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The Rural Voice, 1996-12, Page 12'bQQ'OO.bdG►. LAST MINUTE Christmas Gift Ideas NEW PUBLICATIONS: The American Farm Family by Halberstadt $37.45 Cast Tractors by Moreland & Baldwin $16.20 Case GP Tractor by Pripps & Morland 424.95 Combines & Harvestors Photographic History by Jeff Creighton $24.95 Farm Tractor Advertising in America 1900-1960 by Felherston $24.95 Farm Tractor 1950-1975 by Lester Larsen $24.40 John Deere Buggies and Wagons by Hughes $17.20 International Harvester Photographic History by Klaucher S24.95 Minneapolis -Moline Tractors by Sayers $16.20 Orchard Tractors by Halberstadt S24.95 Orphan Tractors by Vossier S24.95 Steam Tractors by Halberstadt $24.95 Unusual Vintage Tractors by Wendel $24.95 The Complete Guide to Stationary Gas Engines $24.95 Gas Engine Trademarks by Wendel . _$24.95 Vintage Farm Tractors . by Ralph Sanders s37.45 Ford Tractor Data Book by Creighton $13.70 John Deere Tractor Data Book by Dunnings S13.70 J.I. Case, Tractors and Equipment, Vol. II $49.95 A Guide to Allis-Chalmers Farm Tractors $18.70 Auburn and Cord by Beck & Marka JD Photographic History by Robert Pnpper $32.50 Std. Catalogue of Chevrolet Light Duty Trucks 1918-1995 $32.50 Case Tractors by Moreland and Baldwin S16.20 Farm Memories by Apnl Halberstadt S24.95 International Trac Tractors (Photo Archives) $29.95 Cletrac & Oliver Crawlers (Photo Archives) $29.95 Farmall Super Series (Photo Archives)S29.95 Owner's & Service Manuals: Good supply or reprinted owner's and service manuals. American Farm Tractor calendars, John Deere Farm Tractor calendars, Classic Farm Tractor Calendars, Dupont '97 Classic Tractor Calendars (available early Nov.) all at $11.95 ea. Decals Older Farm Tractor Decal Sets in stock New Decal Sets available for Case 300, 400 and 600 In script lettering and In slant tor 500 Diesel Yellow, 300 Triple range, 400 Case -O -Matic, 600 Case -O -Matic and 700 and 800 Dual Range Diesel or Case -O -Matic Diesel $20 to $24 except Case 500 $42.00 State Gas or Diesel when ordering Also AC D17 Series III, D19, etc. Hard -to -find Spark Plugs (others in stock) Autolite 3095 (112 -inch pipe thread)..$3.25 as. Autolite 3076 (7/8 -inch pipe thread)..$3.25 u. High Tension Spark Plug Wire 954/ft. 7mm std Low Tension Braided Spark Plug Wire 70441. Yellow with black and red stripes, various gauges Decal Sets for most older North American Tractors and Gas Engines Please add GST and 53.00 shipping prepaid orders IIAUOIIOLM BOOKS (Allan Haugh) 519-522-0248 1 mile east of Brucefield on Huron Cly. Rd. 3 Open: Mon. -Fri. 1 - 12 a.m. & 1-5 p.m. Sat., Sun., & evenings by appointment 8 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Old McDonald' image protecting farm As Christmas approaches, farmers might be wise to listen to a caution they might give to their children who are tempted to ask for too much: be careful what you ask for — you might get it. Those farmers, for instance, who wished the Mike Harris govern- ment would make the farm labour act go away, might find that now that it's gone, it looks mighty good. The only farm workers who ever cert- ified a union under the NDP legislation, and later had their union decertified when the legislation was repealed, are now challenging the right of the government to exempt agriculture from the labour relations act. They're planning a Supreme Court challenge on the basis they are denied equal rights to bargain collectively as other workers do. Want to bet against them winning? Organizations like the Ontario Federation of Agriculture and the Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario, were accused of selling out farmers when they supported the NDP's farm labour legislation. Critics accused them of being bought off by NDP support for stable funding. They argued that it was better to have a special farm labour law than have farming included under regular labour legislation. If the appeal to the Supreme Court is successful, that's exactly what would happen. There has been much talk of saving "the family farm" from unions by repealing the NDP bill. The irony, of course, is that the only union formed under the bill was among the 200 workers for Ontario's largest producer of mushrooms. Since a mushroom farm is much like a factory, what makes this "farm" different from an industrial plant with 200 employees? It has become common, these days, for people in agriculture to refer to it as an "industry". In fact, all recent developments seem to be pushing toward the industrialization of agriculture. New attempts to produce a uniform "product" (not an animal but a product) have produced different production strategies (three - site hog production and genetically - altering biotechnology) and new marketing strategies, including contracts with processors with specific quality requirements. The drive to get ever bigger and "more efficient" continues. Ontario now has only 1100 chicken producers (up from 800 in 1986) but at a recent poultry update conference in Holmesville, a builder suggested there would have to be a move to get away from the "smaller and less efficient" producers. What is now small and inefficient would have been one of the larger, efficient producers in most farm commodities when people were preaching this same doctrine 25 years ago. So how big is efficient these days? It's easy to see the day when we could have 50 farms producing all of Ontario's pork needs. The 1991 census showed 425,000 dairy cows on 9,757 farms in Ontario, and an average herd size of 47. But if supply management died and we were pushed to mimic the big new farms in California, we'd need only 85 farms with 5,000 cows each to produce all our milk. That's perhaps hard to imagine, but it's easy to see how fewer than 25 companies could produce all the chickens and eggs needed in Ontario. (A new egg factory in Ohio is home to 2.5 million hens, requiring the feed from 18,900 acres of corn and 22,700 acres of soybeans.) Crops? With today's equipment farmers can take on 10,000 acres. Is what remains, then, a farm or an industry? Farmers are caught between their two competing visions: they want the pizzazz of being an industry but the "ah shucks" down- home image of the family farm to protect them from being treated like an industry. It's not just anti -labour protection for which they want the