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The Rural Voice, 1997-04, Page 40•�`�,forrowe� , r► ov TOLL FREE: 1-800-318-0724 PHONE: 1-519-638-2420 FAX: 1-519-638-5015 MAR -SPAN TRUSS INC. RR #2 ALMA, ONT. NOB 1A0 AGRICULTURAL COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL Pre -Eng. Roof Truss Systems - Pre -Eng. Floor Systems Building Liners Fabrene Puckboard Insulated liners Steel SUPPLIERS OF: High Performance, Technical & Economical Building materials Insulation ROXUL Flexi-batt Fiberglass insulation Rigid insulation AGRI-PLUS insulation Lumber Plywood Doors & windows Builders hardware Pressure treated Specializing in AGRICULTURAL products! IIEAVY DUTY KNEE4RACE CONNECTIONS PTO LB alfra Meeting "Your" Specific Engineering Needs • Masonry / Concrete • Structural Steel / Timber • Foundations • Sizing Components - Beams, Bracing • Complete Construction Plans • Engineering Reports Successful Projects Start With Good Plans, Call: Tru // e Engineering Corporation Professional Engineers Ontario Markdale, Ontario NOC 1H0 519-986-3768 Fax 519-986-3399 36 THE RURAL VOICE old cow stalls are still being used for the heifers and it isn't an efficient use of space, Bruce says. Though some good has come of this ill wind, memories of the April 20 storm at still painful. Eleanor, for instance, was home at the time the storm hit and told Cathy Laird, in an article in The Rural Voice last July about watching through the window as the driving shed disappeared. Moments later that window blew in, imbedding glass even in the ceiling. She was heading for the basement stairs which were in the woodshed but before she could get there a 140 - year -old stone wall in the woodshed was laid flat by the winds and the roof disappeared. Still, there are good memories of the aftermath of the storm, Bruce says. "One of the most gratifying things was that within seven days you wouldn't have known anything happened here," he says. The Saturday following the storm, 1100 volunteers registered with the local municipality (so they could be covered by Workers Compensation). Four farmsteads which had been badly damaged and had debris strewn across a wide area were cleaned up on that one Saturday. One worker came from Orangeville, determined to help others in the way he had been helped after a tornado devastated that area in the early 1980s. A soup kitchen was set up in Williamsford and delivered food to volunteers for a week. Friends of the Saunders worked four or five days on their behalf. These memories, good and bad, will no doubt come flooding back for the Saunders on April 20. At least they know now that some good can come from such a tragedy.0 The barn on the farm where Bruce and Brian both have houses, has been converted from the dairy barn 10 the heifer barn.