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The Rural Voice, 1989-09, Page 44USED BUILDING MATERIALS • Wood & steel beams • Steel pipe • Windows & doors • Boilers & furnaces • Fluorescent lights, 8 ft. & 4 ft. Large Quantity USED STEEL 6 x 6" H -Beam 14 ft. long Open web steel joists 20 ft. long 12" I -Beam 20' & 24' long Good Used: 2 x 4, 2 x 6, 2 x 8 up to 16 ft. long. Used 3 x 6 fir plank. For Information and Demolition Quotes Call TTWY DEM or-1-rl oN DURHAM ONT.�-- LIMITED 1-800-265-3062 519-369-3203 Warehouse and Sales Yard Located 5 Km South of Durham on Hwy. 6 FARM TIRES Good selection of Duals Large stock of light, heavy truck & farm tires 'On Farm Service' Two fully equipped service trucks Willits Tire Service Lucknow 519-528-2103 42 THE RURAL VOICE Voice from the Past It's often been said: "The more thing's change, the more they stay the same." But farm life has certainly undergone dramatic and irreversible changes. Writer Wayne Kelly provides evidence for both views: one, the changes in farming and rural life have been so thorough that the past seems quaint; two, "modern" problems really aren't so modern after all. Either way, the"voices from the past" haven't lost their relevance. AGRICuLTUFAL COLLEGE I -P,EOPE;IIIlCr— PR,RICAL MSTRUGTICM IN THE S:1 ce•Ct 6RICULZURE • From The Farmer's Advocate, September, 1911 KEEP THE BOYS AT SCHOOL In these days when labour is scarce and dear, and often inefficient, many a farmer is tempted to solve the labour problem by keeping his boys out of school. To yield to this temptation is for the farmer to make about the greatest mistake possible. There are, it is true, plenty of men who have made money who had little or no schooling. Yet the men of this class who now take rank among our best citizens are the first to acknowl- edge the handicap under which they have run and, further, they are the very men who see to it that their children get the best the schools can yield. Further, the wide world over, the best citizens are insisting that every child shall have, by right, a good schooling. These citizens realize that while the fellow without any school- ing may win out in life's battle, the advantages are on the side of the fellow with a good education. Even should the illiterate man overtake his fortunate, educated fellow citizen, and come to mix with edu- cated men and women, his feelings will be hurt a thousand times because of his lack of intellectual culture. Well-bred men and women will try to overlook his shortcomings and honour him for his attainments, but when he realizes his deficiency he will bitterly regret that he is lacking.in the things that were his birthright. No boy has a right to expect his father to make him rich. He has the right to look for the best our public schools can give him. In this get -rich -quick age, parents should see to it that their boys and girls are at school every day. The dollar or two the child saves the father or mother in wages, at the expense of school, is about the dearest money the parents ever get. Farm life now requires about the best -trained intel- ligence of any job on earth. Keep the boys in school, even though it may seem a sacrifice to do so. The reward is more than worth the sacrifice and the conflict. The best prizes, after all, are for the men and women of education. It may not ap- pear at first, and the boy at school may not admit it, but in the long run a good education is about the best investment a farmer can make for his child.0