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The Rural Voice, 1998-09, Page 16cLn•con ,YAEm1 'THE COMPLETE HOG AND CATTLE CONFINEMENT AND FEEDING EQUIP. CENTRE' • Nipple Drinkers • Crates • Dry Sow Stalls • Plastic Sheets • Nursery Pens • Feed Carts • Hog Scales • Brooder Shields • Rotary. Corner & Feed Saver Feeders • Piggy Tubs • All Flex Ear Tags (Volume Orders Only) Great prices on Crystal Spring feeders, 4' vapour proof fluorescent fixtures, stainless lag bolts. Philips heat bulbs & accessories, ventilation & associated equipment, PVC pipe & fittings. fans. R.R. #1 NEWTON, ON (519) 595-8025 WRANGLERS • Tack Supplies • Riding Apparel • Gifts for the horseman or cowgirl pRCDm ixD is Grey County Mall Sunset Strip Owen Sound Hrs.: Mon. - Fn 10 - 9; Sat. 10 - 6 519-376-2800 Owen Sound FaII Fair i;- September /� 10to13 Highlights of the Fair Thursday Quilt Show (every day) 4-H calf club OPP Golden Helmets Friday Grey -Bruce regional 4-H Show 4-H Horse show Livestock—Limousin GLTPA sanctioned modified tractor & truck show Saturday Livestock—Hereford & Simmental Heavy Horse Pull Sunday Livestock—Angus & Charolais Mini -modified tractor pull ...come and see it all! 12 THE RURAL VOICE The World from Mabel's Grill Mabel has been getting a little edgy as the griping level has increased in the past couple of months at the morning coffee break session at the Grill. What with with the drought that seems to go on forever and bad prices for about every commodity in sight the discussions have become blacker and blacker. "When people feel hard up, they eat less and our prices go down," griped Dave The world's problems are solved daily 'round the table at Mabel's Winston. "How come your prices never go down Mabel?" "They don't have to," Mabel replied as she delivered Dave's toast and coffee instead of his usual breakfast special. "When you guys are feeling hard up you eat less and my income goes down." "Wish I could get my steers to eat Tess when times get tough," George McKenzie said. "Yeh, but you're trying to fatten your steers up so they have to eat a lot," said Molly Whiteside. "You guys hardly need any more fattening." "I heard some expert saying we had to prepare for the bad times ahead because of the stock market crash in the far east and the dollar's problems here," Mabel said. "What I'd like to know was how I missed the good times that are supposed to be just about over." "You've just got to find new ways of generating revenue," said George. • "Yeh," said Molly, "for this lot instead of charging for the coffee but letting them sit around all day, you should charge rent for the chair and give the coffee away." "I was down in the big city the other day and my brother-in-law took me to the open house of the new building the Leafs are going to play in," said Cliff Murray. "It's not Maple Leaf Gardens anymore but the Air Canada Centre. Maybe you could get somebody to pay you to rename the restaurant, Mabel. Instead of Mabel's Grill it could be John Deere Grill." "Hey, hey, it would naturally be the Case IH Grill," corrected Dave. "Kind of convoluted name isn't it?" Mabel wondered. "People wouldn't know if they were coming in for food or tractor parts." "So what are you going to do to get extra revenue George?" Molly wondered. "Hey, living beside the highway like he does, he could sell advertising on his cows," Dave said. "I heard about this farmer somewhere who put blankets on his cows and sold the space as walking billboards." "Oh I can see it," George said, "this cow sponsored by Cutter and Hackum Meat Market. Come back in six months for a taste." "Why not cows, they're adver- tising on everything else," said Wayne Bruce. "Remember when you you used to watch a hockey game and you got a rest from people bugging you — at least until the commercial came? Now you get ads on the boards and ads on the ice and you can't get away from somebody pushing stuff at you every second. And all so some hockey player can make $8 million a year instead of $6 million." "And those so-called `amateur' athletes look like walking graffitti," added Cliff. "I hope this sponsorship thing doesn't get carried much further," said Dave. "I'd hate to see where it could lead. I mean, the way the health care system is going, I can imagine the government selling spon- sorship on ambulances. Can you imagine being wheeled out to the ambulance after you've had a heart attack and there's a big sign that says: `Guardian Life Insurance: now don't you wish you'd bought more?" "Or police cars sponsored by Tim Horton's," said Mabel. "Or how about a sharp funeral director selling the sponsorship of his place like the Leafs did," said Wayne. "Maxwell House Funeral Home, — good to your last drop."0