From trie fries and Years Ladies Indoor Bowling On the teem iht first period of Out of nine the score were as foll ow A five two and two highest tingle score bowled by Miss Walsh Sec single of Ml wit won by Hunter Mis Walsh bowl ed third high of 137 The highest average on the two was played by Miss The second high of bowled by Mis Hunter Mitt MacPherson bowled the third high average of 120 Mrs Howard Cane spent a few day this week in Graven- hunt Mr and Mr Jefferson spent Saturday afternoon with the Aurora Hunt Club in Kin township Mrs Harry Fee was in town last Friday Mr and Mrs J and family of spent the weekend with their parents Mr and Mrs Sanderson Mr Albert Hunter arrived in Newmarket from California Thursday morning on his way to Mr spent last weekend at his sisters at returning Monday morn ing Mr J Armitage of Lack- New York is visiting hi brother Mr J in town Mr Tom Burgess of Mrs John Johnston and Mrs MacDpnald of spent Tuesday with Mr and Mrs Pe ter Mr Arnold and friends attended the wrestling bout In Toronto last Friday and will also attend the Thursday night bout this week 25- and Will and Mr and Mrs Alan Rail- ton of Sutton spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs aux and Mrs Wellington of Oxbridge were vis itors in town Wednesday Mr and MM Miner and son Carlton Miner of Buf falo spent last week at the home of her sifter Mrs A Mr and Mrs Cleaver and daughter of Si incur were visit ing at the home of her mother Mrs Starr last week COUNCIL Continued from page I think we should find out the names of he people who were at thai meeting The mayor he recalled something about the meeting hut Could not recollect the de tails the remainder of their lot come under the new subdi vision control bylaw asked said they did Said Mayor Madmen think they have a moral right to re maining lots Councillor Mired Councillor idler suggested that plan be brought before a of the planning board No plan has yet been brought forward he said Mr Boko said the town engineer had plan for the subdivision He said the engineer wanted a road the fame level a the property He said he has been going on tin- Instruc tions of Mr iff Will Not Be Allowed The Grand Trunk authorities have determined to put a stop the praetlee of throwing rice on their premises on occasions of wedding parlies taking the trains The practice has become a nuisance to such an extent that summonses were served on a number of ricethrowers at a ilencoe wedding recently and a magistrate imposed a fine and promised to send those guilty of a second offence to jail for a term Which Way You are two ways of spending a dollar You can it at home gain en easy conscience make an other friend and perhaps get the dollar back tomorrow or you send It away feel that you have sinned offend the home merchant and forever the dollar and the Influence for good to yourself and neighbor Thos Traviss son Frank and his daughter Miss Minnie returned on Sat urday the fruits of their chasethree deer Miss had the pleasure of shooting one of them They report a most delightful outing and will nev er forget the kindness of Mr Campbell and family at Rock Hill Parry Sound district Miss Campbell of Belmont new organist in the Meth odist church has been upend ing a few days at Mr and Mrs Robert Manning entertained a number of young people last Monday evening in honor of Miss Coon It was while she was there that the president of the Lea gue Mr M McCauley called upon her and presented her with a case of one dozen Silver Tea spoons on behalf of the League as a token of their appreciation of her services in that connection It was a com plete surprise and greatly ap preciated Mr R Jackson of Toronto University and his college chum Mr spent over Sunday at Dr of Toronto was the guest of at the Methodist Parsonage last Sunday Mrs Allen Howard and dau ghter Verna are visiting friends at Listowell this week 50 Mr McCurdy of Toronto was a guest at Mr Robert Mann ings over Sunday SO Miss Coon was honored by a Ouster Shower by Miss Velma Widdifield last Saturday after noon Mr said that in all fair ness council should issue the re maining six building permits which ho had applied for be fore the new control bylaw was passed and that the plan should be put before the planning com mit tee dont see why there should any question about him get ting the permits Kurin got said DeputyReeve ton Mr agreed and add ed that Mr Kurin obtained for his Davis Drive shopping centre Just be fore the deadline Ill go along him getting ten if it does not cause a drain age problem said and were opposed and both insisted the matter be brought be fore the planning committee A motion by and Chop in was paused the subdi vides be granted permits for the six houses for which they had applied previous to the subdi vision control bylaw provided drainage corrections suited the engineer nest white drees and happily In royal lift I tor it suit of thai opened parliament in she tailed or Great Britain to help the Kilt MEHBLN and 1 Office Cat Reports Catnips By Ginger Sirvins n4 the rural of North York Tb 1152 The Exprc Herald by the Era Wlt lor tr ran KM for we in are lie Mtmbtr of A of Iinidi Canadian and lb Audit Bureau of Circulation Mall Office John E Struthera Managing Editor Carollno Ion Women Editor Haikett Sport Editor Lawrence Racine Job Printing and Production THE EDITORIAL PAGE THURSDAY THE TWBNTYSECOND DAY OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND THE CASE OF THE PLAN THE CASE OF the new subdivision oh 1800 plan has brought to light amusing if not questionable proceedings on town council At a meeting last week a member of council was distressed by the fact that houses were being constructed on the east side of town without the approval of council for subdivision Some members expressed feelings of annoyance obviously because council has been conducting for some time a policy to stop residential growth without a balancing development of industrial and commercial properties At that meeting the town solicitor explained that the houses were being built on the former Watson pro perty which he said was part of an old subdivision plan dating back as far as The developers had the right to build the houses without permission from coun cil It was explained They were not requesting special municipal services so legally they were not required to seek anything more than town building permits for the houses a Now this week it is learned from Mondays council meeting that the did not learn by chance of these simple legal requirements for the building of houses One can wonder whether they learned all of the facts until last week It is now revealed that dur ing a meeting on some unknown date attended by some tinnamed members of the towns administration they were told that they could obtain building permits if they would sell part of their land to Mr for a new Tenatronics factory which at lhat time was balancing off other residential development This permits condition now seems meaningless in lhat the subdivide could have had the permits anyway The subdivide cheerfully went along with Ihe deal prob ably unaware that they could have avoided making the deal on the factory land It is questionable whether they benefitted from it It is more that other members of council were surprised on hearing about the meeting and wanted to know when it was held and who attended which goes to show that in this case half the council did not know what the other half was doing Taxpayers of course were left in the dark completely We are still wondering whether or not the private legal advice indicated that the 1890 plan gave full clear ance and why they went lo the meeting When the facts about public business are not kept before the public and half the council there Is bound to be suspicion as there seemed to be during Monday nights meeting True no one had done an academic wrong but ignorance of facts on the part of some elected representatives and possibly lie plus late reports on proceedings all produced a picture of a sus piciously illogical conduct in public business The in terested observer who would try to follow council on a basis of logic thus tears out his hair But there always is a happy council now has passed a subdivision bylaw which gives the admin istration complete control over any type of subdivision which might poke its way into tht municipal affairs of Newmarket But to make sure should we not cross our fingers and add We hope that is subject to legal advice TOWNS GROW TROUBLES TOO Editor of the in Toronto Telegram A FEW YEARS ago nobody would have believed it but nowadays some of the middlesized towns in Ontario are beginning to take a second look at them selves and their future These are the towns of to population not the ones which have been static for the past half century but those municipalities which have been getting in a few industries often one fairly large new factory and two or three small ones with hopes for the future These towns have been growing Recent census statistics show large percentage gains in the past five years Officers of their Chamber of Commerce wear broad smiles and go tracing down rumors of other in dustries which want to move away from the large cities because their management is convinced that life in a small town offers more for their employees These towns are changing and thats why some of the residents are wondering whether it might not be better to try to slow the process rather than speed it up Life has been pleasant In these towns spa cious and unhurried The original town planners laid out no building lots less than HO feet wide They see firrcedy builders buying three lots and crowding four houses onto them There are traffic problems and even parking meters in some towns where councillors havent learned to say No lo high pressure salesmen New- houses are followed by new schools more sewers and larger water tanks Taxes go tip instead of going down In one town the merchants cheerfully paid extra taxes for roads and services in a new subdivision When the subdivision was complete new supermarket was built in it and new business went there Many people especially in the small towns have a theory that the ideal population is about 1500 As one merchant summed it up If had wanted to live in a city Id have moved there Its worth a thought anyway OUR SIDE OF THE STORY by W HARVEY NEXT STEPS FOR CANADA AND THE US The fate of peoples in Ihe Soviet Is one of the most serious of worlds un settled Issues Soviet gov ernment promised permit free elections in those slates but Ignored those promises anil set up their communist dictat orships Wo merely protested Now a decade later when communist dictatorship in Hun falters and the Hungar ian people achieve a fleeting freedom is crushed under the weight of Soviet armor This time we must do thing more than protest Having act ed and effectively stop datively rnild ftgiicision of Britain and frame in we must now do ct- to atop the Ionyear Soviets have been waging against peoples of To help the or any of people no simple mailer To intervene by force even if we had adequate forces in a position- lo intervene would be In tun Die of starting World War III It up- pears we must lie willing buy the freedom of suffer- Jug millions at cost to our- We mint not buy peace for ourselves the peoples What price can we offer that the Soviet government could he expected accept The depends on Ihe objectives of His men in Kremlin As long as were committed lo conquering the world for communism force or lie threat of force was the only argument to which bey would listen If successors are more like oldfashioned dictat ors willing to live and let live it may be possible to come to some agreement with them ft appears Khrushchev did not enjoy the burden of hat red he Inherited from and has tried to popular ity by some freedom to the satellite government The savage suppression of freedom in Hungary which looked like a reversal of that policy was probably rooted in fear rather in any desire to communist The Kremlin likely that free ehclions in IfuriKaiy produce an mill Itussian proWestern They probably feared loo thai ex ample niiKlil he followed by Po land and In aboil the Soviets evident ly freedom for the satellites mean the boundary between their empire and free world be from its present In the middle of to the east iKMindary Poland and Hun Kiev Jf it was fear that Inspired the savagery In llieie Is possibility of mak ing a deal with which would offer them a great men sure security price of a slight lessening of our own and in return for ending the oppression of the satellite peop les Instead of talking about roll ing buck the Soviet frontier the Western Powers might suggest mutual withdraw the Rus sians withdraw within their fron tiers and let us pull out of Ger many Instead of having the two worlds facing each other the Kibe there would be a neutralized area extending from France lo the borders of Russia proper The latest from Germany indicate that reunification is almost the only political the are Interested in They would probably accept neutral isation as the price of reunifi cation Would this proposal be ask ing the to give up pre cisely what Inch- action In limi tary shows are determin ed retain Not necessarily What they want Is security They are not afraid of the mil forces of Hungary or of all the satellites combined What do fear Is the West ern Alliance especially tin Un tied Stales And what they will fight to prevent Is Hie shifting of the frontier the eastern liorder nf the satellite to within a few minutes flight of 1citinRMid Moscow and Kiev Hie of Western forc es from Set many would be a great gain tor the Soviet Un ion the loss involved In free ing satellites would be neg ligible From the point of view of Western defense the loss of the twelve promised divis ions Would not appear to be ser ious Most statesmen are agreed that allout war with the Sov iet Union would be a disaster Ion terrible to contemplate and that our energies must tie de voted to preventing a war rath er than to winning it If true we would not be giving up anything of very great value in neutralizing tier many In short to withdraw from amount nf security it would cost us a de- would win freedom except on ly the freedom have arma ments for some peo ple At the cost of relocating our forces we would score a moral triumph and re- move a potential source of wor ld is of course only out area conflict between democ racy and communism The stru ggle is worldwide and demands a global settlement and the highest statesmanship What we as private citizens must Insist on is that our governments do something effective And since and France are la no position to speak just now It is governments of Canada and the United States that must ta ke the initiative The state fa tentint not the matter of the people the suite in their infringement on their their in international flinV national it i not the funetiun of the state to assume the ftnn of rest on inttiriduol choice There was a movement Jal Friday among the nlfice people to gel our own Slim to run for count Slim was doubtful about the proposal when l Wjit at coffee break When a candidate first you- vo gotta say no then youve gotta decline and then youve gotta be able to in can didate in the last two seconds at nomination before nominations is closed Slim We all agree that it would be pretty tricky business I said But its worth a try Slim Wouldnt you like to he the peo ples choice Theres a folia expenses In volved like bavin posters print ed up election Allan Damd up In Corners hes got them twocolor potter already out fer election which would cost a lot of dough got a slogan on Take Municipal Problem to Allan it says Slim pointed out We staff members could un derwrite your campaign sug gested Egad Cyclops the new reporter We could collect ten cents a week from everybody in the office to help pay And campaign for you Slim declared Ihe advertising man I aint campaigning for no body unless theres money in declared Culvert the com positor Basking in the reflected glory of our cannot he valued in money said dont want to put nobody to no expense declared Slin If I ran council I would do it to serve unselfishly without fear nor favor Our forefathers served our town without asking reward and so Stim And no sir I couldnt accept campaign funds neither Well do it for service to kind then urged him by Dairy Farmer The Top Six Inches Slim lit up an I and a and thought for a white Finally he laid Nope Cant afford a slop watch that last minute on a as Ihey calls it Ill have to refuse We were all disappointed Ill always remember me lata back in the thirties when he persuaded to run fer township council Old Hiram J he was Slim mused What happened lo him ask Egad Old Hiram J was pretty bard up it depression lim es He knew he bad lo have a stop watch last minute qua or acclamation on if there was no other candidates So he mortgaged the farm and bought this here old side winder stop watch the occ asion Wall a unfortunate thing occurred Unbeknownst to Hir am J the baby got ahold of the watch on the day nominat ion Swallered it asked Culv ert Nope Sprung the slop pin the hand said Slim It somehow put Hiram J Blig- stop watch a second and a hair too slow and he qualified too late Terrible things laid Egad And what happened to Hir am his whole farm he couldnt his money back ihe watch and couldnt meet mortgage payments it fc- in depressions years Poor old uncle Hiram J died a penniless pauper with naught Well I guess just as well that you dont run said Kletchcloffsky Besides said Egad youd loe your sense perspective as an advisor if were a politician and that would not be good You are better off be ing a human being than a fcer of a town council The culminating glory of the Winter Fair arrives in the sec ond week is the great spectacle of the competition for the Queens Guineas Spectators friends and relatives from all over the province jam the col iseum providing the one and only good ringside for the whole winter fair while the judge great showman Charlie Yu le from Calgary goes through motion It is easy enough to see what he docs using his fingertips to find the finish on the cattle and thus declare among the some odd the best steer and award the glory albeit a fleeting one to some boy or girl Then bulbs flash and ribbons appear the cameras grind and the speeches resound telling us about the new generation and their ac complishments All in all it is quite a show and it is to be hoped that while we the virtues and accom plishments of young lads and lassies we do not run the risk of being accused by them having misled them You see it only costs us a few cents to go and see that show Every one the participants however puts up around to 150 lake part in it This is how much the net cash loss of an average contestant and there Is only a handful of winners It all starts with a calf Very few of them use calf bred and raised by them Most boys will start scouring the country now accompanied by their elders and usually the club lender who is a devoted man having much the same gleam In his eyes as a hockey coach looking for junior champion team They will go from breeder breeder find a cull and end up selecting one It will them anywhere from to for the calf Wo suspect that some will cost even more We sold one last year for After this stalls the raising and the growing of the calf usually involves s nurse cow or milk It will last for leany a month and taking it front lets Feb ruary to November it means feeding them for nine or ten months During period when feed records kept it is con sidered that the eats some where in the neighborhood of dollars worth of feed may not be quite that much and in many cases it comet from the fathers feed bin However all in all the total cost is likely to be somewhere in the neigh- of 275 to and in some cases considerably more Now this year the calves sold for about cents a pound which would give an average lbs calf Thus there a net loss of take or leave a ten spot And so the hoy is being tau ght the very things farm organ izations have been fighting the devil take the cost and lets get glory They are taught to raise and baby a beef that Is finished well past the stage where it Is an economi cal slaughter proposition and when the year is over and Ihey want lo start again for the foll owing year Ihey have dig into somebodys pocket to gel started The department of agriculture has promoted feed tests type classifications and general ed ucational campaigns to teach new breeders and the val ue of hereditary factors in call- le breeding apparently un der pressure promotes very thing that It preaches one shouldnt do If same contestant took the same money that it is cost them now and bough a breeding female and carried on a program for the number of years are in baby beef they would have a herd of cattle to start out with they would have learned more about beef cattle business and Inst but not wouldnt end up considering us lha generat ion ahead of them In times to come a bunch of nitwits mm Refore hoarding a plane for trip to Halifax WCel CUM was presented with a 10- gallon western hat by Mayor McKay of Calgary Col Is leading the brigade of the Queens Rifles to the Middle where lby are taking over police duties