(Continued from Page 32) 52--Legal Notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF ROSE of the above-named gdeceosed, Rose Nadobney, lote of the City of quirements in Southern Ontario said Mr. Duncan. About 2,000,000 kilowatts next five or six years, Toronto area to meet growing re of thermal-electric generation will be added to the system in the POPULATION EXPANDS 32 Municipalities Without Auditor for of their claim with the undersigned on or before the day of December, A.D. 1959. . AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE thot after that date the Estate will be distributed having regard only to the claims of which the under- signed shall then have had notice, DATED at Renfrew this 13th doy of October, A.D. 1959. JAMES A. MALONEY, Q.C., Barrister, etc., P.O. Box 332, Renfrew, Ontario. Solicitor for the Executors. Top Electricity Demands Up - TORONTO (CP) -- Peak de- mands for electricity in Southern Ontario have increased between eight and 12 per cent over those| of 1958 in every month this vear, Ontario Hydro Chairman James 8. Duncan said Wednesday. He told the annual meeting of Ontario Municipal Electric Asso- ciation District 4 thaf record peak and energy demands were established in Southern Ontario this week. The December peak demand is expected to be 7.5 per cent above the same month last year, he said. pal Ii of F |pended. The company's licence was sus- pended following an inquiry into the financial affairs of Belleville. A royal commissiod report criti- cized the work of J. D. Lewars, Belleville auditor, and Mr. Le- wars' licence was revoked. Mr. Lewars owns MacFadden's. Mr. Warrender said, "my main concern is with the municipali- ties, and in helping them to keep their records straight." The royal commission report said Belleville faces a $600,000 deficit. Girl Found In Swampland BARRIE (CP) ~ Searchers Wednesday bundled up 15-year- old Gladys McKinlev and took her to hospital after she was found cold and exhausted in ice- {hardened swampland near her ome, The girl, missing since Mon- day, was found sitting shoeless by searchers 'in a clump of cedars in near-zero weather. She was suffering from severe ex- posure. More than 100 searchers had scoured the Essa Township bush five miles west of here for the girl, last seen Monday evening {when she went to hang washing |on a clothes line. Fireman Fred Coulter, who |first came across the girl, said TORONTO (CP) -- Municipal Affairs Minister Warrender said Wednesday he will do all he can the 32 Ontario municipalities which are left without a munici- pal auditor because the munici- F. A. R. Mac- Fadden and Company was sus-|te By RUSSELL ELMAN KUALA LUMPUR (CP -- A steady flow of cars, buses and trucks speeds throughout the day and late into the night along the new divided highwav linking Malaya's capital with Port Swet- In less than one hour's travel ling along this 30-mile road, a newly . arrived visitor gains a bird's-eye view of the economic progress being made in the young ederation. Only a few years ago tropical jungle, the route today is like Ontario's Queen Elizabeth Way. On either side of the broad high- way, as good as any road on the Asian continent, are new factor- ies, power stations, planned hous- ing e states, modern university buildings, tin mines and rubber estates. At Petaling Jaya, a new, self- contained town of 20,000 with neat ranch-style homes, plate- glass schools and central shop- ping centre has blossomed in five years. At night, the well - lit streets are lined with cars, {RUBBER TOP INDUSTRY | Atop a nearby hill the 14-storey, Malay Language Institute houses! trainees being Mstructed in how| to teach the national language. A few "yards away are the first ultra - modern buildings of the Kuala Lumpur campus of the University of Malaya and Singa- pore. Bulldozers have stripped TIN VALUABLE RESOURCE Modern Malaya Changed Country On Market Decrease Snapped TORONTO (CP) -- The stock market snapped a four-session de- continued heavy deficit budget The road ends at the busy ing docks of Port Swettenham, now being developed as the federa- tion's principal port to supple- ment the free of Singapore and Penang. New berths are be- ing. built to accommodate ocean- going ships, many of which now have to anchor in midstream. A plan has been proposed to de- velop the nearby North Klang Straits into a major port. While the Kuala Lumpur-Port Swettenham highway serves as visible proof of Malaya's current prosperity, which gives it a higher living standard than its southeast Asian neighbors, politi- cal leaders and businessmen also express confidence in their coun- try's economic future, In the last few years many large European-owned companies have established offices in Kuala Lumpur and industrial concern: are being invited to invest in) building plants in the federation. The government has passed pio- neer industry legislation offering tax concessions, loans and other incentives to attract new indus- trv Anti-dumping laws have been approved and it is hoped to set up an industrial finance corpora- tion. High world market prices for natural rubber have ensured the federation of lucrative revenues a DIVIDED OPINION Opinion is divided as to whether there should be more concentration on establishment of secondary, high labor - consump- tion industries, or going ahead with heavy industry such as a steel mill. So far the government appears to have adopted the former course with additional emphasis on village home indus- tries. There is a feeling that ulti- mately the only solution is to open up more land. Four-fifths of the country is still virgin jungle, which if developed could provide employment and land for the surplus population and pro- duce sufficient food for the whole country. Several pilot land re- ettiesiient projacts have already cline Wednesday with a moder- ate advance amid the slowest trading in two weeks. Index gains: Industrials 1.79 at 512.7; golds 1.03 at 87.02; base metals .11 at 167.07; and western oils .86 at 100.09, Final volume was | | 1,876,000 shares. three points to 28 but most other changes were fractional. Famous Players, Bank of Nova Scotia and General Motors all advanced % point, while Cockshutt and B.C. Power went up % of a point. Senior uraniums were down with Algom the biggest loser dipping 1% points at 11%. Gunnar was off % at 10% and Consolidated Dennison remained unchanged at 1 Chana T By JOHN LeBLANC OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian traders and investors could prof- itably look into prospects of do- ing business with Ghana, says ist just returned from + to help pay for its devel program, Although the tin has suffered more fluctuations, it also remains a valuable source of in-|'™ the jungle of its green clothing to clear the way for a new resi- dence now growing up on the naked, brown soil. | Light industrial factories, mak-| ing products formerly imported from overseas, ribbon the high-| way as it skirts Petaling Jaya. | In the distance is a steel relay| tower of the new pan - Malayan | munication svstem. | come. CURRENCY STRONG With one of the strongest cur- rencies in Asia, the federation hae no foreign exchange problem. The Malayan dollar is more than 100-per-cent backed in sterling. But there are problems on the horizon, which the federation can of economic disruption. The pop- n a United Nations mission to that newly-independent African coun- Philip Stuchen, special adviser in the trade department's econ- omics branch, said several coun- tries--not the least a group be- hind the Iron Curtiain--are show- ing keen interest in promoting trade with Ghana. Mr. Stuchen spent the last 15 months as economic adviser to the ministry of commerce and in- 600 - circuit microwave telecom-|only leave unattended at the risk dustry in Ghana and now is put- | ting the finishing touches on a re- Hundreds of acres of new rub-|ulation is expanding at the phe-iport to the Ghana government, In the next few years Ontarioshe was still conscious and ber trees planted in geometric nomenal rate of 3.4 per cent aHe said that administration is Hydro will rely largely on ther- mumbled she had not eaten) mal generating stations in the Isince Monday. STRONG LEAD Canada May Be Big World Power By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)--After an un-| happy pause, Canada's foreign| policy seems set for a new phase of confidence and self-assertive- mess. One pointer is the way External Affairs Minister Green empha- sizes Canada's role in world af- board "We think we have a great part to play,' he says. "We in- fend to a world power." He said this in the United States and he said it on his recent visit to London and Paris. to Ottawa, he Added Now, however, diplomatic ob- servers are saying that it isn't absolutely necessary for Green to be letter-perfect in the fine print of foreign affairs, What matters, they say, is that the department is once again headed at the min- isterial level by a professional politician who will resist treasury efforts to put financial strings on his policies. In any event, Green is a quick assimilator, approaches new prob- lems with zest and doesn't hes- itate to burn the midnight oil. He has few interests outside his job. And he has a close understanding | Returning he thinks there has been an "ele- ment" in Canada's approach to NATO "which was against mak- ing definite statements." SHOWS STRONG LEAD Partly, such comments may be an understandable defence mech- anism, a reflex action by a Pro- gressive Conservative administra. tion conscious of the international reputation achieved by the former external affairs minister, Opposi- tion Leader Pearson. Significantly, they may also in- dicate that Green is already get- ting a good grip on the depart- ment he took over only six months ago. He gives reporters the impression he is confident of being able to give the foreign service a strong lead. Last June, Green's appointment to a post left open since the March 17 death in harness of former university president Sid- ney Smith came as a surprise in Ottawa. The new minister, now 64, had been immersed in domes- tic politics most of his life and had seemed an indispensable lieu- tenant to Prime Minister Diefen- baker in general political strat- egy. with Diefenbaker, who on two oc- casions has served as his own foreign minister and has always kept a sharp ment, MORALE BETTER Over the years, the external af- fairs department has earned con- siderable admiration abroad. In an article that passed speedily from desk to desk in the East Block a year or so ago, the au- thoritative magazine The Eco- nomist in effect told Britain's for- eign office it could look to Can- ada for inspiration. | The article came as a morale {booster a®a time when there had {been published comment about the muting of Canada's voice in world affairs, This was accom- panied by an undercurrent of un- easinesss in the foreign service, whose career officers felt the in. coming government might "look under the bed" for lingering loyal- ties to Pearson. After that period of uncertainty, there now seems a more buoyant spirit among the bright young men of the department. Under Charles Howard Green, they may be heading back for a place in the sun. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS DOWN drinks 6. Fleshy spike [REEF ADA] 21. Writing [DIEILIAlYBCIOILITIS! [AFITREMTR (LIATYI [CILIY] 25. Evening [AIG ERPIENR[ [TIE] sun god [S10] SIH]! [REIS] 26, Fruity [TO8]! TIMAICIORIN] oof (SINIARIERIMIAINISIE] [SITAR] EILISIER vd eye on the depart-| rows give striking evidence of Malaya's position as the world's largest producer of natural rub-| ber. Tin mines, whose watery] pits scar the beautiful landscape, are Malaya"s second major source of wealth. At Klang, an industrial and largely Chinese - settled city of 75,000, the road crosses the Klang River over a new double-decked bridge. Upstream is the federa- tion's newest and largest thermal electricity for ace is under construction for the Sultan of Selangor. | year, unemployment is growing, the cost of development projects including education is constantly rising, and there always is a dan- ger of a serious fall in the rubber price. Consequently increased; atten- tion is being devoted to finding the money to pay for national development. Total budgetary and capital expenditure this year may exceed $350,000,000. Because Malayan credit has country must increase its ordi- nary general revenues to avoid making strong efforts to attract foreign investment. STABLE GOVERNMENT "There is a stable government and a favorable climate for out- side investors," Mr. Stuchen said in an interview. One recent move was to pro- vide income tax relief in *pio- neer" industries until the initial investment has been recovered in full. Previously, such relief ap- power station, which generates been good, it has been possible to|plied only for five years. factories and borrow large sums overseas and| A pioneer industry is a new one appear to be a field for markets {Kuala Lumpur. Near Malaya's|from oil-rich Brunei. But govern-or one not being conducted on a|for many kinds of Canadian con- |only Muslim college, a new pal- ment financial experts say the scale adequate for the country's sumer and capital goods. The needs. It can be a service as well as a production industry. | Offers Horizons rade "There is a wide area for de- velopment in Ghana," Mr. Stu- chen said, "and I would advise Canadian investors to look into it." Also, he said, this would be in line with the idea that "we are going to have to become invest- ment-minded so far as countries expand as a trading nation." ALUMINUM PLANT A recent development in Ghana, he said, was the opening of a sheet aluminum plant by the Al- 1,834,000 7 shares. Tuesday's volume was|f Tamblyn in industrials jumped / are concerned if we are going to| uminum Company of Canada as a joint enterprise with the Ghana government, for the supplying of| West African markets. But there are many other fields, | he said, and Americans notably are looking to establishing new| projects. On the trade side, several coun- tries have sent full - dress mis- sions to Ghana in the last year or so. They include the United King- dom, Italy, Holland, West Ger- many, Israel and -- from behind the Iron Curtain -- Russia, Czech- oslovakia, East Germany, Po- land, Hungary and Yugoslavia. Canada and the United States {have not sent missions, but the U.S. is expected to do so in 1960. Mr. Stuchen said there would |amount of Canada - Ghana busi- Iness now is negligible. Today's teen-agers, like their sociable parents, prefer lighter side. So follow through Be ready with party refreshments on the at tonight's teen-age session, in the modern manner. plenty of ice-cold Pepsi-Cola, the lighter Pepsi of today. Pepsi, remember, is the refreshment of the trim and smart and debonair-- the up-to-date refreshment. SMITH BEVERAGES -- BO \ WMANVILLE | s THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, November 19, 1959 33 INTERNE IN AMPUTATION CONTROVERSY India born Dr, P. Shamsud- din waves as he boards liner Queen Mary in New York to ail for England and a hoped- for surgical career. The centre of a controversy since the am- putation of the leg of British actor Martyn Green after ele- vator accident in a garage last Saturday, Shamsuddin resigned as an interne at Knickerbocker Hospital. His criticism about lack of necessary instruments in ambulance that caused him to perform thé ampputation with a penknife set off the argu- ment with hospital authorities that caused resignation. FINED AFTER ACCIDENT RENFREW (CP)--August Le- may, 58, of Calumet Island was fined $25 and $15.50 costs Tues- day after pleading guilty in po- lice court here to a charge of careless driving. The charge arose from a level crossing acci- dent Oct. 2 at nearby Haley Sta- tion, which took the life of Mrs. Rose Emond, 52, of Calumet Is land, and injured Lemay and his wife. An auto driven by Lemay was struck at that crossing by a CPR dayliner. eid VN". CENTRE SPECTACULAR CENTRE WIDE Pre CHRISTMAS SAVINGS lvent NOW IN EFFECT "SAVINGS GALORE AT EVERY STORE" RS, Cs Fo BS EN pled ddl) [co FRAAAARAAVAAAAAAARAAARAVARRRRRRRAGR Holiday Blouses 2.95 Perk up for the office and have blouses pretty enough to wear day or date time, Man tailor- § ed, suit or printed blouses. Long or short sleeves. Assorted colors, Sizes 12 to 20. CANADA'S MOST PROGRESSIVE SHOPPING CENTRE NORMAN BEAL MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR OSHAWA SHOPP Gift SUGG ING CENTRE! ESTIONS Extra Special Men's White Shirts Every Popula Single or man needs one r short point collar. double cuff---some no-irons in the geoup Reg. 5.00. NOW "25.00 range of Arrow - > 8 Norman Beal carries a complete Forsyth - Van Heusen & B.V.D. shirts. Men's Suburbans AN IDEAL GIFT. A WIDE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM. "14.95" 39.50 NORMAN BEAL WILL GLADLY EXCHANGE ANY GIFT AFTER CHRISTMAS xX REN RN 28) 2 E24 ll ll NZ