bowaier Cina INCA COMSIAR: Ss pees ate Plant Expansion Necessary LONDON ‘ey — Sir, Chris- £16,379,000 ($49,137,000) in 1965, | topher Chancellor, chairman of compared with £14,554,000 in| This would come into’ p » the Bowater Paper: Corp., Ltd | 1964. Profit for the’ year after | says the company’s paper mills | taxation rose to £8,701,000 from in Canada and the United States | | £7,212,000. “niust continue to expand to| Mieet the growing requirements|most operations, While profits increased “profits tor | in | of customers in. their supply | Canada on ‘the other hand were areas.’ “It is in North America that Great reserves of forest raw ma- terials are still to be exploited. down,” = and it is in the United States | fore tax were £600,000 less that consumption of pa Sn, eens Berey lemand 1 tin ‘ster {9 production problems. at mas to en as 6 ee a deck are world,” Chancellor said™ in his with th the rebuilding of one of the | than anywhere else in the © annual report published Wed. | nesday. Consolidated profit before tax- | “But newspring machines: “LABOR ADDS TO Costs labor costs increased Chancellor reported. S was due for the most | ports to a disappointing year in ewfoundland, where a be- ation for the company and its |and higher expenditure on wood subsidiaries, inchiding those in | procurement in our forest limits Canada and elsewhere, totalled'also added to the cost of po- é ae \, oe | Rezries rues te Canaan | SUIPHUE Oe su aries, ans to a new pul a’ paper mil in whe Plans Future : ‘ish Columbia in 1968 -or 1969, NEW YORK roduc- tion in 1971 with a. daily, output (Gulf Sulphur Co. reported Wed- | in the range of 600 to 1,000 tons, Resday that 1965 was “‘a year of | Chancellor noted that the Brit- building for the future." ish govérnment, is placing ite Claude Stephens, president, | creasing effort on the country’s in ,an annual report to |” exports drive, but he said the arehedars that rapid pro- gives the word “ex. |eress was made in several of a “narrow interpeta-|the company's diversification | projects tion:”* | . Though the company was a major dollar oe and con- earnings from the sulphur busi- substantially to the | ain’s balance of payments, water could not claim Baia narrow delinition . of ex. | ‘incentives. \seeth tt te aecomae ee’ ae “We suffer ‘disincentives’ in-|‘exporters’ may in the longer | stead. The flow of the economy | term come to suffer from a is being twisted in many direc- surfeit of ‘incentives’ and that. | ness (CP) — centrator near Timmins, - Tense moved ahead rapidly. The ,jthe Kid Creek project has been ‘increased — to 2,000,000 tons of ore annually. The company reported earn- lings rose to $18,160,941 in 1965 from $11,556 189 in 1964. Earn- tings: per share climbed to $1.81 He reported’ that sales and {fom improved substantial Fellowships Annouited tions by methods of discrimina-|some of them may export to|Council W tion “of various "kinds and by the detriment of the economy | pre ey Gta es ‘Rad deruinge rose by 57 per -cent. : «He said development of the Kidd Creek Zinc mine and construction of a con- - copper-silver Ont., productive capacity ot Che Guardian - SECOND SECTION “Covers Prince Edward ° Island Like The Dew” Charlottetown, Thur. March 31, 1966. 17 i 3,000,000 from lated $1.15. fields. Recipients _ provinces, - | Nova Scotia — T. B. Ciuciura, ° } Halifax; M. MacInnis, Sydney; | J. E. Smith, Middleton, | New Brunswick — A. E. Elli- gon, D. M. Hurley and F. T.| Walton, all of Fredericton. oc ac Aa atts AE chology, political science and te in the Atlantie |” COST IS INSIDE casing OTTAWA (CP)—The Canada| : announced doctoral Yellow. in | the sociology, psy- tread. 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(CP)—The Okanagan fruit industry is re- covering rem oe a. aye ee out soft wet ries some +- John Smith, the te lumbia government supervising horticulturist: here says indica- tions are for a sizeable crop in 1966. . The industry was set on its ear as a result of the freeze-up in the winter of 1964-65. Mr. Smith says many trees were killed outright and many more received bud damage. He ye WE CMe a8 ee ane — for the industry to fully se full extent of the frost damage is still under investiga- tion in many areas of the lush Okanagan Valley. But comparative figures for the 1964 and 1965 crop seasons give a good illustration of how badly the industry was hit. crop staggered to Sin) tod heen 36,000,000 | ‘|pounds. Apricots hit. 520,000| ; pounds from ‘19,000,0; were reduced to 6,00,000 pounds fromi Neer gredeag eos cherries. 000 from 5,000,000; He ar 5B} i i 3 ine ia. per cent ad : = _8 at 2 Ze i agi Ba § torre Wecreneet frre eoree the Commons by blocking however, gave no indication tion that he is in danger of moves to have the capital pun- Cowan is in danger of being Rein eyeing rem te seueee ishment debate extended. At expelied from the party - ‘caucus. “(OP Wirephoto). at for orchards of less’ than three SPECIALS ON SUNDAY MONTREAL (CP)—City coun- cil has decided ie permit the vitalize the atea: A Vietnamese woman sits arid the wreckage of tier “Saigon hiome. after it was amashed early Wednesday by e@ Viet® Cong ‘terrorist bomb ° aimed at a nearby U.S. mili- VICTIM OF VIET CONG TERRORIST BOMBING tary billet. Four or/five Ameri- cans received minor scratches in bombing that tore a 20-foot _section out of the concrete and brick wall ‘surrounding the - downtown villa..Bombing came . yl on. the anniversary of the bombing of the U.S. Embassy a year ago that killed 22 per. sons. (AP Wirephoto by radie from Saigon)