Buyer meets seller A?! s. ’— 14 PAGES , FREDERICTON (CP) —- A , [Pleafor national development of N Atlantic region was made we today by Dr. Frank Mac- Kmnon of Charlottetown, presi- dem of the Atlantic Provinces 'c council. 1):. MacKinnon, also principal of prince of Wales College in Charlottetown said the problems of the Atlantic Provinces should be examined as problems of a national region, not those of an inflated area. on the topic of problems of regional‘diverslty in the Atlan- tic Provinces, at the annual conference , of the Institute of public Administration of Can- ada, concluded Saturday. A posiflvgurmappaeoach was necessary' ~ er velopment of the Atlantic Provinces was to take place, Dr. MacKinnon “We must ask ourselves what we are going to do, and not just think of the Atlantic Provinces as a kind of “Canadian Tobacco Road. Just as construction of the « st. Lawrence Seaway was con-. " filmed in terms bf national de- velopment, so should expansion gamumty and industry in Atlantic . Constant financial subsistence Ere not enough, Dr; , 'F‘Miss America Hails From ’ATLANTDC CIITY, NJ. (AiPlh ' ~Mississippi, brown - haired Ann Mabley, Saturday night the Miss America title for a: of Mississippi, the now 1:» hopes for a career in tele- « the field to live finalists week-long competiIhiOn that Authorized In Second Clu- Man He was one of three speakers linear-old senior at the um. Stem TELEPHONE 8506 with Guardian Want Dial 8506 ask for classif' taker, for quick results. led ad by III. Port Department. Ottawa om“ gages New Approach To Atlantic Area Problems MacKinnon said. “They are a kind of an economic tranquilizer, and we can become very overly dependent on them." .A new approach based on con— suderauon of the Atlantic Pro- out @uordiuu vinces as an economic unit and realization that the region is an importlant area of Canada will go a ong way to bring about development of the Atlantic re- gion, he said.’ ' . RCMP Sgt. Lionel Strong Is To Retire This Month .FREDERICTON (C’P) — J.‘Dl~ much/Headquarters of the RCMP here has announced that three New Brunswick officers are due to retire on pension. , Sgt. Lionel M.F. Strong, NCO in chargeof Moncton Detachment. is retmngon September 13, 1958 after more,th.m 24 years service. Sgt. Strong, son of the late Sgt. B.J.p. Strong, joined the force in Regina, Sask. in 1933. Afterzbeing transferred to Prince Edward Is- land in 1936 he served in Char- lottetown, Montague, Alberton, Summerside and Souris. During his stay with L Division he‘was awarded the King’s Police and Fire Service Medal and presented The Royal Canadian Humane As- sociation certificate for saving an 11-year-old boy from drowning in the Hillsboro River, Sgt. Strong was a member of the RCMP con- tingent attending the coronation of Queen Elizabeth. Alter retiring Sgt. Strong will TBSIde in Monoton with his wife, the fiormer Sybil Isabell Reynolds ‘ of Montague, P.E.I., and three children. . Sgt. C.R.A Bone is retiring on December 8, 1958, having served in New Brunswick since the com- pletion of his training in 1932. During his. service'here he was stationed at _ Fredericton, Ed- mundston, Chipman, Black’s Har- hour, Saint John, Neguac and St. en. Sgt. Bone intends to reside in Smut John with his wife, the for- }n AT onosero “ K'E, N. 8., (OP) — ,Gould Eryln,38,0lfstew- car collided with in eight train at a level crossing healthy Miller's Siding. Ervln atalone in the car when the - a ' .. hr ALAN DONNELLY , Press Staff Writer mm (GP) — Parliament 'i“ its doors Saturday night ‘ months amid govern- " expressions of economic Situation and over the (lama-brewing dfull off ‘ ll .-1'Vle wan t W 3. ms. fewer than 70 of the s membcns and some “5 the 94 senatons, gathered in Senate chamber to hear Mr. 99 Robert Taschereau, dep- ‘ t0 GovernordGenenal Massey, . "' speech from the throne .mgmng the session. mend came at8150 pm. EDT . m We 93rd day of a hard-work- g session that had con- 1" “Pd Without recess since May $.33‘m'11'g a national or world “fig: the second session of the . Parliament will not be called an“ mid-January. e govenment, in the throne ’H . said there has been an mm nlt ill genenall economic .. , 1‘ §?_ Gus. It promised continued , * to help the unemployed. ' million or CONCERN also said the tension over “Ema, ‘15 a source of deep '1, m DFHF. Earlier, Prim-e Minis- .- e locnbaker had suggested in ours .mmons that the United Na- fvoidlntervene in an attempt to vim.“ Chi} clash between Commu- ‘Wer ‘Fma and the United States 3 my ormosa and the offshore ands. Won the last day of the Com- l‘sv Whosuion members look a we“ approach to remaining wtt'em‘ey lingered over a few . . . “we n.2, 1: TORONTO (CP)~—rAn lllssborey inane for a new ot‘fiioe building collapsed in a high wind Satur- day night, scattering mace-hoot steel girders ems: It cenllml To- ronto street. , Noone was hurt. The 2,000 tons oigliu‘dems icll‘dhomtolfanowof, house . A hundred woulmm were on shi‘llt. - mach $500,000,cost of erecting the steel skeleton- mt Englinton and Bedlam it had been put uphy Domin- ion Bridge Company Limited of Toronto for genenal contractors Anglin-Noruross Ontamio Limited, holders of a $5.W,000 contract to construct headquth for Union Carbide Canada policemen bVE political topics including WM 5, civil serv- Thebuilding mpmsented an Broadcasting Corporation. in the Senate there wés a flurry of debate over one of the session’s most controversial gov- ennment bills tightening up anti- dumping measures in the Cus- toms Tariff Act. Senator W. Ross Macdonald, opposition leader; ac- cused the gnu/eminent of with- holding thebill iii-om the Senate until the last minute. The Commons worked night through its usual 90-minute lunch- eon break and filnidhed work at 6:27 pm. Alter approving Senate- passed amendments in the new broadcasting act, one of the ses- sion’s major items of legislation. One of the amendments specified that th CBC president and vice- pres-ident shall hold office during good behavior and not—as the government first specified—alt the cabinets discretion. As Commons members gath- ered again at 8 pm, waiting the summons to the proroga-tion cere- mony. there was a light-hearted feeling of relief. LIGHT-HEARTED BY-PLAY They sang Alouette, and 0;. position Leader Pearson 'crossed the floor to plunk a book of Lib- eral party policies before Finance Minister Fleming. A belated holiday was on the minds of most members. Mr. Dielenlbaker and his wife plan to leave early this week for their Prince Albert, Sask. home to . stay until Sept. 16. Mr. Peanson hopes to take it easy until a Bos- ton appearance Sept. 22 at a meeting 0f the Atlantic Treaty Association of which he is "i‘?’ - SGT. STRONG mer Lillian Cum-yo! Saint John. Cpl. A.M. Hug-hes retires on November 9, 1958. He was station- ed in New Brunswick since 1940, having served at Saint John, Tabusintac.‘St, George and New- castle. ~ He intends to reside with his wife,» the former Theresa Mc- Namara of Saint John, and fam- ily at Newcastle. Steel Building Frame I in loronh ‘CQllapses motion in structural steel de- sign, in Canada. Designed by the Toronto drew/(seem firm of Shore and Medial, it was to have its smonting columns on the out- side-toincreaseiloorspalceinthe interior. Welding had been completed for all but the last two storeys and witnesses claimed that’s Where the collapse started. The welding, wars to have been today. City building John Payne. on the scene minutes alter the collapse, said plans lot the had been approved and periodic inspections made during constmmtion. “It could have been the storm or it could have been a strum dent. CCF House Leader Hazcn ArSue was due to head west Sun- t-unal weakness somewhere,” he said. ‘ _ ' . _' RFORMOSACRlS|IS N g _ v Only Handful PresentAs parliament Is ProroguecL iii-rings ‘ and the Canadian-ldlay nigh-t for his home hiding at Aassinibo'a, Sask. The propagation throne speech, largely a review of the session’s legislation, also the gown ment has been “encouraged by indications of progrss during the last few months in the field of disarmament, and by recent de- velopments in the Middle East situation." ’ Although it said the general world outlook remains uncentain, it expressed hope that an anglu‘ American. oflfer to suspend nu- clear weapons tests for one year will lead to etifective world agree ment suspending tests under in- tmutional supervision. PRAth FARM All) ’ A big share of commons atten‘ tion during the day went to the government’s plan tor a $14an- acre payment to Prairie grain growers hit by the second suc- cessive subnormlal crop. The aid is expected to total $40,000,000, with a maximum $200 to any one farmer. On another topic J. W. Pickers- gill (L—Bonavista - Twilli-ugate) attacked the dismissals last June 10 of two national parks employ- ees in Cape Breton on the claim of a Conservative Commons mem- ber that the men bade nga-ged in political activity. Mr. Pickersgill said that type of firing should be abolished. He read a letter from the two men saying their only political activ- ity had been to vote. Resources Minister Hamilton, alter being asked twice. gave Ihc name of the MP who recom- vn"“‘:“' "‘13 ”‘ "733, Robert S. ' ~L13n (PC — Inverness- M i.) Rich and) n “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1958 CHINA ORDERS MOBILIZATION But Settlement Talks May Be Renewed Soon ‘ Chou's Offer * lsRay Of Hope; BJONG KONG (AP) — Commu- Alt the same time the Commu- nists were seeldug nerw talks with the West in a conciliatory move. The appeal apparently, was part of the general mobilization or- dered ior the 600,000,000 Chinese . on. the mainland by the Supreme State Council in Peipin-g. Peiping Radio reported Sun- ' day’s joint appeal to Communist China's youth and students was issued by the central committee of the Young Communist All- Clilna. Youth League and the All- China Students Federation. . The general mobilization order was issued “fior the struggle again st war provocations by American imperialist-s in the Tai- wan (Eomnosa) area.” Peiping Red-lo said.“ VOLUNTARY SILENCE Chou said the Red Chinese forces had voluntarily silenced their guns opposite the Quemoy islands dflf Amoy to give Chi-ang Kai-.dhek’s forces "-3 chance for reflection." Chou’s Wsal for talks ape peered tube a move toplace the blame for any troubles in the Formma Strait on the United States. The order, atthc same time, could be a further '- step tooreate. swish. m; the callingofaninte' ‘ melon- feremce at which Red China might obtain world recognition. The call for resumption of U.S.- Red Chino tallns — which "was quickly welcomed by the White House in Washington -— and the Peiping Makes Youth Appeal Supreme State Council’s mobiliz- ation call thus furnished a curi- ousmiirture of tension~easing and a new sense of crisis. {WEIA'XJME TALKS The White House statement, is- sued after President EisenhoNVer met with members of the Na tional Security Council, said the United States welcomes Red China’s decision to resume the talks. It added that the U.S. amasse- dot in Warsaw is ready to re sume the talks with the Chinese Communist ambassador in War- sarw. There was no explanation of what is involved in the general mobilization order. > In sheet, the mobilization call may mean little more than using a military but rhetorical term to whip up anti-U.S. mass opinion in suppomt of Mao Tse-tung and Chou by rallying the whole .na— tion to their new program. ‘ Choudidnotgointoanyde- tails on where, how or when he wanted a resumption of U.S.-Red Chinese talks. He did say Red China was willing to send ambas- endows. GREEKS DIE IN GALES ATHENS (Reuters) — Eighteen persons have died in storms and gallon over Greecein «the last two " a of the’inteuior here. All; Nasxon Island in the Aegean Sea, 13 workers were dwwnedin flood waters under-abndge’ dieywerelnnld‘- ingendtwoollmpersouewere repofleddwwnedlnflnodsmr 1., IE . Six Persons Lase Lives When Fire . Destroys Hotel .In Maine BELFAST, Me. (AlP) — Fire starting in a kitchen destroyed the century-old Colonial Im‘be tore down Sunday. Six pensons died. ' Fourweme guestsandtlw‘owm . will be about employees ‘of the 35-month wooden The Commons also passed a government bill removing all but two of the grounds on which the government can revoke citizen- ship of a natunallned Canadian. Mr. Pickerng proposed an amendment, detected 55 to 17, which would eliminate one of those of a natur- alized Canadian to returndo Can- ada to tame a- charge of treason or espionage. 1 He did not oppose the oth reason for which citizenship may be dirsmissed—lfimud by an appli- cant for citizenship. REJECT NEWFOUNDLAND AID Diefenbaker drew opposi- tion wrath by indicating the gov- ernment has rejected a request by Newfoundland for an interim $8,000,000 federal payment to help maintain essential services pend- ing decision on a, final financial settlemnt of th provinc’s 1949 terms of union with Canada. Mr. Pickrsgill said the rejec- tion was “a slap the face” for Newfoundland. There were a low other Com- mons developments: r 1. Finance Minister Fleming said the 1958.59 budgetary deficit $700,000,000, up sharply from his June 17 esti~ mate of $648,000,000—in itself a record for peacetime. 2. Mr. Fleming said he would welcome a formula that would make it possible for Quebec to accept federal university grants. 3. The Finance minister said he could give no firm ‘commit- ment that the Bank of Canada will support atgpar the bonds of hotel in the heart of Beliast’s business diohict. Three guests were injured. one critically. Several others escaped by leaping noun windows. The toll included two members of a vacationing Massachusetts y—Mrs: Arthur G. Donovan, bdieved to blow, of East Boston- and her Muse-yequ daughter. Mm. Donovan's husband, a let- ‘her earlier, and their Sid-year—old Donovan dropped the boy two storeys onto a projech mot and lumped after him from a third- Donovan was in condi- tion at Waldo County Hospital with a possible mot-me of the" back. son was burned and suf- fered a head injury. N.s". Sailor ' Is': Murdered VICTORIA (GP) — A young Royal Canadian Nev y rating stabbed to death in his bunk at EMCS Naden Saturday has been identified as Aaron Jenkins, 23, of Cody-s, N .B. A towboat worker. Leo Anthony Mantha, 35, .of Victoria, has been charged with murder. He was or- rested at his home and ap- pear in mutt today. Esquimalt police and navy of- ficials said Jenkins wass’aabbcd 'in the chest at about 2 admin his bunk. Jenkins is reported to have attended a civilian potty in Vic- toria Friday night. A sentry no ticed he had a superficial wound on his neck when he returned to barracks and advised him to seek medical treatment. but he did not ' do so. Shipmvales apparently heard the stabbing victim breathing with difficulty later, checked and found him with a stab wound in the chest. Fifi Becomes 6th Hurricane MlAlVllI, Fla. (APl—Fifi, the sixth hurricane of the season, Sunday was reported about 280 miles northeast of San Juan. Puerto Rico, moving toward the northwest at 17 miles an hour. The bureau said Fifi is ex- pected to continue (in a north- westerly course for the next 12 lhe new $6,400,000.000 conversion loan. hours. son, Richard, were hurt when - ouEMov WOUNDED , The toll exacted by the barrage they had been evacuated from of shells hurled into Quemoy Is- ‘Quemoy on the U. Sabuilt landing land by the Chinese Red shore craft in the background. Workers Merle: is Part of the cost on the dock give what. aid they are thesevwounded on the dock at can before thewouhded. are tak- Mnkun'in the Pescadores alter en to hospitals. “ . , . , ., , ' ' we...a\\p.u.,,.acMLu ;‘ airs . .11.? O Canada's UN 1 Delegation I CHARLO'ITETOWN‘ —‘-’ “'1' h at stock of the United Nations has gone up as a result of the casing of tension in the Middle .Elast”, said Heath N. M.F. Edward from Europe. Mr. Maequan-ie has been appointed to Canada’s diele MontotheUnitedNatn’ons. He , had previously been a parliamem .harydbserveratflieU.N.Hewill K go to New York Sept. 161M the three-11mm sittings. Mac- quame' isalso-amember‘ f otthe Commons Extremal Maire corn m.bt”l WIDER NATO "it has been a valuable NATO more meaflngml." He had attended NATO Parliamentary meetings in Iondon, under the ' ‘ of U. S. Senator Javits and. had been selected to serve on a five—member sub- committee. “NATO is more than nmilitaryalliancc. Iltisamove- meat of peoples and this aspect will be further developed at the next year’s congress of NATO Mlacquamrie, - MR. 'MACQUARRIE nations in Paris.” Mr. Macquarrie visited the Canadian pavilion at the Brussels and was most flavor- ‘(Continued on page 2 col. 7) Fleet steamed inside Peiping’s -spondtothetestodthei~rhlock- _, WEATHER Cloudy; clearing this evening; warmer; west winds 15. Low-high at Charlotte- NOT MORE THAN By wannnu Rooms m. WASHINGTON (AP) -— Ameri- can ofificials said Sunday the " United States hopes to start talks " with Red China at Warsaw the next few days on ways to safeguard peace in the For East. These oflficials said lions have gone out to U.S. Am- bassador Jacob Beam to stand by for word from his Red Chinese counterpart in Warsaw, Ambas- sador Wang Ping-nan. . The White House announced Saturday, after an extraordinary meeting between President Eis- enhower and members of the Nvae honal Security Council, that Beam was ready to resume the stalled U.S.‘Red Chma' talks. This move ' came in response to an offer by 0011an Premier Chou Eu-l-ni to renew negotiation-s. Chou’s statement was the first _ in a rapidly worsening bmmlrdolawar situation in the For- mosa Shwaits. It sofitened the tough mood on both sides created by Red China’s threats to invade Nahonalistheld olfishore islands and by U.S. warnings that this might mean war. But the negouahmg‘ ' positions- oi both the United“ Sbates and Red FIVE ,, CENTS China were so flar apart as to make anyhopeotsuccessatWar- saiw lookpuny. . SEEK TWO THINGS The United States seelu two mm in 'the talks’ , previously held tram mid-1954 to last Dec. 12 at Geneva: release of all Americans held in China, and a Peiplng declaration renounclng the use of fierce to achieve its political objectives, particularly in the Taiwan (Formosa) area. Red China’s position is dismal nically opposed. Peiping promised to release all the American pris- oners, but still holds dour. Peip- ing is rock-hard in its detenmn' an tion to conquer Formosa and all the other Nationalist-held islands. It argues these rightiully belong gime as an internal matter which is nobody else’s business. Meantime, ofiiicial said there would be no lowering of the U.S. guard in the Eorlmosa Strait. Memories of Korea were too fresh. It was Chinese Communist practice in Korea to launch some of the bittenest (inning talksdlesighedtosetupmarmis 'n. By ROBERT B. TUCKMAN ABOARD TEE U.S. 7th MEET FLAGSHHJP HELENA MOY‘(AP) — U. S. warships es- canted a Nationalist supply con- voy to besieged Quemoy Sunday and ran a Red Grime blockade unchallenged. ' In the first daytime convoy. cmisers and destroyers of the 7th miles of! Red Gum’s coast. The blockade-manning merited hhestaa'tofanewphaseolUS. summit to die Nationalists in holding the ofifishore islands. The Conuuum‘sts nailed tone- nude and defiance of them-mile Red Shore batteries re- mained' silent as two Nationalist iandmg‘ slups' nudged onto the beaches of Qwemoy and unloaded 300 tons of ammonium, while the escorting U.S. dun-cyan ,veu. Outed seven. miles' of the mainland" coast. Nor did the Reds send out any impede boats or planes VicewAdnumal Wallace M. Beak- ley, cmnmnnder of the fleet, said “it was the iinst time we have tried a daylight operation and gatherewasnowttempttoim .ept a... Reds annumced Saturday they had voluntarily halted their bombardment of the Quemoy U.S. Ships. Escort Supply Sew-TO Besieged 999m?! dierstirnotoneflloct. openntionhmnthebndgeorln: flagship, the cruiser Helena; whooh',alhngwifl1tzhecrmoer‘ Col- umlbm and six destiwm, con- voyed-theNlationalist' amplyves- nelsacrosstheEmmwsnStim'tto Quemoy. The distance from For- mosa to Quemoy in about 100 woo disclosed that American ships have been. escort. ing Nationalist convoys to Que- moy at since last Wednes- dayand said escorting would b. a routine TheU.S. shipswentinwithon- dens not to cros the 3~mul' e limit. Bedford Man Wins Visitors Plowing Class FRE‘DERICTUN, N. 3., —-Win~ nerrlnovlsitorsclass at the provincial plowing match here Saturday was W. Arbing of Bed- ford Station, P. E. I. The provincial title went to James Taylor of Norton with sec- ond place going to Hugh Temple- ton of Haveloclr. complex to give Nationalist sol A. D. , Neil Interval. PRINCE PLOWING CHAMPION James MaCWilliams of Spring- of Prince County at the first an- .‘ield WCTt r: :ve L25.) won the nual county Plowing M a tch at senior plowi..g championship title Kuutsford on Friday. MacWil— K « liams won the title in the two sod division in a close decision lan (above right) who captured over Edward Machillan of How fill“ 91309 in “19 Uh“. 30‘ ‘3“ totheCommunist mainland rev mom on had been completed. The meet was held in nearby I