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The Rural Voice, 1986-09, Page 21and had a staff of four teachers. Some I respected, some I admired, and some I would have liked to emulate. However, our scope was limited. There were four classrooms, one of which was a chemical laboratory. There was no gymnasium and little equipment. We had a football that we kicked around; we had a basement with a wooden horizontal bar and a ceil- ing ladder, a pair of short -strapped rings and, in my first year, a set of parallel bars were purchased. Oc- casionally were were lined up for formal P.T. exercises but most of the time our P.T. instruction con- sisted of loafing in the halls or playing football or baseball. We had a literary society which put out spasmodic efforts in the way of a paper that was written on foolscap, a few songs or musical efforts, and possibly a debate on some such subject as "Resolved that Canada should have Free Trade." We were living at a time when an education was not particularly respected. Most schooling seemed pretty impractical to a society largely concerned with the price of beef and getting the hay saved when dry. What was the value in knowing that "amo" was a first conjugation verb that meant "I love" or that Hannibal crossed the Alps riding elephants as beasts of transport or, for that matter, that (x + y)2 = x2 + 2xy + y2? We were intelligent because, after all, we had passed a fairly demanding entrance examination. As a student body I think we rated higher than today's classes. We were at school because we wanted to better ourselves. We were there because our parents wanted us to be educated and were willing to make considerable sacrifices to give us the opportunity. Our teachers were in that enviable posi- tion of having a selected student body, co-operative parents, the authority to exact obedience, and a fixed course of study with ade- quate texts. They lacked luxuries in terms of environment and equip- ment but they did produce a high percentage of students prepared to enter any institution of learning and to choose any profession. Thus I was saved by my times. I did not know what I wanted to be but I didn't need to know. If I finished successfully that was enough to start with. ❑ Give it your best shot with 'TYLAN® 200 Tylan 200 Injection works fast to control the three major hog diseases: • Pneumonia • Swine Dysentery • Erysipelas Get effective, economical results because Tylan 200 Injection moves quickly to the source of the disease and starts to work immediately. See your animal health supplier and get your Tylan 200 Super 7 Pack today. ELANCO Your best shot Tylan is a registered trademark of Eli Lilly and Company Elanco D n s,on Eli Lilly Canada Inc is a registered user 2839 Once again Bar -B -Dee Farms Ltd. would like to inform their customers that they will be handling white i beans as a licensed satellite for W.G. Thompson & Sons Ltd. Licensed Grain Elevator Handling Red Wheat, White Wheat, Barley, White Beans, Soybean, Corn, Feed & Seed. Bar -B -Dee Farms Ltd. R.R. No. 1, BORNHOLM, Ontario NOK 1A0 PHONE (519) 347-2966 GRAIN HANDLERS • FEED SUPPLIES SEPTEMBER 1986 21