Antique cars similar to the one shown here are on dis- play at the Canadian Automo- MUSEUM NEARS OFFICIAL OPENING tive Museum in Oshawa, which is to be officially opened Mon- 9 day, September 23 $1 Million U.S. Bandits At Large (AP)--Ajt ~re PLYMOUTH, Mass year.ago W ednesday, a well hearsed band of white-gloved shotgun bandits held up & small USS. mail truck in this town and the big nash $1} escaped with rest haul in the U.S The only thing to world was the estimat 000 taken jast week from a trau at Cheddington, England well - drilled gang of ma men For a full year relentless postal inspec sometimes 60,.and as many 73--has worked on mouth case. To date the money has been fou William F. White, chief New England posta oN charge of the dogg the bandits. He t man. He makes it clear to ¢ qu tioners that he cann all the information the tors have uncovered. But he did say this: Investigators have made pro gress; they have solid suspects And--he has "the highest hopesic 5 top it in the 700 ed $7 sked tors- by ay been offered by vari will ved before 'ond anniversary." White has not altered the po sition he took a year ago.. He said t "LT have little doubt we to a successful conclusion." He takes he case so the se pride in pointing thesses to the robbery ctims -- Philip er of the truck, and ick Barrett, They head on 3 for the al Reserve Bank Bos 1 money picked Only Ww route om ite 3 and left tf andits un- irbed as stepped from yery and. pointed guns at the ybbery Bank has to use at Fede asked m arve banks armored car companies to han- ile shipments of cash. Reward totalling $200,000 has mus agen nonev es Fake Kurd Tells About Rebellion Disguised as a Kurd, As- sociated Press Correspond- ent Alex Efty has been liv- ing for weeks with rebelli- ous Kurdish tribesmen in the rugged northern moun- tains of Iraq, Travel in the area is banned by the Iraqi zevernment but pictures taken by Efty have just been received, having been sent out by a special cour- ier over a secret route, The Jollowing descriptive mate- rial is taken from dis- patches -- | sent out by Efty. ... eee By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Amid the. mount of northern Iraq Kurds, a_ restless p dream of an independent f land which would with tribal brothers. in Turkey Iran and Soviet Armenia Ta y are fighting for this am against Iraqi gove dealing with them as ! But the Kurds warm, friend win 'their trust you with sweet t the freedom of though free travel is diff a country that has no roads More than 1,000,000 Kurc roam the jagged highlands wind-whipped pls sled turbans and pantajoor To reach their travel by horseback along fPwisting across: maariows and streams in opie who yme unite a.so 2 and their and an font mountain trials eams and _ hillsides zing W with banks of s let ou Whatever their origin, the Kurds are a handsome p2ople Some have bhinde and a complexion CLOTHES COLORFUL The Kurds' love of en in the bright blue turbans and the six-yard-long swatches and bottle-green cloth wrap around their waists Kurdish oss his back, laret they The fle stung acr he usually packs a warrior has nisto _sometimes a great curved aging from the them' r, when snow an down re tribesmer passes I nder: adheres to the and speaks n RNESS ig hos sti lit outsiders Kurds are usua hospitable Every aga or ik maintains a guest hous he fetes visitors with sweet tea k known rice, Stroy » sour milk drin FRONT-END round , to major Yinedy's educational program Tax Favoritism Claim Levelled By Merchants By STEWART MacLEOD VANCOUVER (CP) rhe sh Columbia division the Retail Merchants Assoc on Canada endorsing a simi brief | fr its sister org tion in Or io, Wednesday icized the "outrageous tax fav shown co-operatives | of om 1 told tl ness,"' rom Co-operat patron taxable rome less tax holder corporat Rot R ome eqt Ss brief. While meet any form com "they cannot compete w amounts to a government subsidy."' 'ABOLISH HOLIDAY' The association also said the three-year tax holiday given co ops should be abolished. To ex tend the holiday to all forms of new businesses. would not lessen the discrimination, was ar 'gued. This would only result in Inew discrimination -- between new business and old Nothing short of . absolute equality between co-Ops and corporations would solve the tax « oversy and tore fair compet "We believe that cc are well awn feet ety th what tax other re hon able to stant meet their ob! paying to so through fy share of} ' carry out the able role in th Another ation ty-free places where . touris |imported goods ped to their homes wi shops they ] don't encourage tors, partic ularly those from. the TO AID COLLEGES W ASHING TON (AP) >us Represt to th 090,000 for college constru hree-yea part thorizes $360,000.000 in 000.900 ma loar sa for buildir ri€s an te and avel United States, ty beyond the duty-free sho; By CARL TORONTO (CP)--A MOLLINS leading \iglican world congress Wednes-} day the atheistic founder of} i;/communism and the unbelieving! father of psychoanalysis have strong claims to godliness. Canon Max Warren, general secretary of the Church. Mis- sionary Society in England, said f Christians can claim no monop- oly on God because His right. eousness works through other faiths 'and even atheistic sci ence, He appealed for more sympathetic understand- ing among Anglicans for other ideologies and science He suggested to 1,000 Angli- jean churchmen at the first jworking session of their 11-day |meeting that Christian concern 'for social righteousness "'owes not a little, under God, to the stimulus of Karl Marx." Christians conscious of the contribution of psychoanalysis Ito the healing of spirits "will humbly thank God for His grace at work in Sigmund Freud, no less at work because Freud did not acknowledge him." SERVES RELIGION Canon Warren cussion on. how the church can t ront rival faiths and ggested that since re. launching dis Hligion is a quest for understand- ing of life-then a medium that British churchman told the An.|increases understanding serves Lreligion. He described such con- itributions as 'godly irreligion." "The great role of science is to make men more religious be- cause it is forever increasing our knowldge of the universe." The trouble with religion, he added, is that it is in danger of denying reality by building on mystery. "Science has no brief to tell _ireligion the meanin of life and love. Religion, for its part, has no right-to tell science what is knowledge. "But science and religion to- gether may. some day have something very important to! say to technology--a word as to how things are done and what should not be done." Canon, Warren warned - there is danger in the very theme of the current congress the church's mission on the "'fron- iers" of religion, politics and culture--because it tends to di- vide life into religious and secu- lar compartments when such divisions should not exist if the church is to survive An apparent failure to believe in Christianity often is just "a refusal to accept the distortions of our own believing," he said A major source of such distor- tions is the failure of the church to speak to modern man in his" own language--"we have not yet acquired a vernacular that adequately expresses the mod- ern world," MENTIONS BOOK Referring to the fact that religious jargon sometimes cre-| ates "a God that is dead," Canon Warren commended as a "deeply sincere and profoundly courageous" attempt fresh language a controversial) book entitled Honest to God by Bishop John Robinson of Wool- wich, England, (Dr, Robinson, | who suggests there is no perso. nal God, was described earlier) by the Archbishop of Canter- bury as '"confused."') Other points made. by Canon wear . The West must drop its tra- Aisin air of superiority wards Asia and Africa, which is based on technical know-how and charity. monopoly on humanity and the} new nations want friends not helpers 2. The church, while continu ing to share Western affluence with poor countries, must seek understanding of economic problems, including the impli cations of the population explo sion to find a)' to-| The West has no|Christians THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, August 15, 1963 19 Sympathy For Athiest cc ntsc sams mag oa Sought By Anglican ithe nature of its missionary |fact that Roman Catholic guesis |work among people who follow | are attending the congress opén lother' religions such as Islam new hope for deeper under. jand Buddhism. 'The walls of| standing. He noted Romah Jericho are not falling down at}, : the blast of the gospel trumpet,|Catholics were asked by their The great ethnic religions of|leaders not to attend the lagt the world are certainly resurg-/Anglican congress in 1954 at a Minneapolis. Other speakers traced simi-| Dr. Ramsey noted that larities between other religions|"'Rome and Canterbury : are and Christianity and said the|speaking to one another in a church must recognize these be-/new charity without belittling fore it can argue its own unique-|their respective concerns about ae ; 'i : /truth,"" ongress Chairman owar . H, Clark, Primate of All Can- soutsad an 4 onde been fe. jada, suggested @t a congress| ther Protestants and Roman jlaunching rally of 15,000. Tues- Catholics, he said, but "today |day night that the church must|in an ecumenical age Christians understand what is, before We/overywhere are ready to go to jpedio , pronouncing what ought one another without the aid.of to be our bridge, or perhaps any Archbishop Clark said that/bridge, to help them." : persons who profess no Chris-|-------- - itian faith may still be doing) God's work in science, philoso. | phy or social work, "God does not spend all his time in church," he added, = °) The theme of Christian unity | cropped up time and again at ithe congress. "Today in an ecumenical age, everywhere are| ready to go to one another," the! 'Archbishop of Canterbuy, Rt. Rev. Michael Ramsey, said. 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