14 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., April 22, 1966. Nova: Scotia Trade Leaders Launch Mission To Britain Se tbon (CP)—Nova_ Scotia |flew into Tanda Monday for 2 trade leaders entertained a three-week visit. Among them @foss-section of British business were 99 members from the An- executives at a luncheon napolis Valley affiliated boards here launching the first of of trade, headed bj ir presi- ‘ four getting-to-know-you. mis- dent, Colin W. Stephens of in 1966 organized by the Windsor, N.S. ax Boar Tade tarsi a ins -the--An-+ ulate two - way commerce napolis Vv alley Association, between Britain and the Mari- composed of 15 boards of trade, times. has sent a mission to Britain. Among guests at the lunch In the past individual visits by J. H. Haylock, presi- have ‘been made by _ apple dent of the Halifax Board of growers and processors. Trade, were Canadian High, ‘One of the major objectives Commissioner Lionel Chevrier; of these trips is to get our peo- Peter Allan, chairman of Brit- ple acquainted with Britain and ain’s Committee’ for Exports to to emphasize the proximity of Canada;. Lord Tweedsmulr, our part of Canada to Britain,” chairman of the Canadian sec- said Kenneth A. Ross, general tion of the London Chamber .of manager of the Halifax Board Commerce and son of Canada's of Trade. q former governor - general, and) The new direct Halifax-Lon- businessmen representing in- don route to be inaugurated by dustries ranging from elec- Air Canada April 28 would be tronics to' matches. * a great asset to the province, In a speech boosting opportu-. he added. nities in his provinge,, Haylock| Ross and H. P. MacKeen, ' gaid by the time the fourth mis- lieutenant -' governor of Nova gion arrives in: September, 1,500 Scotia, are heading a party of Board of Trade, representatives ‘nine leaving here Thursday for fromthe Maritimes would have a 15-day tour .of Scandinavia, visited Britain since the Halifax whose main industries are sim- association began its business- ilar to those ofthe Atlantic ecum-vacation charter. flights in provinces. 1961. Trade between Britain and| On the party's return to Can- the Atlantic provinces had dou-lada May 6, the Halifax Board bled in 11 years, he added. |of Trade will be receiving a 16- The apple-growing industry of ‘member delegation from the ‘ Nova Scotia was strongly rep-| City of Westminster Chamber of eet: in _ Lani of-433-who tComrherce for -a~ five-day. visit: ‘International Nickel Reports Best First Quarter On Record By KEN SMITH | Canadian Press Business Editor | TORONTO (CP) — Interna- | tional Nickel]. Co. of Canada has announced it started this year with the best quarter it has ever had, with estimated | net earnings of $38,500,000 com- pared with $37,480,000 in the similar 1965 period Chairman Henry S. Wingate | said at the annual meeting | nickel deliveries are the ‘high- | est in -the—company's—history— and predicted the unprece- | dented demand will continue. | that yet. GAVE NO FIGURES — | Mr. Wingate said the growing He gave no figures on-deliver- demand for nickel will make it fes, but at the meeting and at | Recessary for mining companies an earlier press conference Mr. to turn to lower-gradé ore bod- Wingate made~ these other jies. To make such bodies eco- points: 'nomical ‘‘it may well be that in —An increase in the price of ‘time increases in the price of nickel may be necessary; nickel will be. required to maxi- =Inco,“Canada'slargestsin- \mizexs the production: ~ot-—-lower-. gle copper producer and sixth grade ores.’ largest. in the . world, is not | Asked at: the press conference eonsideting an increase in the ,about the* Chilean copper in- all but about $3,000,000 _ Spent in Canada, —Work could start in six months on production - facili- ties at its Guatemala prop- erty, with expected initial pro- duction- when the property starts operating ‘in three years of 25,00,000 pounds of: nickel annually; —Inco would like to get a re- finery for the Guatemala. out- put located within the Euro- -pean Common Market, but no decision has been made on price of the red metal despite |crease, he said Inco, like almost}. a_-20-cent jump: to. 62..cents.-a-|all-large private producers, -pcund announced last week by feels the new high price is “‘ex- Chilean producers; |tremely damaging to future Spending on mineral explv- | markets.” a ation this’ year will total If the high price continued, “anout $15,000,000 compared | some major users would switch with $12,000,000 in 1965, with ito other materials. McNamara Dismisses Claims ‘Viet Nam War.Mismanaged WASHINGTON (AP) — De- carried such great military fence Secretary Robert S. Mc- | strength with so‘little burden on Namara ‘has dismissed as __ba- Lits_ _Society.”’ loney charges that the U.S. de- CITES FIGURES “ fence department is mismanag- | -McNamara indicated that ing the war in South Viet Nam. | strength is somewhat larger McNamara said here the than the -defence department mar probably will intensify | had publicly disclosed. He said with a-large-scale new Commu- | there are 245,000 fighting men nist offensive, perhaps next {on the ground in South Viet month. 'Nam:. 75,000 on the waters . And he forecast new political | nearby. discord in South VietNam as} hat is 5,000 more ground well. | ai ; qi But McNamara told the Sen- | ae ae Rea DeVoe ate foreign relations committee | McNamara said the United the U.S. effort in South Viet | states has 325,000 men assigned Nam should inspire pride in the |t) combat operations: in South- U.S., not only because of its east Asia—and has sent them power but because of its re- Straint.- “We should be proud-of what we're doing there. . .°."’ he said. “Instead, we seem to seek and to try to exaggerate imaginary weaknesses.”’ REPEATS CHARGES While McNamara testified at a crowded Senate hearing, Ger- | ald R. Ford, Republican leader in the House of Representatives, |serve forces, without imposing wage-price controls and without disrupting the civilian economy. McNamara was speaking out \for the $917,000,000 military as- President Johnson. OTTAWA (CP)—The civilian staff payroll of the federal gov- repeated his charge of ‘war mis-’ ernment’s departments, agen- management. = cies and corporations amounted The Michigan congressman to $165,500,000 in January, 6.7 per cent higher than in Decem- fber ‘and ~16.8- per~ cent -higher ‘than in January last year, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics eports.. The number on payroll rep pay ar added a charge of shipping shortages to his assertion that bomb shortages are hampering the air effort agaihst Commu- nist-led forces. “It's absurd,’’ MeNa- |at the end of January’ was 334,-y- Mars responded. : /700. There ‘were -fewer. em- "All this baloney, and. it's ployees in the agencies and -@nly that, about lack of bomb Crown corporations, ‘offset by roduction, is completely \mis- an increase in the departmental ading."’ : branches and services. His retort was indirect; | 777 3 oe 5 Ford's. name was. not wees CNR DROPS HORSES tioned. MONTREAL (CP)—When the McNamara. began a_ wide-|CNR’s accounts department: iredesigned expense account fanging Viet Nam report to the Je forms one~jtem was omitted— Senate committee with this dec- laration: _ horse hire. No-one could re- “Th history, never has any |member when they had. last other nation—and never has ‘seen a claim on that line of the Sees United States in the past— form. oe eee ee me ee there without calling U.S. re- }. | sistance program proposed by |. GOVT. STAFF. PAID... MORE_-}- FUNERAL NOTICE Ali members and veterans of Ken- sington and surrounding districts are ask- ed to meet at the Legion Home, Ken- _sington Friday afternoon, April 22nd at 1:30 p.m. to attend the funeral of our late comrade, Major Sir-clair. 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