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Village Squire, 1978-06, Page 22i9Th •.. 110:' 4411116 t`481341111111 `,— . ir. . 41 � �� �, ill i 'TAW hiellgi """8 2 Family picnics PG. 20. VILLAGE SQUIRE/JUNE 1978. BY G.P. There are things from the past that one,is glad to have said good bye to, once and for all. Some that readers with snowy locks will recall are frantic dashes to the privy on subzero nights in winter or during summer thunderstorms. There was the Saturday night bath with the galvanized washtub drawn close to the old cat iron`range in the kitchen. Threshing dry peas was the Joe job to end all Joe jobs. But no one who relished the joys of the old family picnics can look back with other than deep nostalgia for past good times. Maybe boys, because they are all born with hollow legs and arms have fonder memories than girls, for that was surely next to Christmas the great day of the year for eating. r I grew up in my Dad's family settlement where the sense of relationship was a truly strong bond, and used to go to not one annual family picnic but four. They were a prolific lot and it was exciting to arrive and look about you knowing that every last one