EMPHATIC DENIAL
\VhbrjL Mr. Veitch's charge against the Wanganui Chamber of Commerce was referred to the president of that organisation, Mr. A. S. Burgess stated that the chamber had had nothing whatfjver to do with Mr. Masters's visit to Vfanganui. "You may give Mr. Veitch's statement an emphatic denial,"' said. Mr. Burgess.
]Fr!om a member of Mr. Bain's commi'tttee it was learned that 800 invitations to Mr. Masters's meeting were sent out to all persons actively engaged in business in Wanganui, and those mvii tations were signed by ths Wangamii branch of the National Political F(tderation. As Mr. Masters, as Minis'ti;i' of Industries and Commerce, had agreed to meet the business people of \tTanganui to speak as "one business r nan to another," it was fitting and an Met of courtesy to ask the president of the Chamber of Commerce to take the chair. Owing to Mr. Burgess's absence at the annual meeting of the Associated Chambers of Commerce at Hastings, the vice-president (Mr. E. M. Silk) acted in his stead.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 111, 6 November 1935, Page 14
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171EMPHATIC DENIAL Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 111, 6 November 1935, Page 14
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