1 and 4. THE INFIRMARY: We are very proud of our fine bright, airy, well-equipped infirmary, which includes girls’ ward, boys’ ward, bathrooms, nurse’s room and sun-porch. The illustrations show Miss Dale, R.N., the resident School Nurse, and Field Matron conducting the practical Home Nursing Classes which were instituted this year. 2. THE PIG PEN: The new Pig Pen, added to our plant this year, is one of the best and most up to date in the Valley. It is fifty feet, by thirty, by ten, and large enough to house fifty pigs. Tt has five pens, with cement floor and feed trough, litter carrier, loader and cooker; and a straw loft with five-ton capacity. 3. THE CHILLIWACK HIGH SCHOOL: Where the Coqualeetza students taking High School courses attend. We have this year six High School Students, three in Matriculation, One in Grade X, and two in Grade IX. We would here like to express our gratitude to Principal Woodworth and his Staff for the interest they have taken in our students, and their ever-ready desire to help and encourage them in their efforts towards higher education. 5. BLACKSMITH SHOP: A pleasant place, with its glowing forges, and the great hammers clang- ing merrily on the anvils. And pleasant work it must be too that goes on there, since Mr. Ironside, who conducts the classes, tells us he has been a Blacksmith for thirty years. 6. THE ANNEX: Really a relic of old Coqualeetza. Three old buildings drawn together, reno- vated and repainted and now serving as a Clubroom for the Boy Scouts and Cadets, a Tearoom on Sport and Field Days, and a Boys’ Dormitory. 7. THE CHICKEN HOUSE: The new Chicken House is likewise strictly modern. It is seventy feet by twenty, by seven—with room for three hundred hens. The ceiling is covered with straw about two feet thick to absorb the moisture, with Ventilators above. Four drinking troughs run along the front, the upper part of which is wire and the lower part glass. The egg nests are under the drop boards, with small mesh wire netting bottoms to allow the dust to fall through onto the floor. The floor and walls are double thickness, with tar paper between to prevent draught. Both this building and the Pig Pen are painted in colours which harmonize with all the other buildings of the Institution. Page twenty-six