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The Rural Voice, 1989-12, Page 64LIQUID MANURE —A Valuable Resource! Custom Contract Spreading Saves Time & Money + Complete line of agitation and pumping equipment + Operators with 17 years experience + 4 terra tired vacuum floater trucks, high capacity - fast, timely and economical service + No job too large or too small + Free estimates For competitive rates & superior service, call GREENER ACRES 519-371-2345 Evenings call George — 519-371-2323 THE SURGE STANCHION FEED MANAGER The freedom to feed your cows the way they should be fed Now you can: Feed up to 12 times a day. Lead feed. Combine up to 6 different Challenge feed. feed components. Increase or decrease amount fed over a specific period. Measure weights accurately to within 5 grams (0.176 oz.). nv aearonn vm NOK ivvv HURON DAIRY EQUIPMENT LTD. R. 4 Seaforth Ont NOK 1 WO 519-522-1935suave 62 THE RURAL VOICE NOTEBOOK full, lighting up a panorama of white peaks, pale green meadows, and surging rivers. He told of a successful public pro- test which saved a scenic English train route from Margaret Thatcher's axe. The British, like Canadians, depend on rail service for business and pleasure. Heading home to the East: • A Winnipeg man on a business trip to Toronto said he had spent enough years in the airforce getting from point A to point B in the shortest time possible. If time allows, he now takes his business trips by train. When I asked him what he thought about the VIA rail cuts, he launched into a well -honed attack on the Bay Street Boys in Toronto and Brian Mulroney and his Ottawa gang. Winnipeg and the West, he added, will be hurt seriously by the cuts both in terms of service and loss of jobs. "Winnipeg is the hub of all East-West rail traffic, freight and passenger." • A former schoolteacher from Eastern Canada was travelling from sea to sea. She felt such a trip should be made free to every Canadian kid in Grade 7. This would "strengthen our national bond," she said, and appro- priately, because trains are part of Canada's heritage. It was shortly before 2 a.m. Sunday when the train descended from the plains into the blanket of lights which is Toronto. Several of us were gathered in the lounge area of the dome car, munch- ing on pieces of fresh McIntosh apples supplied by a Saskatchewan farm couple and homemade cookies from a Calgary grandmother who was visiting her first grandchild in Toronto. The Saskatchewan farm wife was taking names for her diary and a Chicago couple was exchanging ad- dresses as the train lumbered toward the looming CN Tower. Only then did we realize we must get back to our seats and luggage. We stood in unison and in silence, knowing whatever we'd experienced together was over. "Have a nice life!" someone said. It broke the awkwardness of the moment. We laughed, then went our separate ways into the night.° i