If I'm not mistaken, this 1930 photo shows Central Station.
Windsor Station is out of sight (on St. Antoine St. W. at Peel) behind the cathedral (Mary Queen of the World).
The open-cut was amazingly covered over mid-century and became the site for new buildings (Queen Elizabeth Hotel, Place-Ville-Marie, etc.).
In 1931, St. Paul's Church was slated to be demolished to make way for the construction of Central Station. It was saved from demolition by the Pères de Sainte-Croix who purchased the building for the symbolic sum of $1. Over sixty days it was dismantled stone by stone and moved to the grounds of the Collège Saint-Laurent.
Could this barbershop be the sole survivor of the buildings that stood on the west side of York between Adelaide and Richmond?
York, north from Adelaide, 1926. Barbershop mid-block...
I can't help but wonder how much the "Wealthy Barber" settled for when the 'big-money' developers finally arrived.
For some reason I'm thinking that's too big and sophisticated for 1904.