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The Rural Voice, 1993-07, Page 12AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICES Provide employment planning assistance to the agricultural industry Recruit workers for agricultural employment from across Canada Assist with worker orientation and mobility costs Promote and develop education needs for employees and employers Provide information about government employment programs OWEN SOUND WALKERTON 371-9522 881-3671 =—L:� � We now have our HYDRAULIC TEST STAND in operation. This allows us to detect any leaks or lack of pressure in hydraulic systems, valves, pumps and motors. We can also establish flow rates under operating conditions. When you have problems Call BARFOOT'S WELDING AND MACHINE SHOP at 519-534-1200 or 1-800-265-6224 We also provide: Hydraulic pumps, Valves, Cylinders & Controls - • Repair • Sales • Service Parts & Service - • Bearings • Shafting • Shearing & Bending • Castings repaired • Cylinders re -bored & resleeved WMWiarton, (e) BARFOOT'S WELDING Ont. 519-534.1200 1-800-265-6224 8 THE RURAL VOICE Adrian Vos Co-operation is the key For many years now I have been a student of history. This was necessary if I wanted to understand my own ancestry. When I made up my family tree I found that long line of names and dates rather boring. So I began to study the history of the various generations. What was the economic situa- tion when Diony- sius Voskens lived in the year 1600? Nys, as he was called, was a prominent citizen in the City of Hasselt in the Low Countries, what is now Belgium. How did he live? Why did his youngest son, my ancestor, go to Rotterdam in Holland? For a student of history, the last question is easy. The Spanish Inquisition raged in the south of the Low Countries. In this way I learned a lot about his- tory. I also learned that these early an- cestors formed a tight clique and co-op- erated to keep the area's business tight- ly in the hands of family and friends. The key word here is "co-operated". The community play "Many Hands" playing in Blyth when I write this column, is all about such co-operation. Without it, the early pioneers in Ontario, your forebears, could not have survived. They not only survived, they prospered. The playwright, Dale Hamilton, also gives examples of such co-operation that still exist, even if in a different form. The bees of former years that were necessary, survive as a form of recreation: quilting bees to raise funds for a worthy cause, dye -ins by the Spinners and Weavers Guild, even the workers on the production line of the rutabaga plant. The play takes a crack at the contro- versy of foreign land acquisitions in Western Ontario and gives supporters and antagonists of the fictional company AgraCorp a chance to express their opinions. One player deplores the new feudalism; another praises them for buying their near -bankrupt farm at a fair price. One regrets the disappear- ance of small farms. Another lauds the creation of jobs in further processing of farm products. The greatest benefit of this play is the strengthening of rural life. People from the area are the players. They come from Blyth and Seaforth, from Walton and Teeswater. Some are farmers; some are business people. I have lived on the edge of Blyth for over 23 years and in all that time I got to know fewer people than I have in the last year during research and rehearsals for the play. It took many hands co- operating to build Ontario and it took many hands co-operating to put on this play. The early settlers, your ancestors, wherever you live, built this country. Many tend to forget the debt we owe to these pioneers. There's a familiar, touching story woven through the entire play. One young man, "Red" Root, can't get out of Blyth fast enough. He does move and later acquires a truck. But in the end he comes back and says that the community "gets in your blood". When he gets closer to the old home he can "feel" it. He compromises with his conservative parents to work on the farm part time and do his trucking the rest of the time. The play brings all farmers (and non -farmers) the message to re -assess what they want to do with their lives. The pioneers' children changed with the times. We must do the same. It may be a compromise, like the one "Red" Root found. Or it may be a complete break with the past, like East Wawanosh artist, George Reid, did. One thing is sure. Our rural society is in danger of disintegrating. If co- operation ceases it will surely happen. I can only recommend to all communities to put on a similar play. The local history will be different from that around Blyth and interesting to local people. It definitely revives the community spirit.0 Adrian Vos, from Huron County has contributed w The Rural Voice since its inception in 1975. He is a writer and raises exotic birds on the farm where he raised pigs for many years.