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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1929-09-20, Page 626 \$i g{k my Glias eral of the almond slivers in the cream as garnish. l,°3ead how one woman lost 28 lbs. of tat, without diet, without dangerouai dlruga or exercises. "I take a daily dose of Krusehen, and It lave lost two inches round the waist hips and 28 lbs. since last summer. 11 feel very well on it and people tell time I look very Ht. I am 5 ft. 4 in. in height, Oil years old, and come of a otout family." Miss E. L. /Don't go lumbering about with a Unladen of unhealthy, excess fat you 2211 get rid of it easily if you get the 1'Kruschen habit. 11.rusehen Salts provides the easiest, caeca and surest way to lose fat that s a can possibly desire. By purifying your blood of harmful acids, helping the liver, kidneys and bowels to throw cad waste material, they remove in a ❑atural way the fatty deposits which aoiconous waste matter has produced. Not only do you lose pounds in weight, but you lose years in appearance. Little by little, the ugly fat disappears -- slowly, yes --but surely—and you soon L'ee1 wonderfully healthy, vital and utergetie--more oo than ever before b your life. Stuffed Pears. Core fine looking firm pears, fill the centres with chopped nuts and dates. Sprinkle thickly with granu- lated sugar. Put in a pan with one- half cupful water. Cover and bake for ten minutes, then uncover, baste with the pan syrup, adding a little boiling water if too much dried out, and bake until tender. Chill a,id serve with cream. Dutch Peach Cake. Two cupfuls of dour, one-half tea- spoonful of salt, 3 teaspoonfuls bak- ing powder, 34 cupful shortening, one egg, % cupful milk, sliced peaches, 1 cupful sugar, slight grating nutmeg. Sift together the Hour, salt and baking powder, work in the shorten- ing and mix to a light dough with the well beaten egg and milk. Roll out and spread in a greased shallow pan, then imbed the peaches in the dough, having the fruit cut in rather thick slices and placing these very close together. Sprinkle with the su- gar and nutmeg and bake thirty to thirty-five minutes in a moderate ov- en. NOW IS THE TIME TO USE UP FRUITS Make the most of the fruits of the orchard while they are cheap and plentiful. Baked Peaches. Peel fresh peaches, cut in halves and remove stones. Put in shallow baking dish or greased pie plate, fill each cavity with 1 teaspoonful sugar, , teaspoonful of butter, a few drops of lemon juice and a slight grating of nutmeg. Put in hot oven or at 450 def. F. and bake until tender. Meanwhile cut bread in slices and then in circular pieces. Remove por- tions of the centre, brush with but- ter and brown delicately in the oven. Serve peaches on the toast with or without whipped cream. Peach Cottage Pudding. Make a cottage pudding, but be- fore baking cover the top with peaches, peeled, quartered and stor- ed. Sprinkle with granulated ugar and bake in a moderate oven or at 350 deg. F. for 35 minutes. Serve with lemon sauce. ECISMA E hum 0 No matter what e an have iehetl, Dene try "Sootha-Salva". ThIse �I a famous physician kao i t cgs quick relief to Dthoussuretz c;rt =gee= that you can count on it magma tka itching and burning, heeling teat? Inge Sur- faces, and completely cleeramme your shim of torturing Eczema. mat as coats ywm noel ticGQ�,y-. do Lam.. Moor %taians te.,o L'bouca off "Slact. a ca°0 i2 you aro not ,- a-i5voo Nue �t� tuna to Fruit-a�-�a�Lv�co ]L�dac� caul aro wan =tunes your za.sm;{y .P c Mr rpt. ups .r rt i 1 eau he needed a new set of legs. The Saskatchewan Red Cross Society of- fered to provide them and he had to come to Regina to be fitted. What queer squeaks and groans the old legs made as they carried their owner across the office of the Red Cross headquarters to greet W. F, Marshall, the Saskatchewan Red Cross commissioner. They had been mended and patched and strapped and glued. And they were heavy—each one weighed 14 pounds. Three days later when Boettcher walked away to the train he had the very latest things in artificial legs. the total weight of the two being just what one of his old ones weighed. And for emergency purposes he car- ried his old legs, carefully mended Boettcher has determined to give his six children the best educat;on possible. One has already reached grade nine. Two of his boys want to go to the agricultural college at the University of Saskatchewan. With much of the spirit of the old pioneers of the west Boettcher is determined that obstacles can be overcome. He has already demonstrated that they can be. Compote of Rice and Peaches. Remove the skins from six ripe peaches. Peaches, when quite ripe, may be peeled—otherwise if they are plunged into hot water for a mom- ent the skins may be rubbed off. Cut a little piece from the stem Ends, and remove the stones. Fill the cavities with white sultana raisins, or with any kind of jelly or jam. Cook in a baking dish in the oven for about twenty minutes, or until hot through and soft, but not broken. Have ready about a pint of rice boiled in milk and sweetened. Make a bed of this on a round dish, arrange peaches on the rice, garnish with whipped cream, dust fine granulated sugar over all serve hot, with sauce, of melted jelly. —American Cookery. Peach Melba. Pare a ripe peach and cut in halves. Cook in a thin syrup (made of one cupful sugar and 1 cupful water) un- til the peach is tender. Remove from syrup, drain and chill. Make a puree of fresh raspberries, by mashing rine berries and adding sugar to taste. Chill. In the dessert cup place rich vanilla ice cream. On it lay the half peach, cavity downward. Over this pour a generous amount of raspber- ry puree. Canned raspberries may be used when the fresh article is out of sea- son. Peaches Supreme. Line shallow fruit dishes with halt'• ed lady -fingers; put into each half a firm 'pared peach; fill the cavity with powdered sugar and shredded sweet almonds, moistened with whipped cream, and fill up the mound with whipped cream, sweetened and faint- ly flavored with almond. Stick sev- fi eIIl�j�ullltllg life? ""-Ir in just in her ,,teen ., age" that a girl should be getting the most fun out of life 1—Yet so often it happens that girls of sixteen- to - twenty have outgrown their strength ---are quickly tired, pale, nervous, generally run- down and unhappy! These are sure signs of anaemnia, a condition that results from thin, worn-out, under -nourished blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have corrected this in thousands of girls. Here is the actual experience of Mrs. Ben Nicholas of Prieau, Ont. "My daughter was in a run-down stare. She was easily tired and did not wish to associate with others. Ao this was unnatural, 1 began giving her Dr. Williams' Pith Pills, and they soon mmmdlo a strong healthy girl of her. Now she is es happy a girl as one would wish to Start your daughter on this proven treatment now fey buying Dr. Williams' Pink ]p'' ie,at your druggist's or any &eller in medicine or hi man, 50 cense, postpaid, from The Da. Wnlliemaa Vffei'iekilo Co., a'•rocewille, cif+ tem Baked Pears. If the pears are small, bake them whole. If they are large scoop out the cores from the blossom ends, fill the cavities with almost anything— stale cake crumbs, apple or other jelly, and a few sultanas, a dash of spice and a little sugar, alt mixed, and after packing this in, cut a piece from the blossom end to form a cotk or stopper, and press this in to hold the stuffing. Set the pears, stem ends up, in a baking dish, pour a little water around them, and bake until they are soft, but not broken. Then serve them with a spoonful or two of the good juice from the pan. Win- ter pears lend themselves nicely to baking, and so do the fresh pears of August or September, when,, they are just a little too hard for eating—net unripe, only rather hard.—( American Cookery). HOUSEHOLD DISCOVERIES Stretching Curtains. When washing your fine net cur- tains, pin the tops of curtains on clothes line, with a number of clothes pegs; then run a brass rod through the hem at bottom and let them dry. The curtains will dry perfectly straight and you save the trouble of putting them on stretchers. Of course the line must be a fairly high one. To Clean Ivory Handled Knives. Efort UR ON 55 r=' at c®PV1Il'ViINNETY Ir' rE e (9,3 UYI NG ]IDERIWITOBV ANID) IBUSIVRSS GUILD lr: �Througlit the co-oimeeatinun of the Business Men listed below, we will reproduce a eeslea ee edea eeessee ata;lee amid eavunt big # 094242 Old pig a better business relationship between resident and merchant BIM the toed ammo tlnafl brhn Elliott a),metro psre(31eoraflvca c®zm¢>m eai y Ilru1 ctrl lle15 Q.a 1V . FIFTY YEARS Fifty years ago a young man call- ed at a dentist's office in a little town in Eastern Canada. The dentist was a cousin of Alexander Graham Bell, and was proud possessor of one of the very first telephones ever made. It consisted of two speaking tubes connected by wire which ran over the roof of the houses from the dentist's home to his office. It was a great curiosity to those who had the priv- ilege of using it, and nobody seemed to regard it as anything but a re- markably fine toy. Last week this same man visited the Winnipeg cen- tral exchange and there, where thou- sands of wires come in cables to the wonderfully constructed switchboard, he heard messages being sent to Ed- monton0, Calgary, Chicago., Toronto and New York. In the city and prov- ince there are in daily use no less than 75,000 phones. In the world there are hundreds of millions. The little speaking tube has become necessary in business, in social life and in the conduct of affairs. It has transformed trade and industry, brought comfort to a lonely world, saved time and relieved warry and all this has come about in half a cen- tury. Fifty years ago this young man, leaving for Western Canada, drove to the nearest railway station. He travelled in an old-fashioned demo- crat and it took three hours to go eighteen miles. Yesterday he re- turned from an automobile ride. In three hours he had travelled one hun- dred and seventy-two miles, and that was a rather modest rate of going. Fifty years ago he had seen the hired man cut down two acres of wheat in a day with the old-fashioned cradle. Last fall he saw train -load after train -load of combines leave the yards at Regina for the farrns of Sas- katchewan, and each combine could harvest fifty acres a day. Less than fifty years ago this young man, coming westward on one of the lake boats, saw for the first time an incandescent light. It was a wonderful novelty, in days when coal -oil and gas and candles were in common use. Last month there was a series of celebrations of stupendous proportions in honor of Edison and his incandescent light. "It was that light which prompted the first central sta- tion and was the origin not only of New York's present electrical system but also of the advance in every field of civilized effort that has had no equal in any other period of history." In fifty years electricity as a source of light, heat and power, has come in- to its own. Fifty years ago this young man went into a country printing office and watched the compositors setting type by hand and the pressman running off the few hundred papers—the work of hours of patient toil. To -day he visited the plant in which the Western Home Monthly is printed. There he saw the typesetting machines, the rotary presses, the engravers and il- lustrators at work and saw the hun- dred thousand copies printed, bound and hurried to the post—all in an un- believably short space of time. All this change in less than a life -time. Fifty years ago this young man had no gramophone, heard no orchestra, no great choir, hut to -day he can tune in on his radio and enjoy with a mil- lion others the grand opera produc- tions and symphony concerts of New York, or if. he wishes something sim- ple can make use of the records pre- pared for the gramophone. All the world is his if he presses a button. These changes are hut typical, and in a way they are not so startling as the changes in manners, customs, thoughts and behavior of people. The grandmothers say that young girls are frivolous and bold, but their grandmothers said the same thing fifty years ago. Yet in everything the world seems to he growing better. There is more frankness, more altru- ism, more real philanthropy, more re- gard for women and children, more opportunity for education. There is a change even in religious feeling, and perhaps the modern revolt against authorily is better on the whole than blind submission. We cannot expect the World to cease revolting. The next fifty years will see even greater changes than the least fifty. It is rinser to appre4iate and make use of STIEWART RCS. SPECIAL DIISPLAli of ROYAL YORK MADE -TO - MEASURE SUIITIINGS Sttswezt �1.) TOO Tllu " TOG ERY MCP" Men's CRotllun>rng amid Ladies' des' IReadymto.Wea' TIIP TOP SUITS AND OVERCOATS—Made to your individual meas- ure, hundreds of different English all -wool cloths to choose from. Leave your measure to -day. One price -424.50. Guaranteed fit. Geo. D. Ferguson .` foo SOLER Guaranteed Electric Light Bulbs, burn longer and show a bright- er light: 25 and 40 watt, 27c; 40 watt d 30e; 100 watt, 48c, inside frosted. Everything in Hardware. TELEPHONE 61 Ivory knife handles that have be- come yellow can be restored to their whiteness by rubbing with turpentine. Enamelled sinks and toilet articles can be purified and all stains removed by pouring vinegar over them and al- lowing it to remain over night. Cooking Baby's Cereal. Cereal becomes so dried out when cooking the required four hours in a double boiler—try the following -- when partly cooked remove to a pint sealer, put on top and stand in boil- ing water on a cloth—continue cook- ing. A small amount can he doea this way and it keeps well in th° sealer. To Clean Pipe From Basin or Bath. When pipe from lavatory basin or hath becomes clogged, mix a handful of soda with a handful of common salt and force it down the pipe -- leave half an hour or so, then pour down a large kettle of boiling water —rinse thoroughly with warm water and you will find the pipes quite clean. To Remove Rust From Dripping Pan. If your dripping pan becomes rust- ed, grease well and place in oven—let grease burn off—wash pan thorough- ly and it will he as good as new. Chopping Walnuts. When using walnuts put them on a piece of wax paper and roll with the rolling pin instead of cutting them up —it is much easier and the wax paper saves the oil in the nuts. Pastry Blending. The potato masher makes a good pastry blender in mixing the flour and shortening. Use it for baking powder biscuits also. S. A. WESTCOTT Jeweller and Watchmaker ATTRACTIVE WEDDIING GIFTS AT MODERATE PRICES. Preserve Y©mus Rasources. The person who spends the money which he earns in his own town outside his community is helping to exhaust his own resources, in the same manner in which a man whe indulges in dissipation exhausts his physical resources by expending his energy faster than the body builds it up. When a dozen residents or more do their buying outside Seaforth, they reduce the economic strength of the community to a noticeable extent, and when a hundred or more residents do so, the situation becomes alarming, and the ultimate collapse of the community is in- evitable. Its merchants will be forced to retire from business through the losses they incur, public institutions will fall into disrepair through lack of care, and soon the population will begin to fall off, as people move to a more prosperous community. The ultimate end will be ruin for the community and its residents. Guard against this condition in Seaforth. The failure of one merch- ant means little, but the "uccess of the majority of the merchants spells progress for the commurity and its residents. The merchant is the backbone of the community. Individually, perhaps, there are are a few who are not boosters of Seaforth, but collectively they are the men upon whom you should depend and give your support. Be individual bankers. Build up your resources through community buy- ing. A 'VISE' S Sl ' lii'®Il'IF1 LADIES' AIPPARIEIL SEM' THIES WEEK END we are featuring O. V. PURE WOOL sED COVET' S —IN— Soft, Pastel Shades as Fawn Coloss, Combination Plaids. • FRIED S. SAVAUGIIE, Iiia®a Watchmaker and Jeweiller Optometrist "THE GIIFT SHOP" M. ROSS SAVAUGE, Opt. D. Optometrist WIITH ARTIFICIAL LEGS HE TRAPS FOR A i.IVIING For more than fourteen years Chas. Boettcher, Henrybourg, Sask., has been trapping in northern Saskatche- wan and earning a living for his wife and six children despite the fact that he has two artificial legs. Winters he has tramped through snow that often times reached his waist. Summers he cultivates his quarter section of land. Only one fear has haunted him as he followed his traps under the frozen skies. It was the fear that one of his legs might break and he could not drag himself the two miles from the far- thest trap to the trail where his horse and cart waited. Or that having reached the horse he would be un- able to harness it. It was through being frozen that he had to lose Iris legs. Boettcher was born in New York and lived for a time in Philadelphia. Until he came to Saskatchewan as a young man he had spent his entire life Inning the crotrded American cities. 1'or fifteen years (after owning to this eittttltry he w'tad nem ma a train. Then. Thommpsoln's l:,00lk Store WALL PAPER BARGAINS for Balance of month of September. Window Shades Picture Frames Made to Order Phone 181 W. R. SMi IITH Groceries, Teas and Coffees PEACHES AND PLUMS Cucumbers - Spices Vinegar - Tomatoes Telephone 12 W. A. CRIME BAKER TRY OUR SPECIIAL JAM FILLED BUNS Telephone 34, eattne9s China Store DINNER STETS —Special— COME AND SEE BEATTIIE'S CHINA AND GIFT STORE 1r, ., J. E. KIEATIING SPECIAL 32 oz. Bottle Puretest Genuine Im- ported Russian Oil $1.49. Kodak Agent Phone 28 - Seaforth WALTER G. WILLIS Dependable Shoes. Men''s Rubber Boots, first quality, red or grey soles. $8‘ SPECIAL Complete stock of New Rubbers for every member of the family. -R1dl©s WESTINGHOUSE AND PHIILCO RADIO SETS Service on all makes of Radios. D fly s G trate, Self®mil I I ROY S. PIINKNEY read, Cakes and (Pastry TRY OUR JELLY ROLL Peach, Pineapple and Raspberry filling. Phone 70. J. J. C LIEA I' Y Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables PEACHES BY THE BUSHEL O!',DER NOW. Delivery Service : Phone 117 h>rndnvidua1 Business Witte- gyp° DALY'S GARAGE—Is owned and conducted by Mr. J. F. Daly. In point of service, Mr. Daly is one of the oldest men on Main Street, having been continuously in business in Seaforth for the past thirty- seven years. He was born in Eg,nondville and after attending the public school and Collegiate Instit ite, he entered the store of the late M. R. Counter, where he learned the jewelry business. In 1e92 he started in the jewelry business for himself and conducted this busi- ness until .two years ago, when he sold out to Mr. J. A. Westeott. In 1910 he took the agency for the Ford car and he is now the old- est Ford dealer in Canada. From a very small beginning, he has steadily increased his Ford car sales, this year being his largest year of business when he disposed of 55 new and 70 secondhand cars. In addition, he does a very extensive garage business and carries a full line of car parts and repairs, and also handles bicycles and radios Besides his extensive and varied business interests, Mr. Daly has always taken an active interest in municipal affairs and sports. He served on the Council Board for four years and for 18 years has been Chairman of the Public Utilities Commission. For seven years he was President of the Seaforth Agri^ul+nral Society, and for 30 years he has been a Director of the Turf Club. TO SECURE THIIS $51 SAVING COME TO WAITAIK ER'S DURING NATIIONAL SANII-BILT WEEK, SEPT. 14 to 21st and' see this special Sani-Bilt Suite priced for 7 days of quick selling all over Canada. R. H. SIPROAF WE'VE BOYS' and GIIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES WORTH BUYING They are worth buying because they; are good. Compare our prices and quality. V. ! llM _LNT COAL and WOOD HARD MAPLE SLABS Phone 126 FRED W. WTIIGG oots and Shoes CALL AND SEE OUR SHOES FALL FAIR DAY Special prices on all lines for Men, Women and Children. FOR WALL PAPER, PAINTS, VARNIISHES AND WINDOW SHADES, TRY T. G. SCOTT Telephone 62 IEIIGIER'S GARAGE Studebaker Sales and Service Repairs on all Makes of Cars. TIRES, BATTERIIES, ETC. Telephone 167 The Robt. Iteli Engine & Thresher Company Manufacturers of Traction Engines, Gas Tractors. Threshers. Power and heating Boilers, Sawmills, Etc. We offer a large stock of new, rebuilt and secondhand threshers and engines, very suitable for individual or custom work. Buy et home where you are assured of prompt service. SIEAIFORTIIR C 1., EAMERY The place to market your Cream and to receive the best service that can be given. Phone 80 W. C. A. BARBER, Proprietor. Wolverton Flour I`V1lnlllls Co., Limited Millers of flour that's Dependable SIILVERKIING for BREAD KEYSTONE for PASTRY Telephone 51 . S. SHENAN Men's and Ladies' Ready-to-wear Dry Goods Pure Line Tablecloths, 54"x54" at 85e yard Heavy Linen Crash at16c yard Bordered Linen Tablecloth, 2 yard® wide at 85e GALLOP McAILIPIINE Agents for Massey -Harris Imple- ments and Repairs. Beatty Bros. Farm Equipment Metallic Roofing Frost Fence GASOLINE and OILS CANADA IFN1I .NIITURIE MANUFACTU ERS, LIMITED Office Furniture Sectional Bookcases. A. W. ([DUNLOP GARAGN We specialize in Body and Fender work. Make your old fenders like new. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Phone 187 THOMAS DICKSON Dealer in (Flour - Feed - Seed Poultry and Eggs Telephone 13 every forward movement than to sit on the fence and complain as the crowd goes by, better to look towards the East and welcome bright Aurora than in sadness to fix the gaze upon the setting sun as if it would never rise again. The world grows just as people grow, and because of this to- morrow has better promise than to- day: "Yet I doubt not through the ages one increasing purpose runs, And the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the suns." This, from the Empire's greatest laureate might well become the watch word of the Dominions ,beyond the seas. May Canada realize that the next fifty years belong to her, and may she he ready to change with changing conditions, willing ever to relinquish the old for a new that is betterx.—The Western Home Monthly. ROOFING TIBIE STREETS Blirl'lr R THAN SUBWAYS Of late years we have heard little of the proposal to dig subways in Toronto, but undoubtedly that project will be revived when it is generally realize] that traffic conditions are be- coming worse v ith little prospect of becoming 'butter 'unless something radical is dorm. ` 'hit being the ease it is interestio to learn that Hervey Wiley Oorbett=,i lime of the most prom- inent of New cork architects, declares that no mere' &glean should &le dtfz . His idea is that existing streets should be toofed over, and that in the future the city will be traversed by three layers of thoroughfares, one on top of the other. The bottom one will he used for subways, the present streets, roofed and enclosed, will serve for the motor traffic and on the third layer the surviving pedestrians will plod about their business. At certain places there will be exists whereby the motors can reach the pedestrian level, or the subway passengers promote themselves to the motor grade. The plan is admittedly a tremendously ex- pensive one but Mr. Cornett says that it will not cost a fraction of what subways will cast and can be brought into existence much more rapidly. It is admitted that the skyscraper (las made the subway necessary and that it is the skyscraper which has produced one of the major traffic prob- lems of all cities in which it is per- mitted. Private persons are building skyscrapers more rapidly than muni- cipalities are building subways and probably will continue to do so unless forbidden by law. Therefore the sug- gestion has been made that the height of buildings should be regulated, that in effect that skyscrapers should be modified or abolished. Mr. Corbett dissents strongly from this view and says that skyscrapers are a necessary part df such modern civilization as is to be ound on this continent. He be- lieves that more and more skyscrapers will continue to be 'built and that efforts to restrict them aro like trying to sweep back the ocean with a !broom. Be illustrates his point by rensarlting that ht Allentown, Pa., the il nnsyl- vania Power and Light Company had its various departments scattered all over town, so that a fleet of motors was needed to transport officials from one branch to the other. The company then built fir itself a skyscraper so that all departments could be brought together. This resulted4 in all the motors being withdrawn from the streets and vastly improved efficiency for the company. He makes rather a neat point when he says "Every skyscraper we have is, for all practical purposes, an extra street, built vertically instead of hori- zontally, and as an extra street it takes just that much of the burden from the more conventional thorough- fares, and indirectly from the sub- ways as well," This view is support- ed by a director of traffic for the city of London who said to Mr. Corbett, "I wish we had skyscrapers. We have reached a congestion in our strests almost impossible to handle and I see no solution except airways a couple of hundred feet in the air." The mod - to live in the same block and even in the same building. Despite the con- venience of the telegraph and the telephone it is acknowledged that personal contact is vital and if a man can establish this contact in the, building where he has his office it is obviously more desirable than if he has to take a subway or walk half a dozen blocks to exert the influence that he supposes to reside in his per- sonality. So in Lonnon there is more time wasted in getting from one office to another than in New York where the other office may be on the floor below instead of on the street in the next block. Mr. Corbett, we believe, has pretty well established his case for the sky- scraper, especially as it happens to be here and to represent billions of dol- lars. The notion that large cities should become more decentralized so that there would be no more evening congestion, let us say, on the corner of Bay and King Streets, than at the corner of Parliament and St. Davidl ern skyscraper is a self-'containedStreets, is an ideal never to be at - community during the day. Besides offices, it hall restaurants, retail shores, barber shape, lbanks, and all conveni- ences that the average tenant needs so that from the time he reaches his office in the morning until he is ready to leave in the evening there may be no reason 'Why he should go into the street and add to the congestion. The tendency of various businesses to establish themselves in the same area it to be noted in all large cities, and is plait enough in Toronto. , Peo- ple who habitually have daily deal- ings with each Other itud it convenient tained. The point to he borne its mind is that there will be congestion and that subways or surface cars will not cope with it. We have always had an idea that the London busses handled crowds better than the To- ronto street cars, hut there are tubes in London which drain away a tre- mendous traffic that in Toronto flows upon the surface. In any event, be- fore subways are built the idea of putting roofs over the streets ifs 'worthy of eonsideration; especially 00 it is recommended by such a high au-. thority. :.,d