unique program
  978. Converting basement into rec room
  979. Another benchmark year for real estate
  980. In 1896 “Vics” issued challenge for hockey supremacy
  981. Important birthday
  982. Impressive new MLS® records established last year
  983. Heating system for your rec room
  984. New theories about first people settling continent
  985. Wrong message
  986. Re-organize your closet space
  987. Selkirk loses railway bridge battle
  988. Expect a school tax increase
  989. January stats show housing market continuing its winning ways
  990. New government means changes
  991. Crossing the Red — railway bridge battle
  992. Perceptions count
  993. New board president predicts more balanced market in 2006
  994. Truly remarkable year for real estate
  995. A newsboys’ Christmas in 1896 — called “a howling success in every way”
  996. Doer as Santa
  997. Efficient warm-air system
  998. All that glitters is gold: Manitoba’s first gold mining centre re-opens
  999. Young voters
  1000. MLS® dollar volume sales record expected: well ahead of last year’s record-breaking pace
  1001. Winter election in Winnipeg: new meaning brought to adage “vote early and vote often.”
  1002. Bylaw 6400 requires a delicate balance
  1003. Winter tips
  1004. Canadian Museum of Human Rights campaign: “We believe we can change world for the better”
  1005. Abandoned by the gods
  1006. Canadian economy in relatively good shape — banks ranked most sound in the world
  1007. St. Boniface Cathedral fire — 40 years ago basilica reduced to a charred shell
  1008. Central bank lowers interest rates to boost national economy
  1009. Abandoned by the gods
  1010. Canadian economy in relatively good shape — banks ranked most sound in the world
  1011. St. Boniface Cathedral fire — 40 years ago basilica reduced to a charred shell
  1012. Central bank lowers interest rates to boost national economy
  1013. Burn wood properly and safely
  1014. City bylaw review now underway
  1015. Fuel tax squabble
  1016. CREA proposes Ottawa raise RRSP withdrawal limit: Home Buyers’ Plan hasn’t kept up with home prices
  1017. Winnipeg 1912 — new book by Blanchard tells of year when optimism reigned supreme
  1018. Housing market should remain strong in 2006
  1019. Not forgotten
  1020. Winnipeg’s economy continues to hum along: confidence in real estate market remains high
  1021. Why did Canadian soldier save wartime newspaper? It’s a mystery we’ll never be able to solve
  1022. HOP expands beyond city’s West End
  1023. For valour
  1024. Survey shows majority favour school tax shift: groups call for the government to finally act
  1025. Munich agreement a goose-step towards war — Hitler deceives world leaders
  1026. Rent controls create “have-not” province
  1027. Prosperity bonus
  1028. Canadians remain fiscally responsible, survey says: Unlikely to extend themselves when buying house
  1029. Steel-insulated door for our climate
  1030. Red River Floodway expansion underway — “Duff’s Ditch” has saved billions
  1031. Rent controls create “have-not” province
  1032. Ideas needed
  1033. MLS® home sales generate economic activity: spending attributed to purchases $10.8 billion
  1034. Real estate called where it’s at — Toronto example similar to what’s happening elsewhere
  1035. E.L. Drewry noted for beer and boosterism
  1036. Tainted legacy
  1037. Hall of Fame honours outstanding citizens: Drewry and Roy newest special inductees
  1038. Internment of “enemy aliens” during WWI — Brandon camp held 800 people
  1039. Putting market in perspective
  1040. Beware autumn “blows”
  1041. Real estate market hits triple play in August: MLS® sales, listings and dollar volume are up
  1042. Add insulation to your home’s attic
  1043. Link to Orkney Islands — reliable source of recruits for Hudson’s Bay Company
  1044. Impost fees impose on new developments
  1045. Soaring gas prices
  1046. Report says first-time buyers are open-minded: many snapping up older homes under $150,000
  1047. Eliminate the “water hammer” effect
  1048. End of an era — implosion levels Olgivie Flour Mills Co. site
  1049. Even federal government uses MLS®
  1050. Joy-ride about to end
  1051. National association revises housing forecast: local market is doing better than anticipated
  1052. Arrival of stagecoach in Winnipeg — linked community with outside world
  1053. Seeing red for the right reasons
  1054. Never forget
  1055. Survey shows strong support for school funding reform: coalition tells minister should come from general revenues
  1056. Kitchen designers emphasize efficiency
  1057. Self-taught plant genius — plaque commemorates his contributions
  1058. HOP prototype for Hamilton program
  1059. Free to disagree
  1060. First-time home buyers enticed into market: low interest rates one of many considerations
  1061. How to hang a rec room door
  1062. “Manitoba mosquito” called worst species of insect in the world
  1063. Randa was an inspired, talented artist
  1064. It’s a bull!
  1065. Fifteen new infill homes for city’s North End: stabilize neighbourhoods and provide hope
  1066. Windigo of First Nations oral tradition — fearsome and loathsome creature
  1067. Reality realty — get used to it
  1068. Sick old man
  1069. New hydro headquarters design completed: called next pillar in downtown development
  1070. Failing grade on Canadian history quiz — but most do want to learn more
  1071. Not necessary to re-invent wheel
  1072. Canada Day disappointment
  1073. Continual rainfall hasn’t dampened home sales: “May and June have been spectacular” — Penner
  1074. Measures to combat credit crunch
  1075. Gamble that failed
  1076. North American Boundary Commission — fixing the U.S.-Canada border at 49th Parallel
  1077. Best September MLS® performance ever recorded
  1078. Draw your deck plan to scale
  1079. Red River cart called “marvel of mechanism” — noise compared to “den of wild beasts”
  1080. The little details make a difference
  1081. Closer to Manitoba
  1082. Closer to Manitoba
  1083. MLS® sets new monthly and quarterly sales records: little to deter consumer confidence in resale market
  1084. Reminder of Canada’s connection to monarchy — it’s more than just a civic holiday
  1085. Committed to serving their clients
  1086. Dangerous precedent
  1087. Central bank’s rate remains the same: mortgage interest rates actually drop
  1088. How to create some curb appeal
  1089. Little has changed — Martin’s problems similar to events of 1926
  1090. Serviced land in short supply
  1091. Model community
  1092. Railing adds to deck’s look and safety
  1093. A return to the past — border closure incentive for meat-packing expansion
  1094. Changes to controls — how “suite” are they?
  1095. Need answers
  1096. “We were extremely pleased. It was amazing.” nearly half of MLS® sold for above list price
  1097. Durable tiles for deck surfaces
  1098. Manitoba’s oil patch — new discovery creates new crop of rural millionaires
  1099. Multiple Listing Service® rocks
  1100. They forgot
  1101. Looking for two good Winnipeggers: nominations for Citizens Hall of Fame
  1102. Early fishing on Lake Winnipeg — an important resource serving aboriginals and settlers
  1103. Loose or missing chimney brick mortar
  1104. Housing report worth examining
  1105. Eminent domain
  1106. Not a forgotten hero — new statue of Mynarski unveiled at former RAF base
  1107. Happenings in national real estate
  1108. Save the trees
  1109. MLS® listings continue their winning ways: By using agent couple realize hefty profit
  1110. Program worthy of recognition
  1111. Certain mowers able to recycle clippings
  1112. 54 West Gate — new book tells stories of Ralph Connor House
  1113. After the deluge
  1114. Manitoba tops housing affordability index: biggest improvement detached bungalows
  1115. Solar collectors that even work on cloudy days
  1116. First 50 years of hotels in Winnipeg — in the beginning was the Royal
  1117. Winnipeg turning into Winn-couver
  1118. Right step
  1119. MLS® sales hit record levels in May
  1120. Finishing new wood exterior siding
  1121. Winnipeg turning into Winn-couver
  1122. On Strike!
  1123. Spence neighbourhood revitalization funding: families have chance to become homeowners
  1124. Easy-to-install suspended ceiling
  1125. Mad at CBC
  1126. “We’re going to win this one,” vows chairman: more groups attacking education funding system
  1127. Table saw is a multi-purpose tool
  1128. “Disastrous year 1826” — floodway expansion to protect city from flood of greater magnitude
  1129. You ain’t seen nothin’ yet!
  1130. Invaluable to wildlife
  1131. Debt may be rising but don’t panic: increase offset by household assets
  1132. How to change door cylinder lock
  1133. The story of voyageurs — festival is a celebration of fur trade’s history
  1134. January freeze doesn’t chill market
  1135. It’s the economy
  1136. January called sign of things to come: brisk demand for housing continues
  1137. Winter installation of new windows
  1138. A “magnificent failure” — controversy dogged Meighen’s political career
  1139. HOP speaks out on housing
  1140. Not giving up!
  1141. National MLS® sales hit record high: return to normal sales pace predicted
  1142. Damage from frozen pipes
  1143. Mayor Katz wants a return to optimism of “Chicago of the North” era
  1144. Records are made to be broken
  1145. Noise pollution
  1146. New education funding announced: issue of property taxes still remains
  1147. Williams not first to use flag as political tool — Dief hated new flag
  1148. Growth needs to be accommodated
  1149. Lost advantage
  1150. 2004 detached-home price up 11 per cent: we’re still one of three most affordable cities
  1151. 2004 market like Team Canada at Worlds
  1152. eBay snowball
  1153. Association and board give support to Waverly West: suburban growth doesn’t always equal urban sprawl
  1154. Tips for purchasing unfinished furniture
  1155. Holiday musings on the market’s future
  1156. Christmas at York Factory — a time of feasting, drinking and dancing
  1157. Market poised for another good year
  1158. Spam, spam, spam
  1159. Journey into history
  1160. The shape of things to come?
  1161. Action required
  1162. MLS® has entered “uncharted territory:” months of homes sales over $100 million
  1163. Snow, stats, stocks, schedule
  1164. Mysterious death of Thomas Simpson
  1165. What to do when the lights go out
  1166. Canadian icon
  1167. 10th month of $100-million-plus sales: average price increased by 10.8 per cent
  1168. Formulate suburban lot strategy
  1169. Anniversary stock market crash of 1929 — start of the “Lost Decade”
  1170. Basic techniques used when working with plywood
  1171. Nothing mysterious
  1172. Residential lot shortage is becoming desperate: home builders could run out of land in two years
  1173. Search out all drafts in your home
  1174. The Famous Five championed women’s rights — anniversary of the Persons Case
  1175. Rent control reform across Canada
  1176. Another tax increase?
  1177. In Winnipeg you get most bang for your buck: home relocation among more affordable in N.A.
  1178. Market still very buoyant
  1179. Electrifying Manitoba — first mention of electric lighting at Davis Hotel
  1180. Installation of polysterene insulation
  1181. Installation of polysterene insulation
  1182. Housing and transit
  1183. Two more Hall of Fame inductees: Carl Ridd and Lionel Fitzgerald
  1184. Glass blocks regaining popularity
  1185. Heritage Winnipeg website chronicles history of city’s built heritage
  1186. Neighbour a “have”
  1187. Not fooled by piece-meal tax break, says Weiss: education tax problem won’t go away that easily
  1188. Good timing for good initiative
  1189. Electric drill a very versatile tool
  1190. Start of a new era of optimism? City once had lofty aspirations
  1191. Absolutely terrific
  1192. 50th HOP home just completed in the West End: program stimulates neighbourhood revitalization
  1193. Low-income housing under review
  1194. The Grey Cup — North American football’s oldest national championship
  1195. Another option is a gas fireplace
  1196. Taxation shift
  1197. Single-family starts will surpass 2003: already well ahead of last year’s pace
  1198. Resale market at record pace
  1199. Hell’s let loose — Canada mobilizes to fight in First World War
  1200. Ceramic tile floor installation
  1201. D-Day Dodgers
  1202. Canadians feel homes make them wealthy: real estate assets are favoured investment
  1203. An era comes to an end in Winnipeg — PPCLI depart for Shilo
  1204. Real estate Internet use growing
  1205. Paint problems that can be fixed
  1206. Blame both sides
  1207. Luxury home sales doing well on local MLS®: four homes currently listed for $1 million and up
  1208. Ryan Block retains heritage building status — mayor had helped lead city out of sin
  1209. Homeownership is more than just shelter
  1210. Control moisture to control mildew
  1211. Paradise gained
  1212. MLS® sets another home sales record: dollar volume sales now over $1 billion
  1213. Definitely a sign of the times
  1214. Historic Cathedral of St. John’s to be designated provincial heritage site
  1215. Tricks of the trade when taping drywall
  1216. Sticker shock
  1217. Amazing market continues to impress: record-breaking homes sales on MLS®
  1218. Local house prices still rising
  1219. A history lesson on ice — players wear replica jerseys of Falcons
  1220. Right nails for do-it-yourself project essential
  1221. “My home is worth more today:” polls say almost everyone agrees
  1222. Not “idiots”
  1223. Dirty chimney presents a fire hazard
  1224. Short-lived Republic of Manitobah ends when shots are fired
  1225. Scrooge exists
  1226. City undertaking new reassessment: values seem to be quite reasonable
  1227. Organize workshop
  1228. Support review of Bylaw 6400
  1229. It could have been St. Boniface, N.D.
  1230. Power to spare
  1231. Value of household real estate assets soars: net worth now averages $136,500 per capita
  1232. Proposal that Ottawa amend Income Tax Act to encourage investment in “real property”
  1233. Repeat of '07 crash
  1234. Battle of Rat Portage — special constables carried “heavy bludgeons of green wood”
  1235. Economy primary focus of candidates at election forum
  1236. Real monsters of the deep — new marine reptile fossil discovery
  1237. River resource
  1238. Higher prices, mortgage costs have little effect:
  1239. Lost opportunity
  1240. Industrial zoning under review
  1241. Shoal Lake aqueduct — ensured safe, reliable source for city’s water supply
  1242. Homeowner surprised by contest win: showed curb appeal with green thumb
  1243. Televised federal election forum slated for October 7
  1244. Valour Road mural
  1245. Not the United States — comparisons to American mortgage meltdown not applicable
  1246. The Rat Portage War — Ontario and Manitoba clash over town now called Kenora
  1247. A good dose of “economic reality” about Canadian housing market
  1248. Unsung
  1249. Housing boom not about to end
  1250. First major railway strike in Western Canada — CPR and engineers at odds over wages
  1251. Rapid transit and stadium
  1252. Current market characterized as stable
  1253. First major railway strike in Western Canada — trains stopped by engineers’ strike
  1254. Award-winning architect designed human rights museum
  1255. York boats — carried freight and people on the great inland waterways of the Northwest
  1256. Election tradition
  1257. Waverley West subdivision — province has already sold 134 of first 184 lots placed on the market
  1258. Human rights museum opportunity for economic renewal
  1259. Honouring sacrifice
  1260. Agents care about their communities
  1261. Historic York Factory along Hudson Bay — former commercial capital of northwest
  1262. Real estate associations support Canadian Museum for Human Rights
  1263. Food safety
  1264. It pays to use a professional
  1265. Historic York Factory along Hudson Bay — Ottawa taking steps to preserve site
  1266. Healthy levels of home sales across the province
  1267. Ill-fated Franklin expedition
  1268. Province offers incentives for geothermal heating and cooling
  1269. Lake deserves better
  1270. Good news real estate market
  1271. Ill-fated Franklin expedition
  1272. Province offers incentives for geothermal heating and cooling
  1273. Meet me in St. Louis — Winnipeg lacrosse team captures gold medal at 1904 Olympics
  1274. Keep the faith
  1275. Single-family new home construction remains strong
  1276. The beat goes on in Winnipeg
  1277. Measuring
  1278. Baffling mystery of Molsons Bank robbery — only suspect a former employee of the bank
  1279. Record local MLS® sales and dollar volume reported in July
  1280. Ford’s "big idea"
  1281. Canadian Museum for Human Rights — believe in possibility of new vision for our province
  1282. Baffling mystery of Molsons Bank robbery — “solution will require some skilled detective work”
  1283. National dollar volume down while local market records gain
  1284. Gliding into history
  1285. New rule changes for real estate transactions
  1286. Murder in Brandon — petition for death sentence to be commuted as Blake called a “moral lunatic”
  1287. Second quarter report shows strength of resale market
  1288. Safe bet dollar volume sales will surpass $2 billion this year
  1289. Protecting the Canadian housing market against inflation and U.S.-style mortgage meltdown
  1290. Showing disrespect
  1291. Murder in Brandon — terrible news of cruel crime spreads through city like wildfire
  1292. Government changes rules for longer-term mortgages
  1293. Engineering marvel
  1294. Home values not standing still
  1295. “Worst water disaster in Winnipeg’s history” — five drown en route to Elm Park picnic“Worst water disaster in Winnipeg’s history” — five drown en route to Elm Park picnic
  1296. Renaming Higgins Avenue
  1297. Unfair school tax levied on cottages
  1298. First aeroplane flight in Western Canada — it took three attempts to become airborne
  1299. Rising gas prices could impact number of trips to cottage
  1300. First aeroplane flight in Western Canada — it wasn’t spectacular but Ely got off the ground
  1301. Win-win for Hop and U of W
  1302. Point Douglas or Polo Park
  1303. Real estate agents now “must” verify personal information
  1304. Special Selkirk supplement
  1305. Fishing challenge
  1306. More listings mean more choice for home buyers
  1307. It had to be done
  1308. The power of our home team
  1309. Selkirk special supplement
  1310. Dollar volume sales exceed $300 million for first timeMay marked the first time REALTORS® sold MLS® properties for a total exceeding $300 million during a single month.
  1311. Dollar volume sales exceed $300 million for first time
  1312. Global warming "poster child"
  1313. Changes to Manitoba’s rent controls
  1314. Grand welcome given curlers from Scotland — arrived in city to play in “monster bonspiel” of 1903
  1315. First-time buyers express confidence in housing market
  1316. Another lost paradise
  1317. Policy change will increase rental units
  1318. “Dastardly outrage” — good doctor became scapegoat for failure of incorporation bill
  1319. Significant gains in local real estate over past decade
  1320. Science of ice-making
  1321. Market conditions affect mortgage rate
  1322. Manitoba’s first Brier winner — Hudson rink takes tankard after three-way playoff
  1323. Poll shows Manitobans confident buying home sound investment
  1324. Humble spud mixed blessing
  1325. New rules for multiple offers
  1326. Russian Jews find haven in Winnipeg — government initially only provides squalid living conditions
  1327. Strong housing demand expected to prevail well into spring
  1328. Ledohowski drops bombshell
  1329. Housing Opportunity Partnership on the move
  1330. Dominion Immigration Sheds — facility at The Forks handled newcomers streaming into province
  1331. Canada’s baby boomers want affordable housing when retiring
  1332. “Philistine land-gambling”
  1333. Municipalities propose affordable housing initiatives
  1334. Winnipeg’s first post offices — mail service evolved with advancements in transportation
  1335. Canadians cautious when it comes to mortgage debt
  1336. Winnipeg’s thriving riverfront market — flatboats “present an unbroken string of floating merchandise”
  1337. Aboriginal housing program attracts more applicants than expected
  1338. Unintended consequences
  1339. Politics and Olympics
  1340. MP wants to improve Home Buyers’ Plan
  1341. Broadway Bridge damaged during spring break-up — occurred just four days after grand opening
  1342. Real estate market takes a break in March
  1343. The ‘burbs gas bill
  1344. Annual Winnipeg in Bloom contest
  1345. Winnipeg’s new summer resort — at the pavilion “expectations of an excellent dance floor were fully realized”
  1346. Suburban vs. urban — it’s a matter of lifestyle choice
  1347. When rumour becomes fact
  1348. Winnipeg’s new summer resort — Whyte selected site with crescent-shaped beach
  1349. Winnipeggers top home renovators in the nation
  1350. Need equitable school funding model
  1351. Happyland — Winnipeg’s “mammoth amusement park” first opened on May 23, 1906
  1352. Txt speak
  1353. CMHC says solid foundation for heathy housing market
  1354. Fixed election date fad
  1355. Winnipeg’s office and industrial share in relation to other Canadian commercial markets
  1356. Happyland — Winnipeg’s “mammoth amusement park” scene of elephant stampede
  1357. Contest provides opportunity to spruce up neighbourhoods
  1358. Celebrating
  1359. A benefit to all Canadians
  1360. Changing of the guard — enthusiastic welcome for Ritchot who negotiated Manitoba’s entry into Confederation
  1361. It was the best April on record for MLS®
  1362. When homes were scarce and pricey — estimated 5,000 to 7,000 people forced to live in tents
  1363. REALTORS® step up to the plate
  1364. Clouding the issue
  1365. Nominations needed for Citizens Hall of Fame
  1366. Forty years of progress for the Commercial Division
  1367. Wild West shootout in Winnipeg — murderer Gribbon flees justice and the chase is on
  1368. When politicians sing
  1369. Bank of Canada cuts interest rate
  1370. New Titanic Theory
  1371. Elephants in Manitoba — new research suggests extinction linked to arrival of first humans
  1372. More than a needle in a haystack
  1373. Price of new homes has eased in Winnipeg