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David Sillers

I am not sure of the year my father Donald Sillers first came West, it was about 1880.  My father and mother were born and raised in Huron County, Ontario, near the town of Exeter.  He filed for N.W. 24-1-16 in 1882.

After my father had a bit of a farm shaped up, he went back East and married my mother.  Her name was Mary Jennison.  Her people were English and came from England.  My father’s people were Scotch and came from Scotland.  After my father got farming, it was not very smooth sailing, as some years were very dry and other years we were hailed out.  When there was not a crop the price of grain was very low.  The price of wheat was sometimes as low as fifty cents a bushel.  Sometimes it was lower, and the price of oats was ten cents a bushel.  My father kept a few cattle, but the price of them was all too low.  It took a good cow to bring twenty-five dollars.  We used to milk eight or nine cows, and my mother used to make quite a bit of butter, and used to sell it to the store in Cartwright, at ten cents a pound.  Eggs were eight and nine cents a dozen, and five dollars was a big price for a pair of little pigs.  My father seemed to be unfortunate in other ways too.  It was not easy to pick up another horse, but he finally got one from Mr. George Crawford (Mrs. Olive Atkin’s father).  By that time the season for summer fallow had past.

Our house was very small, and there was not much in the way of furniture.  The food was very common, but substantial.  My mother made all our clothes from material purchased from our local stores.  There was no weaving or spinning, but they did make a few rugs and mats.  My father tried to bring us up right, in his own way and was very strict.  We had to be like mice.  Our social life was rather quiet.  My brother Floyd and I started to school to the Old Rose Valley School house.  He was six and I was eight.  We walked the first year, and the second year we had a pony and a buckboard.  Some years we used to get into Holmfield on the 26th of May, where they would have football games and pony races, and some foot races for the boys and girls.  There would usually be a picnic through the summer at some of the school houses. 
In the fall there would be a box social or a meeting in Holmfield to raise money for the Church, and that was about all we got out of it too.
It was many years before we ever got to the Killarney Fair.  I was 17 before I ever saw Killarney Lake.  Very little visiting was done between neighbors and there were no clubs of any kind.  At home father played the violin a little, and the only game we had was a crokinole board.  We played that nearly every night, and got to be quite good at it.

My people were of course Presbyterian, and there used to be services in the Rose Valley School house, mostly in the summer months.  The school was different then too from what it is nowadays.  You started in the first book, and on to the second and third and so on.  We were just taught reading and writing and arithmetic and some history and geography.

Our mode of transportation for a long time was just a team on a lumber wagon, later on we did manage to get a top buggy.
In politics, may father was a staunch Liberal and was a strong supporter of the late Senator Finlay Young and the Honorable Greenway.  But outside of being a scrutineer at the polls on election day, he took no further part.  In 1904 we moved off the old farm to one in Holmfield.  In the spring of 1906, we moved to Killarney.

I think this is all I can think of………
                               
Wallace Sillers