Instead of offering them to school libraries who in turn really don't want them due to the simple fact that they WONT shelve them on there shelves, why not offer them to FFA advisors/4H sponsors?!! Not that they will do anything with them such as a project, or anything like that, but atleast offer them to the kids for free to take home. Many of those kids or thier parents are likely not subscribers to such magazines. You could always tell them to take what's left over to the recycle drop off. Might be better than taking them directly to recycle yourself, even if only a few get re-circulated. You might offer them on a online dollar auction. They might be of interest to a non-subscriber for reading material. Alot of good reading in those things. Only part of the magazines that go bad for reading material is the classifieds which is time sensitive. There's alot of people out there that would read like say, a red power magazine, if it were free to them, but won't subscribe to it because thier main interest is in another line of tractors and perhaps thier subscriptions that they do take are in line with that. Not everyone can afford to subscribe to everything, and have to limit thier subscriptions to thier main interest. And it's more about that, than it is they wouldn't read it.
Just stick with it. They were accumulated over years, and you can't expect them to disappear over night. That would require a match, or a direct trip to the recyclers.
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Today's Featured Article - 12-Volt Conversions for 4-Cylinder Ford 2000 & 4000 Tractors - by Tommy Duvall. After two summers of having to park my old 1964 model 4000 gas 4 cyl. on a hill just in case the 6 volt system, for whatever reason, would not crank her, I decided to try the 12 volt conversion. After some research of convert or not, I decided to go ahead, the main reason being that this tractor was a working tractor, not a show tractor (yet). I did keep everything I replaced for the day I do want to restore her to showroom condition.
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