PAGE 14


to get a job, oft times spending his summer's earnings before he again gets located with a farmer the following spring.

This condition of the farming community will, of course, change for the better from time to time, as farmers engage more in stock raising and dairying, branches of farming that promise ample remuneration to those who en¬gage in the same, on account of the cheapness with which coarse grains and hay can be raised.

There are opportunities, however, on the approach of winter to join camp outfits that go to the bush in various parts of the province to cut firewood, or get out ties and saw logs. Experi¬enced axemen make good wages at this work and return in the spring to labor on farms.

Any careful young man can from the beginning earn and save enough eachyear to make payment on say 160 acres of land at from $3 to $5   per  acre as payments spread over ten years, and in these cases would be $60   and $100  respectively each year.

LABORERS REQUIRED DURING HAYING, HARVESTING AND THRESHING.

It is a well recognized fact the farmers with full equipment of teams and up-to-date implements can sow a greater area in the spring than the same force can possibly harvest. There is therefore a special demand for farm laborers in August, September, October and part of November, to take off crops and complete threshing the same. For the past two seasons over 5,000 harvest hands come each year from eastern provinces to assist in this work. Cheap transport is given by railway companies to Manitoba and the N. W. T. and turn, so that those coming earn enough to pay for transportation and still have a fair wage on returning to their old homes in the east. This demand for men in the harvest time is likely to in-crease as the area under cultivation increases. These men come in two or more excursion parties and scatter over the province and N.W.T. , securing sit¬uations for themselves without any assistance. If however the labor market becomes congested at any points, telegraph wires soon inform railway officials and men are moved to point where they are still wanted.

Again there is a demand each season for strong able-bodied men. Accustomed to hard work on railroad construction. The probability is that there will be railroad construction each year for many years to come, for as new settlements are made railroads must follow until all parts of the N.W.T. fit for settlement will have a network of rail¬ways as in Manitoba. These men secure employment from railway contractors or railway officials.


FEMALE HELP.

It is impossible to supply the demand for female help throughout Manitoba and N.W.T. If it were possible and applications were asked from those desiring help, a thousand applications would be received in a brief period of time. As it is, applications are frequently received and the only reply that can be given is: "We regret that nothing can be done to supply you as we have no one applying, for a situaion.”  The wages for such female help in farmers' homes would vary from $6 to $10— a month. These servants would be, as it were, one of the family and would receive the kindest of treatment. The experience of many farmers' wives has been that their servant girl is most likely, before many years pass, to get married to a neighboring farmer and become mistress of her own home. The servant girl now her own mistress, engages a servant, if one can possibly be secured, to be in turn robbed of her by a bachelor neighbor. And so the settling of Manitoba and N.W.T. goes on. The young women who came from Scotland in the early summer of in charge of Miss Livingstone, sixty in all, have done exceedingly well. A number of them it is said are now married and have homes of their own.

There is room for hundreds more of smart, industrious house keepers. The Girls' Home of Welcome Winnipeg, in charge of Miss Fowler, is always open and ready to welcome new arrivals until they are rested and obtain situations.

A MARRIED  MAN.

It is generally easy to find a situation for a married man without children, when husband and wife are both willing to engage in work; the husband as farm laborer, the wife to assist in the housework, or in many instances they may find work with a bachelor, when the wife takes full charge of the house keeping It is not so easy to find a situation for a married man with two or more children as, at present, few farmers have a second house on farm  to accommodate such a family, and the farm house is not large enough to accommodate two families A careful, industrious married man, after one year's experience in Manitoba, often gets a situation to manage a farm for a resident of a town or village, everything being supplied to work the farm, the owner either paying him wages or giving him a share of the crop, which in most years amply pays for labor. This experiment generally leads to the laborer gaining control of stock, etc., until he rents the farm for a share of the crop to be handed over to the owner when threshed. Many men in this way have in the course of a few years saved enough to start on a homestead or purchase land for themselves.


Our Heritage  Resources / This Index