ONTARIO 



I am getting along all right since 1 <amr <ut here. It is a fine country 



iy young man that wants to work, also thcv have a fine way of farming 



It is a great deal better than the Old Country for young men, even 



in saving money, and many other things. I have been writing to many other 



U m County Antrim. There are a good many young men coming out 



through my letters that I don't think would come at all. 1 recommend the 



try to all young men that I ha\v been writing to, and I can say 



that they have a great deal more opportunities here than they have at home. 



;ke to go home to farm in the Old Country any more. It i> 



a lot easier work here than it is in the Old Country. They have good impK 



merits for working their land here. A man working for a few years could 



easily make a home for himself. A man that idles is no good here, he would 



be better to stay at home. Plenty of people come out here that can't work 



at all, and then they go home and give this country a bad name. But I could 



tell them a different story. I recommend this country to any young man. 



N. BOYLE. 



GORING P. O., ONT., Jan. 14, 1913. 



In reply to your letter of the ipth inst. I am pleased to say in the 

 place that there is plenty of work and good wages in Ontario for the man 

 who is willing to work. The wages for an experienced man in this neigh- 

 lorhood are $30 per month and board, and more if one is worth it. and the 

 living is good. Farming here is altogether different to what it is in England. 

 The best farmer in England would be lost in Canada and the best farmer 

 here would be no good in England. A man must come here and be willing 

 to learn by degrees the ways and the methods. The Canadian farmer has 

 to get the work done, and he is quite willing to teach one, and will help in 

 every way provided the man is willing to try to learn. I brought a wife and 

 three children out here, and after two or three months I had a pig and 

 twenty-four hens of my own. I was a gentleman's gardener all my life in 

 the Old Country; in fact I am a professional gardener, and would like to 

 get a position at my trade. If any one in the Old Country would like to 

 write to me for information I shall be pleased to find the right men places 

 around here. 



D. BRAINS. 

 Former address Biddeston, Chippenham, Wiltshire, England. 



Moscow, ONT.. Dec., 1912. 



I am just sending a few lines in answer to your kind and welcome letter, 

 but I cannot yet recommend it to any of my friends, because it has been an 

 awful hard year for us. and if we hadn't had some good, kind friends who 

 have helped us as much as they could, we would not have been as well off 

 as we are now. I think after we have been here for a year or more and 

 get better acquainted with the people and know more of their ways, we shall 

 be able to recommend it. We like Canada better than England, and art- 

 Retting to like their ways; they seem easier than they do in England. Tf I 

 find that I want any assistance I will write and let you kn* 



E. CROSS. 



