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Canadian Tire Petroleum (CTP), operating as Canadian Tire Gas+, is the division of Canadian Tire which operates gas stations and car washes. [2] CTP was founded in 1958 as a means of increasing customer traffic to Canadian Tire stores. [ 39 ]
49th Parallel Grocery; A&P; Best for Less; The Barn Fruit Markets; Canadian Tire (short-lived rollout) Commisso's Food Markets; Cooper's Foods; Darrigo's; DiPietro's
As of that same year, Garden City was one of the four largest regional malls in the city of Winnipeg. [10] The Eaton's store closed in 1998, and its space was taken over by a Canadian Tire store. [11] In Spring 2018, Garden City completed a $10-million renovation.
Canadian Tire: Consumer goods Tires Toronto: 1922 Retail P A Canadian Tire Bank: Financials Consumer financing Oakville: 2003 Credit card company, part of Canadian Tire: P A Canadian Western Bank: Financials Banks Edmonton: 1988 Banking P A Canadian Wheat Board: Consumer goods Farming & fishing Winnipeg: 1935 Agri-business, defunct 2015 P D ...
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce: Toronto 20.2 3.9 486.0 36.8 Banking 9 229 Suncor Energy: Calgary 29.7 2.5 65.6 52.6 Oil and Gas 10 273 Sun Life Financial: Toronto 23.4 2.0 196.0 24.5 Insurance 11 341 Bell Canada: Montreal 18.1 2.3 41.8 40.9 Telecommunication: 12 342 Canadian Natural Resources: Calgary 16.2 2.0 53.9 37.6 Oil and Gas 13 346 ...
Folklorama held annually every August in Winnipeg. Folklorama is the world's largest multicultural festival. It is a 17-day festival held annually in August with close to 100 different cultural pavilions performing 3–4 shows per night. Jazz Winnipeg Festival; Red River Exhibition held annually late June in Winnipeg; Winnipeg Fringe Theatre ...
Canadian Tire Services Ltd. (CTSL), doing business as Canadian Tire Bank (French: Banque Canadian Tire), is the financial services subsidiary of the Canadian Tire retail chain. The bank is based in Oakville, Ontario, and has additional business operations in St. Catharines and Welland, Ontario.
Canadian Tire Corporation purchased Mark’s Work Wearhouse for $109 million in early 2002. [2] At this time, Mark's Work Wearhouse operated 325 corporate and franchisee stores in Canada. The acquisition provided Mark’s Work Wearhouse with additional capital which allowed it to grow between 2001 and 2008 to 372 stores across Canada.