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The Rural Voice, 1988-10, Page 48FOR QUALITY, SELECTION & BEST VALVE., Shop Louis' of Hanover • Saville Row • Chaps • Arrow • Riviera • Nash & many more Specializing in shorts, tells & oversizes. touts' den's #110 Downtown Hanover 364-1060 TIRES SALES & SERVICE TAURAS 20.8 R X 38 8 ply I• $875.00 c&c Whil supplies last • ON FARM SERVICE Willits Tire Service Lucknow 519-528-2103 46 THE RURAL VOICE NOTEBOOK VI - LER a�dT�C Making a fashion statement: pants out, rolled, and in. a-.. vm GETTING OFF ON THE RIGHT FOOT by Cathy Laird Now is the time to pay tribute to one of the main stand-ins of farming life: the rubber boot. None of the many types of footwear available today can take the place of a rubber boot. And rubber boots have been around a long time. On a farm, there should be at least one extra pair of rubber boots to accom- modate visitors who want to go to the barn. drawings by Daryl Graham words. Then, in 1839, Charles Goodyear accidentally discovered how to "vulcanize" or soften rubber. The rubber boot, often taken for granted, had its great beginnings. The rubber boot is second to none when it comes to covering feet in the Sometimes visitors end up with a not -so -good pair .. . The European explorers of the 1700s discovered that the natives of Peru and Brazil covered linen cloth with rubber, making the first "rub- bered shoes." The word "rubber" itself was given to the substance when British chemist Joseph Priestly found it would "rub out" or erase written farming industry. It is important not solely to prevent frostbite in winter, but to allow freedom when walking in summer. A walk to check cattle is far more enjoyable if one does not have to consider where to take each next step. A stroll through a field unhindered by worries of "cow -pie -itis" is one of