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The Rural Voice, 2000-03, Page 8TKA NETWORKS PERIPHERALS SOFTWARE COMPUTERS LAPTOPS Home & Offce Compute! Produce & Service AND St PNeleu 161)0111'1f St, Sltatfold ?3S•0996 111•13N K6 Value System *CPU: 450MHZ AMD K6Il * Hard Drive: 10 GIG *15" Monitor $1399 PI11 Value System *CPU: 500MHZ Intel PIII *Hard Drive: 13 GIG Ultradma *15" Monitor $1700 TKO COMPUTERS INCLUDE 2 Year Parts/Labour Warranty Norton Antivirus, SPECIAL 2 Pieces of Software Included With Every New System Scanners as low as $99.00 UPS Battery Backups! Average. 15 Minutes Battery Time in Event of Blackout NO INTEREST NO PAYMENT for Six Months O.A.C. 'Pnce.s Subbed To Change Without Nonce 4 THE RURAL VOICE Gisele Ireland Super Wrench gets the point For several years now, Super Wrench and I have wrangled about what we'd do with the extra space upstairs after the parental nest. He wants a room where he can hang the treasures he picks up at auction sales on the wall. Real nifty things such as rusty saws used by pioneers and the cutting teeth out of old mowers. He envisions them as a border all the last fledgling left the A different tack wins argument way around the room. Fortunately these nostalgic decorating hallucinations were infrequent on Super Wrench's part, which cheered me immensely. I just couldn't justify sacrificing any corner of the house to warehouse rusting metal parts. I have plans of my own. I want to build a room with lots of light and space in which to set up a queen sized quilt and still have room to do the ironing or sewing around it. As long as the business was devouring all our resources, neither one of us got past the "I want" stage. Until this winter. Super Wrench capitulated, not gracefully mind you, one morning last week. "You win", he grimaced painfully, "I'll contact a carpenter today." He couldn't look me in the eye during this announcement to gauge my reaction as he was busy prying a quilt tack out of the bottom of his foot. No matter how careful I try to be, one always gets away on me and Super Wrench's feet always seem to painfully locate it. Another factor contributing to my victory could be the ungainly crawl he has to make under the quilt to get to the stairs due to the lack of room. This area is always a haven for straight pins. Super Wrench isn't big on acupuncture to the kneecaps. My orders were to clean out the rooms in preparation for the carpenter. I truly meant to methodically go through all the contents and neatly box and label them alfid get rid of the cruddy stuff before the construction started. It never happened. As a result, the carpenter called to say he had the studs to partition off the wall and he'd be there in two hours. Super Wrench resignedly offered to help when he noticed the guilty horror on my face. He even hauled one of the guys out of the shop to help with the donkey work. We did it in 45 minutes. The exercise proved conclusively the accusations Super Wrench had flung at me for years. I am an indiscriminate hoarder of predominantly useless junk. There was no time for lengthy explanations, although I tried to justify some of the items moved. The several bags of worn out jeans were being saved to make something useful. Martha Stewart had instructions of how to make a tent out of them as soon as they're cut up and sewn together. I was waiting for the right time. The odds and ends of dishes and pots were leftovers from the kids' college days and I was keeping them in case any of them decided to go back to school. The broken picture frames, lamps with no shades and several miles of extension cords were a mystery to me too. I did find the Easter bunny grass I misplaced last year and as well as Super Wrench's favourite western shirt. The next item on the agenda is a crowbar party to gut the rooms. Anyone have any statistics on how far old plaster dust travels? I'll make a note of it as I'm sure there'll be Tots of memorable moments as Red Green Renovates.0 Gisele Ireland, from Bruce County, is an author of several humorous books on farm life.