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The Olds Gazette and Mountain View News 1972-01-06 - 1972-12-21
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Date
1972-03-16
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162
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Thur., Mar. 16,1972 OLDS GAZETTE Page17; ~~ Tee c =A Farm & Ranck Management Consultants 631 -42ND AVENUE &.E. CALGARY 24, ALBERTA 3 Rural Land Management and Appraising Telephone 243-4345 1 Report from ‘Ottawa By Allen Sulatycky, M.P., Rocky Mountain On the night of February 29,; jects approved. One should dollars from the federal ernment. gov- In addition to these are quite a few other projects being car- ried out in all parts of our constituency. \ I regard as the best point of the program, that people all a- cross Canada, have been given | the chance to decide on their | own what there needs to be done in their own community Bovine ransplanis A group of Edmonton Scien- tists have formed the Canadian Bov-Transplants for the purpose I.can think of no better way of multi-ovulating by the use stimulating hor- | then | transplanting the fertilized ova of ovarian - mones, ° fertilizing and from superior cows used as do- nors into grade Holstein heif- | ers as recipients for the nine | months’ gestation period until natural birth occurs. This will be done on a commercial and | assembly-line basis. In this man- ner it wil be possible to ob- ra == ay > 3s > fo Business Machine Repairs All types of ADDING, CALCULATOR and TYPEWRITING MACHINES. Phone: OLDS GAZETTE at 226-3351. ANTIQUE SALE March 22nd, 1972 —AT— ; ‘Zimmerman’s Auction Service INNISFAIL AT 7:00 P.M. PHONE 227-5040 List Your Items NOW for this particular sale hours before the debate on the Speech from the Throne was to end, Conservative M.P. for the Yukon, Erik Nielsen was let- ting the government know what he thought of various .of its present policies. One which was in his line of fire, was the Local Initiatives Program. Mr. Nielsen ended his criticism of this by asserting “the quicker the Canadian peo- ple realize that taxpayers’ mon. ey is being spent in this fash ion, the better”. I. agree with him on that point, because I am sure that when the overall results have been viewed, the program will be judged: to have been a great success, and awill garner high accaim rather than be judged a failure, as Mr. Nielson would like. Opposition critics were as speedy in their denunciation of the Opportunities for Youth Program, as they were in. their attempt to discredit the Local Initiatives Program. -Opportu- nities for Youth turned out to be a great success, as I am sure the. present venture will be. Of course, there are prob. lems in the execution of such a program. It is, one must re- member however, a totally new- type plan, just as Opportuni- for Youth was. There are bound to be a few mistakes made. In both programs, there may have been a very small however, look at the vast ma- jority when weighing the mer- its of the respective programs. The constituency of Rocky Mountain has: benefitted great: ly from the ‘Local Initiatives Program. Here are sOMe €X- amples of projects now under- way. Members ‘of the Stoney 1m- dian: Band are recording the history of the tribe’s culture. A. site for a high school is being. cleared. in the Edson area. The golf course in the new Town of Fox Creek, is being improved. Repains are being made on several schools in the Turner Valley .area. The Sunehild. and Ochiese Bands at Rocky Mountain House are burning brush -and clear- ing new dand. A campsite is being cleared for the Town of Hinton. Also, an addition to the Hinton Civic Centre: is under construction. The construction of a swim- ming pool is under way in the Crowsnest Pass. Various town improvements are being undertaken in Gran- de Cache, Canmore, Blairmore and Blue Ridge. Assistance was also provided in the staging of the World Cup Alpine Ski Meet in Banff. 162 new. jobs were created by the projects. These projects a- lone represent a total contri- to do it. for tax monies to be expended. | tain “a whole herd” of pure- _———$—<—<—6~— bred calves from one dam and one sire in a single year. A tre- mendous impact on the live- stock industry is obvious. Geared to handle five opera- tions simultaneously, and with the trained surgical teams to make these operations possible, the Canadian Bovy-Transpiants expects to be able to perform 520 transplants per year with no alteration of the present fa- cilities. A “New Holland” Baler and ‘Bale Wagon Service Clinic one - Wed PHONE 226-3939 2:00 P.M. AT R. H. BELL and SON EVERYBODY WELCOME COFFEE and DOUGHNUTS nesday, March 22, 1972 OLDS, ALTA. number of ill-cpnceived pro-} bution of one-quarter million : Se =e er FFE 5.00 $6.00 Per Year in U.S. and Overseas) All new subscriptions and renewals will be honoured at the present rate of $4.00 per year as long as payment is made “FECTIVE PRIL 1, 1972 - Subscriptions To This Newspaper PER YEAR IN CANADA prior to April 1, 1972 The Olds Gazette and Mountain View News BOX 820, OLDS, ALBERTA
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Image 162 (1972-03-16), from microfilm reel 162, (CU12509831). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.