The Saskatchewan Bulletin, June 11, 1976, p. 10; "One man holds up a sheaf of oats while the other demonstrates the method of cutting standing grain with a sickle, one of the oldest implements used for that purpose."
The Saskatchewan Bulletin, June 11, 1976, p. 11; "Above right, once the sheaves have dried sufficiently, they are pitched into a horse drawn rack in order to move them to the threshing machine."
The Saskatchewan Bulletin, June 11, 1976, p. 10; "Above, one man "feeds" while two men turn the cranks on a groundhog thresher, an implement which performed both the flailing and manual separating tasks seen above and to the right."
The Saskatchewan Bulletin, June 11, 1976, p. 10; "One of the volunteers shows the motion used to cut grain with a cradle scythe. The cradle scythe cut the grain and gathered small amounts of it together in the "cradle" which made gathering the grain into sheaves an easier task."
The Saskatchewan Bulletin, Sept. 3, 1975, cover picture; "Easterlea School, established 1905, now located in the Western Development Museum in Saskatoon." Life-sized mannequins of a teacher and students are part of a vignette in the interior of a one-room schoolhouse.
Photographs show antique farm equipment at the Western Development Museum on 11th Street in Saskatoon, December 10, 1981. [Published December 12, 1981]