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University of Saskatchewan, University Archives & Special Collections
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Better Farming Train - Staff - Group Photo

Staff members, including Ray Archibald, Mrs. [Jane] Archibald, W. Jaffrey H. Tisdale, Carson Morrison, Fred Bradshaw (chief Game Guardian of Saskatchewan), Thomas N. Willing, J.B. Harrington, A.E. Lloyd, Miss J. Gillespie and John G. Rayner all seated at tables in the Dining Car.

Bio/Historical Note: From 1914 to 1922 a Better Farming Train (BFT) toured the province providing lectures and demonstrations and presenting exhibits on matters pertaining to agriculture. Funded by the Agricultural Instruction Act, equipped jointly by the Department of Agriculture and the College of Agriculture, and staffed by the University of Saskatchewan, the BFTs were operated free of charge by the railways. Consisting of between 14 to 17 cars they toured the province for several weeks each summer. During part of one summer two trains operated. The train was divided into five sections: Livestock; Field Husbandry; Boys and Girls; Household Science; Poultry; and Farm Mechanics. A converted flat car acted as a platform for the display and demonstration of the "well-selected" horses, cattle, sheep, swine and poultry. Each section usually contained a lecture car accompanied by one or more demonstration cars.

Better Farming Train - Staff - Group Photo

Staff gathered in front of railroad car: Fred Bradshaw (chief Game Guardian of Saskatchewan), Miss J. Gillespie, Mrs. [Jane] Archibald, [Rev. Cummings or Ray Archibald], Alexander R. Greig, Christina Murray, Jacob E. (Jake) Kratzert, Mrs. W.W. Thomson, Winkona Frank, Alexander M. Shaw, [Kenneth G. McKay], [John Franklin Booth], Harry Saville, Allan S. Kyle, James Waddell, Arthur Wellesley Henry, Walter Lee Kirkpatrick, Jean G. Bayer, and [Everton A. Lloyd].

Bio/Historical Note: From 1914 to 1922 a Better Farming Train (BFT) toured the province providing lectures and demonstrations and presenting exhibits on matters pertaining to agriculture. Funded by the Agricultural Instruction Act, equipped jointly by the Department of Agriculture and the College of Agriculture, and staffed by the University of Saskatchewan, the BFTs were operated free of charge by the railways. Consisting of between 14 to 17 cars they toured the province for several weeks each summer. During part of one summer two trains operated. The train was divided into five sections: Livestock; Field Husbandry; Boys and Girls; Household Science; Poultry; and Farm Mechanics. A converted flat car acted as a platform for the display and demonstration of the "well-selected" horses, cattle, sheep, swine and poultry. Each section usually contained a lecture car accompanied by one or more demonstration cars.

Better Farming Train - Staff - Jean E. Murray

Jean E. Murray stands in the egg candling room in the Poultry Car.

Bio/Historical Note: From 1914 to 1922 a Better Farming Train (BFT) toured the province providing lectures and demonstrations and presenting exhibits on matters pertaining to agriculture. Funded by the Agricultural Instruction Act, equipped jointly by the Department of Agriculture and the College of Agriculture, and staffed by the University of Saskatchewan, the BFTs were operated free of charge by the railways. Consisting of between 14 to 17 cars they toured the province for several weeks each summer. During part of one summer two trains operated. The train was divided into five sections: Livestock; Field Husbandry; Boys and Girls; Household Science; Poultry; and Farm Mechanics. A converted flat car acted as a platform for the display and demonstration of the "well-selected" horses, cattle, sheep, swine and poultry. Each section usually contained a lecture car accompanied by one or more demonstration cars.

Better Farming Train - Staff and Train Crew - Group Photo

Group photo of staff standing on and in front of a train engine. Names: Christina Murray, Arthur Wellesley Henry, Alexander R. Greig, Jean Gordon Bayer, Walter Lee Kirkpatrick, Allan S. Kyle, Kenneth G. McKay, Winkona Frank, Miss Fawcett, Miss J. Gillespie, Mrs. [Jane] Archibald, Alexander M. Shaw, F. Bates, James Bishop Harrington, W. Jaffrey H. Tisdale, Ernest Gordon Booth.

Bio/Historical Note: From 1914 to 1922 a Better Farming Train (BFT) toured the province providing lectures and demonstrations and presenting exhibits on matters pertaining to agriculture. Funded by the Agricultural Instruction Act, equipped jointly by the Department of Agriculture and the College of Agriculture, and staffed by the University of Saskatchewan, the BFTs were operated free of charge by the railways. Consisting of between 14 to 17 cars they toured the province for several weeks each summer. During part of one summer two trains operated. The train was divided into five sections: Livestock; Field Husbandry; Boys and Girls; Household Science; Poultry; and Farm Mechanics. A converted flat car acted as a platform for the display and demonstration of the "well-selected" horses, cattle, sheep, swine and poultry. Each section usually contained a lecture car accompanied by one or more demonstration cars.

Betty Gibson - Portrait

Head and shoulders photo of Betty Gibson, special lecturer, College of Education.

Bio/Historical Note: Betty Gibson was born in Brandon, Manitoba, in 1911. She attended both Alexandra and Park Schools before being trained as a teacher at the Brandon Normal School. At age 17 Gibson received her first teaching job at Bayview School in Turtle Mountain, Manitoba. In 1936 she travelled to South Africa where she taught at a school in Johannesburg for ten years. Upon returning to Brandon, Gibson took a job as principal of Fleming School. She later taught at Brandon University and the University of Saskatchewan after receiving her MA in Early Childhood Education. She also served as assistant superintendent of the Brandon School Division. Gibson wrote a children’s book called The Story of Little Quack, and was involved in a CBC television series entitled Common Sense About Reading. Gibson was the recipient of several awards, including the 1967 Centennial Medial and the first John Brown Award for excellence in teaching. After Alexandra and Park Schools were closed, the new Betty Gibson School was named in her honour. She retired in 1975. Betty Gibson died in 2001.

Betty Jantz and Louise Barak - Book Launch

Betty Jantz and Louise Barak, co-authors of The University of Saskatchewan: A Photo Album, stood aside University of Saskatchewan law graduate Bernie Isman '28, of North Vancouver, who was the honourary alumni representative attending the official launch of the book at the Bookstore recently.

Bio/Historical Note: Betty Jantz is an art supplies buyer for the U of S Bookstore and Louise Barak is the coordinator of the Visual Resources Centre in the Department of Art and Art History.

Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 13 March 1998 issue of OCN.

Bio/Historical Note: From OCN article: Bernie Isman, born in Kamsack 91 years ago [1908], graduated from the University of Saskatchewan in 1928 and subsequently spent 61 years in the profession (save his wartime stint in the RCAF in the 1940s), including a number of years as a judge in the British Columbia Provincial Court system and an 'official guardian' of that province. Isman served as honourary spokesman of the University's 1997-'98 Annual Fund campaign. He earned the letter S on his sweater from his days as the captain of the hockey Huskies in the late 1920s.

Betty Jantz and Louise Barak - Book Launch

Betty Jantz and Louise Barak, co-authors of The University of Saskatchewan: A Photo Album, stood aside University of Saskatchewan graduate Bernie Isman '28, of North Vancouver, who was the honourary alumni representative attending the official launch of the book at the Bookstore recently.

Bio/Historical Note: Betty Jantz is an art supplies buyer for the U of S Bookstore and Louise Barak is the coordinator of the Visual Resources Centre in the Department of Art and Art History.

Bio/Historical Note: Image appeared in 13 March 1998 issue of OCN.

Bio/Historical Note: From OCN article: Bernie Isman, born in Kamsack 91 years ago [1908], graduated from the University of Saskatchewan in 1928 and subsequently spent 61 years in the profession (save his wartime stint in the RCAF in the 1940s), including a number of years as a judge in the British Columbia Provincial Court system and an 'official guardian' of that province. Isman served as honourary spokesman of the University's 1997-'98 Annual Fund campaign. He earned the letter S on his sweater from his days as the captain of the hockey Huskies in the late 1920s.

Betty Onufreychuk and Ihor Papish

Betty Onufreychuk and Ihor Papish are seated in the studio of CJUS FM. The two on air personalities hosted "Morning Favourites" and "Folk Music International".

Bio/Historical Note: In 1959 a campus group calling themselves "University Radio Productions" approached the federal government for a broadcast license to operate a student-run FM station on a non-commercial basis. Licensing requirements demanded that licenses only be issued to the university itself; in 1960 students approached the Board of Governors for approval. Operation of the station, including a constitution, was formalized in 1965 between the University and the Students Union (USSU), and CJUS-FM was launched. Studios were initially located in the basement of the university's Memorial Union Building, but were moved to the basement of the Education Building in 1980 next to the Department of Audio Visual Services. The station was launched through a partnership between the university's board of governors and its student union. For a number of years, the station also aired some programming from the CBC Stereo network before CBKS was launched. In 1983, with the station in financial trouble, it began to accept limited commercial advertising, and briefly changed its call sign to CHSK. The following year, the university's board decided to discontinue its funding of the station, and CHSK ceased broadcasting on 30 September 1985. CJUS was relaunched as an Internet radio stream in 2005.

Betty Weber - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Betty Weber, financial accountant with the colleges of Medicine and Arts.

Bio/Historical Note: Betty Weber earned a BA, BCom, MBA, and CPA designations at the University of Saskatchewan. She is a Chartered Professional Accountant who taught for several years as a sessional lecturer in financial accounting, managerial accounting, auditing and information systems at both the University of Saskatchewan and SIAST community college. Prior to moving to BC, Betty also worked as a financial accountant for the University of Saskatchewan in the College of Medicine and College of Arts and Science. Weber teaches financial and managerial accounting following a career with the Province of B.C. where she worked in several ministries.

Betty Wilson and Pat Lawson in Sprint

Betty Wilson (left) finishes ahead of Pat Lawson, both Huskiettes track and field members, in a sprinting race; unidentified runner and building in background at [Griffiths Stadium].

Bio/Historical Note: Betty Clare Bray was born in 1928 in Saskatoon and attended Wilson and King Edward public schools and City Park Collegiate. She obtained her BA at the University of Saskatchewan. Later, in her fifties, she earned a BSW at the same institution. Bray was a three-sport athlete, competing on the track and field team for three seasons as a sprinter, highlighted by the U of S winning the Western Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic Association title in 1947. Bray was also on the tennis team for three years, capturing the doubles tournament in 1946-47 and winning the Hudson Bay Trophy in 1948-49. Bray played guard on the basketball team for two seasons. In addition to competing in sports, she served on the Women's Athletic Board. In 1987 Bray was inducted into the U of S Athletic Wall of Fame for basketball, tennis and track. She was inducted as a team member, also for basketball, in the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame. Betty Wilson died in 2012 in Saskatoon.

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