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70 A L B E R T A W O M E N ' S I N S T I T U T ES opportunities to become leaders in their communities, also gives them a polish that rubs off the rough spots, so to speak. The students leave these schools with many happy memories and as many as can attend the annual reunion of the Alumni Association of each school. This reunion takes place each year in July, and is a most happy event. It is usually of some educational value as well as renewing old acquaintances. There are several worth while scholarships given each year at these schools as well as the prizes for best work, etc. One thing that always impresses me while at these schools is the fine selection of instructors and the close companionship between the staff and students. The chief mission of these schools is not to educate students to search for positions in the towns and cities, but to train the boys and girls to make a profitable living by staying on the farms. One feature most important is the problem of training our new Canadians so that they can go back and be leaders in their own communities and be Canadianized in the proper spirit. I hope that I have convinced you that the course of studies at these schools are so complete that they provide a systematic training for the future home- makers of this Province. T H E OLD HOME STEADING Dean E. A. Howes, Edmonton. Indulgence must be requested should the story deal mainly with one particular home, because one can write more accurately about that which is most f a m i l i a r t h i s is not the only reason, since it w i l l be manifest that there has been a distinct prompting of heart interest. There is one other reason for the present selection, and that is because our'home might well have been described as an average home; while many were not perhaps so snug nor so attractive, there were as many that were much more pretentious. We had reached the era of farm home competition or rivalry, and our district could boast several farm houses and surroundings that might have been described as commodious. After all it mattered little how big or how small the steading, so long as love, contentment, and progress were manifest. The famous " Senator" Devlin of Ottawa once said, " As Shakespeare says in Pilgrim's Progress, ' a man's a man for a' that'." Every farm- born lad carries away from home a pretty clearly defined mental picture of what the old home looked like from some familiar point of vantage. When I shut my eyes and look at the old home, I see it as I used to see it after I had reached the top of Pearl's H i l l , when I was returning from school, or from many a long, long mile further than that. Surrounded by a forest of trees of different sorts, the top of the house and parts of some of the outbuildings were v i s i b l e . " T h e buildings would have looked plain enough without the trees, but that was a contingency most of the early settlers quite understood, although some of them never seemed to have had time for providing this very necessary setting to the home steading. The house was built of hewn logs, dovetailed at the ends, and was of the familiar rectangular, story- and- a- half type, that in all probability succeeded the original log shack of the pioneer. I never saw the logs of our house, because it had been sheeted with inch boards, put on vertically and covered at the joints by beaded moulding strips., Earlier than that it had been faced with red brick, but the wall had proven unstable, so that it had eventually been removed and boards substituted. This boarding had been painted an indescribable color, t^- » f i n time became weathered to a rather restful shade; this painting must have consisted of many coats of good paint, because the
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | 1930 - Annual Convention Report |
Subject | Convention;Report; AWI |
Description | Report of the Sixteenth Annual Convention held May 20-23, 1930 |
Language | en |
Format | application/pdf |
Type | text |
Source | Alberta Women's Institutes |
Identifier | awi0811099 |
Date | 1930 |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Description
Title | Page 68 |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | AWI Collection |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Transcript | 70 A L B E R T A W O M E N ' S I N S T I T U T ES opportunities to become leaders in their communities, also gives them a polish that rubs off the rough spots, so to speak. The students leave these schools with many happy memories and as many as can attend the annual reunion of the Alumni Association of each school. This reunion takes place each year in July, and is a most happy event. It is usually of some educational value as well as renewing old acquaintances. There are several worth while scholarships given each year at these schools as well as the prizes for best work, etc. One thing that always impresses me while at these schools is the fine selection of instructors and the close companionship between the staff and students. The chief mission of these schools is not to educate students to search for positions in the towns and cities, but to train the boys and girls to make a profitable living by staying on the farms. One feature most important is the problem of training our new Canadians so that they can go back and be leaders in their own communities and be Canadianized in the proper spirit. I hope that I have convinced you that the course of studies at these schools are so complete that they provide a systematic training for the future home- makers of this Province. T H E OLD HOME STEADING Dean E. A. Howes, Edmonton. Indulgence must be requested should the story deal mainly with one particular home, because one can write more accurately about that which is most f a m i l i a r t h i s is not the only reason, since it w i l l be manifest that there has been a distinct prompting of heart interest. There is one other reason for the present selection, and that is because our'home might well have been described as an average home; while many were not perhaps so snug nor so attractive, there were as many that were much more pretentious. We had reached the era of farm home competition or rivalry, and our district could boast several farm houses and surroundings that might have been described as commodious. After all it mattered little how big or how small the steading, so long as love, contentment, and progress were manifest. The famous " Senator" Devlin of Ottawa once said, " As Shakespeare says in Pilgrim's Progress, ' a man's a man for a' that'." Every farm- born lad carries away from home a pretty clearly defined mental picture of what the old home looked like from some familiar point of vantage. When I shut my eyes and look at the old home, I see it as I used to see it after I had reached the top of Pearl's H i l l , when I was returning from school, or from many a long, long mile further than that. Surrounded by a forest of trees of different sorts, the top of the house and parts of some of the outbuildings were v i s i b l e . " T h e buildings would have looked plain enough without the trees, but that was a contingency most of the early settlers quite understood, although some of them never seemed to have had time for providing this very necessary setting to the home steading. The house was built of hewn logs, dovetailed at the ends, and was of the familiar rectangular, story- and- a- half type, that in all probability succeeded the original log shack of the pioneer. I never saw the logs of our house, because it had been sheeted with inch boards, put on vertically and covered at the joints by beaded moulding strips., Earlier than that it had been faced with red brick, but the wall had proven unstable, so that it had eventually been removed and boards substituted. This boarding had been painted an indescribable color, t^- » f i n time became weathered to a rather restful shade; this painting must have consisted of many coats of good paint, because the |
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