Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1986-10, Page 50FINANCIAL PLANNING is as easy as .. . A B PRODUCTS INVESTMENTS INSURANCE INCOME TAX STRATEGY REVIEW COMPARE PLAN C RESULTS HIGHER RETURNS PEACE OF MIND LOWER TAXES The FINANCIAL. CENTRE your headquarters for financial planning 122 The Square, Goderich ,L- ,Investments & Insurance Agency Ltd 524-2773 Regal Capital Planners Ltd 524-2639 1-800-265-5503 Frank Little Dennis Little John Little HEAT & COOL YOUR HOME WITH DOWN TO EARTH PRICES The WaterFurnace System captures the tremendous reserve of underground energy and transfers it into your home. Imagine an energy pipeline without a meter on it! WaterFurnace Systems are effective and affordable. Your dealer is a professional. Take time to discuss an Energy Analysis with him and learn the TRUTH using REAL numbers which PROVE a WaterFurnace System will actually PAY YOU to own it! Choose the leader. "The responsible solution" 10-1-fer SYSTEMS Cliff's Plumbing & Heating LUCKNOW 528-3913 ADVICE NORTHERN PROGRAMS GET EXTENSION Two programs to improve the competitiveness of the livestock in- dustry in northern Ontario are to be extended for another three years, says Minister of Agriculture and Food Jack Riddell. The Northern Ontario Livestock Transportation Assistance Policy provides grants to defray the high transportation costs northern pro- ducers must pay for breeding stock. With the renewed program, the level of assistance increases from 331/ to 60 per cent of the transpor- tation cost for animals purchased outside of Ontario. Dairy bulls and beef females are no longer eligible for the program. The second program, the Livestock Improvement Program, is designed to redress the im- balance caused by the high prices northern producers must pay for breeding stock. Grants of 20 per cent of the pur- chase price are paid for performance -tested beef bulls, rams and boars, and breed -class dairy cows or heifers. The total amount a farmer can receive over a three-year period increases to a maximum of $2,500 from $1,500. The new program covers livestock purchased outside On- tario and eliminates the maximum grant on individual animals.❑ EGG -LAYING CONTESTS In 1919, egg -laying contests were introduced at the federal agricul- ture department's experimental farms across the country. The goal was to promote better flock management and produce more eggs per hen. In that first year, the average was 122 eggs per hen. Six years later, it was 172 eggs, an in- crease of 40 per cent. But the record came in 1926 at the Agassiz Experimental Farm in British Col- umbia. That year, a bird owned by the University of British Columbia set a world record when it shelled out 351 eggs in 365 days. The cur- rent annual average, nation-wide, is 247 eggs. ❑ Think Canadian 48 [HE RURAL VOICE L