DEPARTMENT OF PARKS. 10J 



ii-inch, twenty-five feet of f-inch, fifty feet of f-inch, seventy-five 

 pounds of solder and lead fittings, forty feet of 4-inch iron pipe, 

 fifteen feet of 2-inch iron pipe, eighteen tees and elbows. 



At the Flower Garden Shelter a skylight, 8 by 10 feet, was 

 put in the roof of the restaurant to improve the light. The 

 ceiling in the middle room was replaced with two hundred square 

 feet of narrow wood ceiling, the steam heater was repaired, twenty 

 large glass panels put in, the closets and water pipes repaired, 

 and a bicycle rack thirty feet long was erected in rear of the 

 shelter. 



At the Lake House new flooring and partitions were put in, 

 twelve new closets with the necessary attachments constructed 

 in the room for men, and during the skating season 6,000 feet of 

 2 inch spruce lumber were used in providing extra accommodation 

 for the skaters. 



At the Farm House five new sashes and eight screens were 

 provided for the windows, two washtubs were put in the base- 

 ment, and the range, closets and water pipes were repaired. The 

 buffalo cage was reconstructed, the deer paddock was renovated, 

 twenty-four posts, 200 feet of wire 6 feet high, and several water- 

 ing tubs being used, and the cage for the bears was repaired. 

 Two additional sheds were erected to protect the elk from the 

 severe weather, and all of the sheds were painted. 



At the Picnic House the water pipes were encased in wood, 

 one hundred and twelve picnic tables 4 feet wide, 13 feet long, 

 together with one hundred and thirty wooden horses were con- 

 structed; the drinking fountains, tennis lockers and closets re- 

 paired, and the Carrousel building repaired and painted. 



At the Rose Garden 3,000 feet of wooden curbing were made 

 of 2-inch material, and a system of surface drainage provided 

 which required the use of 1,000 feet of 2-inch galvanized iron 

 pipe, 2,000 feet of i-inch galvanized iron pipe, fifteen i-inch 

 garden valves, one 2-inch gate, two i-inch stopcocks, one hundred 

 and forty-seven feet of 4-inch vitrified pipe, twelve brick silt 

 basins, two hundred and five feet of 5-inch vitrified pipe and one 

 hundred and ninety-one feet of 6-inch vitrified pipe. 



In the Vale of Cashmere a drainage system was constructed, 

 which took seven large brick silt basins, two hundred and ten feet 



