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The Rural Voice, 1987-09, Page 58JEROME FEED & SEED is supplying a complete line of new -life feeds as well as Custom Seed Cleaning Winter wheat, winter canola, and grass seed JEROME FEED & SEED Lucknow (opposite the sale barn) 519-528-2447 LIQUID MANURE Maximize your Potential Returns with this Valuable Resource • Fast, timely, economical service • Operator with 16 years' experience • Complete line of agitation equipment • 4 Terra -tired vacuum floater spreaders • No job too large or too small • For competitive rates and superior service, call us. Summer Rates now in effect GREENER ACRES Owen Sound 519-371-2345 Evenings call George — 519-371-2323 56 THE RURAL VOICE NOTEBOOK SCHOOL TIME THE WAY IT WAS CARL L. BEDAL is a writer living in Magnetawan, Ontario. Like many farmers' sons in the Depression years, I attended a one -room rural school. Forty years earlier, my father had gone to the same school. His attitude to learning was reflected in his attention to our education. My brother and I were expected to want to leam. With the help of our teacher we learned well, perhaps too well. It wasn't long before I realized that I liked schooling better than farming. But that's another story! My brother took to learning too, but not on day one. According to him, after his first half-day at school he ran back home across the fields to tell Mom and Dad that he'd had enough. I can assure you that next morning he left hurriedly for school, having received parental guidance typical of the 1930s. The schoolhouse nestled in a wood- ed area along the sideroad that bordered the western edge of our 100 -acre farm. Tall windows graced two sides of the one -roomed building. These provided the only source of light, since at that time electricity had not come down our road. Floors were hardwood and reeked of oil. Resting comfortably at the back of the classroom was a large black box stove. Two -foot lengths of split dry hardwood were piled neatly in the vicin- ity of the stove door. Sometimes our teacher would stoke the fire, but more commonly a student was asked to take on the duty. The teacher signalled the timing of these stokings by pretending to shiver — or was it for real? Our teachers were a courageous and hardy lot. For $600 a year they toiled in their goldfish bowl, watched by every- one: students, parents, school board, and inspector. All our teachers were single women; most were very young, often teaching in their first school. Although inexperienced, they put forth valiant efforts to teach us — and to perform a myriad of other tasks. They acted as cooks, for example, graciously receiving soup bones from parents who had butchered recently. In the middle of the morning the box stove became the cook stove, with soup bub- bling merrily — one more noisy distrac- tion in an already noisy room. But the aroma of soup was a welcome change from the odour of oiled floors. At noon our winter lunches of dry peanut butter sandwiches were helped along their way by this hot soup. We would rush through lunch so that we could go out to play. Back in school, and all in the same room, were students ranging in age from 6 to 16 years. At any one time, most students were doing seatwork while our schoolmistress held forth with one class. The challenge for her was to live and work with a horde of capricious students from nine until four. Only aparentcould imagine the dificulty of this task. At the end of the day our teacher was the last one to leave. She could be seen trudging up the gravel road on the way to her boarding house — a farm home. There, at least, she was in the company of adults, but never really alone. The party telephone line, the teacher's only link with family and friends, was a mixed blessing, particularly when she wanted privacy. Her only escape was to leave the community on weekends, a respite she must have yearned for long before Friday. Because our school was located in a woodland nook in the midst of farms, nature greeted us on every side. Nature, therefore, became the focus of many of our activities. In warm weather we took our art classes outdoors to sketch our beautiful surroundings. Arbour Day was the official recognition of the part