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Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jul 1966, p. 19

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'Closer Rapport Promoted gans." "Frauds." In such caus- 'itic terms, members of Roman |Catholic and Masonic fraternal "\orders have sometimes----re- garded each other in the past. But the distrust is disappearing. John McDevitt, supreme knight a NEW SENATOR Paul Desrisseaux, a Sher- brooke, Que., lawyer, 18 one of the men named to the Senate in July by Prime Minister Pearson. (CP Photo) aenicet. Group To Plan | For New City -- } SAO PAULO (Reuters) --More than 100 men, women and chil-| dren have left their homes in Jaboticabal, Sao Paulo state, to trek hundreds of miles into the wilds of central brazil and cre- ate a new city and a new life. They have vowed to live "in fraternity, with love, truth and stice." inese pioneers, called "band- erantes" after the first Portu- guese explorers who opened up the interior of the country, com- prise 27 men, 25 women and 62 children. They have sold all their pos- sessions and bought 450 acres of Jand at Vera Cruz, in the north of Goias state, 470 miles north of Brasilia. | The spiritual leader of these idealists is Alberto Pavezzi, former soccer player who was nicknamed "Cafelandio" when he played for the local Sao) Paulo teams, Portuguesa de} Desportes and Juventus, 25} years ago. This nickname has now been incorporated into the commu- nity's title--Associacao Agricola Pecuaria Religiosa dos Cale-| landios (Religious Association of the Cafelandios for Agriculture and Livestock). a Pavezzi knows the new site well and says the ground will be good for cultivation. -- The colony will be a strict co-| operative based on serious and all profits will be distrib-| uted among the brethren. Help Is Urged | Around Home | PEKING (Reuters) -- China's young men and boys have been told by the Communist Youth With Catholics, Masons By GEORGE W. CORNELL 7 YORK (AP) "Pa. ares nu "Those days are gone," says of the Catholic men's order, the Knights of Columbus. "We're encouraging closer rapport." The change has meant not only a fading away. of the mu- tual aspersions, once uttered in the separate organizational quarters, but has also brought about joint discussions and pros- pects-of co-operation. Welcoming the new friendlier relations, Wendell Walker, Ma- sonic grand secretary in New York State, said, "It's been so good so far, it seems likely to develop still further." Across the country, Masonic} lodges and councils of the| Knights have met. together in many communities at "'brother- hood breakfasts' and similar} affairs--for the first time. ATTEND MEETINGS With growing frequency, offi-| cials of both groups have been guests at meetings of the other. Rev. John O'Brien, a Catholic) theologian at Notre Dame Uni-| versity, has spoken at several) Masonic gatherings lately in the| middle western United States, | stressing greater Catholic es-| teem for Masons. He predicts the time is rap-| idly approaching 'when offi-| cials of the Catholic. Church| will re-examine the causes and| circumstances of its ban against} Catholics joining a Masonic| lodge." That ban was first imposed by Pope Clement XII in 1738, the beginning of a long succession) of papal condemnations, edicts) and censures imposing excom-} munication on Catholics joining) or promoting Masonry. Pope Pius IX, in the mid-19th) century, characterized Masonry as insidious, fraudulent, per- verse, "'injurious both to re-| ligion and society." Other harsh charges also were hurled. Because Masonry is nonsec- tarian, open to men of varying faiths, past popes accused it, of a false tolerance, creating re- ligious indifferentism and under-| mining Catholicism, MUST BE BELIEVERS Masonry, which bars atheists and agnostics, obligates mem- bers to broad religious princi- ples and, in the words of early} constitutions, "to be good men and true -- by whatever de- nomination or persuasion," It regularly has denied oppos- ing Catholicism. But frayed feel- ings existed in both camps. The Catholic magazine, America,! comments: "Many a Knight will doubt-| harhared a good deal and when The Masonic Order includes about 4,000,000 members in the United States, their lodges stressing rules of brotherliness, help to the needy and civic vir- tues. The Knights of Columbus, in- cluding about 1,200,000 members in this country, also carry on Jess recall less fraternal days,;works of civic and social serv- when Masonry, particularly injice. alr Mable of anti-Catholicism, Catholics rather commonly tarred all Masons with the same brush." | MeDNevitt. of the Knights' headquarters in New Haven, Conn., said the first job of rec- onciliation between the frater- nal orders is "to get rid of de- rogatory" impressions of each other. "Neither side has had a mon- opoly on this,"' he said, But he added that the mood and man- ners have changed as a "divi- dend of the ecumenical spirit." He foresees numerous fields of co-operation ahead. | that was on heedless as they burned and 'Under Wilderness Skies' Opens Treasury Of Data By R, J. ANDERSON Canadian Press Staff Writer First in a trickle, then in a flood, they came across the sea to a world that was theirs for the taking. They con- quered the land and the life it. They were Slashed and killed. Nothing can compare with | man's rape of the North American continent. The depredations of the set- tlers from Europe, who sometimes burned whole for- rests to clear a few acres of farm land, and the greed of their descendants in a relent- less drive to the Pacific, are touched on bitterly in two books on wildlife and con- servation. Scathing, too, are comments on modern - day "sportsmen" who kill without heed for the future. In Under Wilderness Skies (McClelland and Stewart), W. Philip Keller opens a treas- ury of information about wild- life in North America, based on 20 years of study and pho- tographic expeditions into the wilderness. Bruce S. Wright's intimate knowledge of game is evident in Black Duck Spring (Clarke, Irwin), a cap- tivating tale of a black duck. WASTING WATER NOW Man's waste of natural re- sources--of forests, of land, of water, of wild game--are preliminary in Keller's book to a series of lively pen sketches of various types of game in their natural habitat. |= Bitterly, he writes: 'We have wasted one of the finest arrays of wildlife ever known on the planet; we have wasted the soil from millions and millions of acres; we have wasted one of the great- est grasslands produced by nature; we have wasted en- tire forests; we have wasted the native tribes; now we are wasting the water. "Not only are we wasting the water, we are also ex- perts at contaminating that which we do not use in such a manner that it is no longer fit for man, fish or animal life." | That's the sledgehammer approach in getting across Keler's message: that if Canadians do not quickly take a more serious interest | Three Hills, Alta. Under Wild- erness Skies is his fifth book. Born in Quebec City, Wright served for a time in the Ca- nadian forest service before doing graduate study_in wild- life management. For two years he worked on a survey for Ducks Unlimited. He now is director of the northeastern wildlife station of the Wildlife Manacsement Institute of Washington, D.C. He has writ- ten four books and numerous short stories and articles. Early Bird Has $2,107,000 Income WASHINGTON (AP) -- Early Bird, the switchboard satellite 22,300 miles above the Atlantic, rang up revenues fotalling $2,107,000 for telephone calls, television relays and other serv- ices in the first six months of 1966, the Communications Satel- lite. Corp. reported Thursday. The activities brought total Early Bird revenues, since the satellite started operating com- mercially June 28, 1965, to | $4,472,000, COMSAT said. |, The 1965 total was swollen by) |management fees from the COMSAT international consort- {ium retroactive for 14 months, |while the 1966 figure embraces such fees for only six months, a spokesman explained, Canada is a member of the consortium, Pakistan's Khan Praised On His Economic Policies By CONRAD FINK RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP) -- Rawalpindi's shops sell bright and frilly goods these dave and food is plentiful. In the seaport city of Karachi, new cars travel well-kept roads. This is something of a phen- omenon in south Asia, and it has given Tise lo a dual ap- proach by many Pakistanis to the government of President Mohammed Ayub Khan. While they may view his strongman politics,with dis- taste, many Pakistanis are giv- ing the 59-year-old field marshal high marks for his economic policies. Foreign economists, though emphasizing much is yet to be done to~-modernize Pakistan, also applaud some of Ayub's economic moves. : Two factors most impress for- jeign economists: --Despite last September's war with India and continuing internal political unrest, Pakis- tan's over - all growth rate is averaging six per cent a year. --Foreign exchange reserves are estimated at $290,000,000, slightly higher than a year ago. The industrial sector, Ayub's pet project, had made impress- ive gains that helped maintain national growth levels despite a 10-per-cent drop in agricultural production due ta drought. Work on some projects, such as the huge Mangla dam in West Pakistan, continues 24 hours-a-day, Construction of a new national capital in Islama- bad, near Rawalpindi, was slowed and non - essential im- ports slashed 40 per cent fol- lowing the war last year. Ayub has campaigned hard for birth control, Intra - uterine contraceptive devices now are being inserted at the rate of about 40,000 a month, The primary drag on future development is military spend- ing, now tie highest in-history: The latest national budget al- locates $474,000,000 to defence, 39 per cent of total spending. | Ayub's major headache, eco- nomically as well as politically, is East Pakistan, where more than half of the country's 110,- |000,000 people liye. This prov- lince, separated from West Pak- istan by more than 1,000 miles of Indian territory, is economic- ally backward even by south THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdey, July 30, 1966 16° 'Instant Towns' MACKENZIE, B.C. (CP)--, This municipality has a council. That's about all. Eventually it is expected to tc es tansine sammunity aun. ported by a nearby sawmill and pulp operation. As of early June, it consisted of a muddy street and some partly-built housing. The council was sworn in recently in Van- couver, shortly after the muni- cipality was created by the Brit- ish Columbia government. Mackenzie is one of the "'in- stant towns" springing up throughout the province in the wake of massive pulp and forest |development. It was started by Alexandra Forest Industries Lid., a sub- sidlary-of B.C. Forest Products Ltd., which is building a pulp Asian standards, Because its jute is one of the country's prime exports, East Pakistan constantly demands a large share of the payoff. Ayub is trying to prevent eco- nomic problems in the east from setting off a political ex- plosion that would jeopardize Found In B.C. In Wake Of Pulp Development and forest operation on banks of the Parsnip River, miles north of Prince George. The company is b the first 30 houses of the community to make accommodation avail- able for some of the 120 work- ers needed to put a $6,200,000 sawmill into operation. INQUIRIES FLOOD IN Private developers are ex- pected to build the other resi- dential] areas called for in the town plan. Starts have been made on 50 terrace housing rental units and there will be a temporary bachelor camp. Already the company plans and the town have attracted attention by prospective em- pioyees, Company oificiais said some of these have visited the townsite and mill. The company has received 1,200 inquiries from people in 78 B.C. communities and eight provinces, The lumber mill will be 3% miles from the townsite. Highly automated, it will permit eight men to handle machinery cut- ting 125,000,000 board feet a his entire program. | shift. -- in | conservation of their natural | resources they soon will have | nothing left on which to build. | HOOKS NAB DUCKS Wright is more subtle. Deftly woven into the fabric of his story of a black duck that roams up and down the eastern seaboard are descrip- | tions of Quebecers catching practice before the hunting the great auks from New- foundland, of the brutal death in 1894 of the last of the sea minks on the northeast coast, of "sportsmen" catching ducks with grain-baited fish hooks in New Jersey. Keller became familiar with wildlife in his youthful days in East Africa. He Canada and has done much agricultural research and Jand management in British Columbia. He has visited more than 20 countries on signments and now lives in season, of the eradication of | | HOSPITALS ARE NO PLACE FOR trained as an agronomist in | writing and photographic as- | BAHA'I! WORLD FAITH Teaches. "Men must eliminate all those prejudices which 'divide man- kind" League there is nothing shame-| ful in lending a hand with household chores. i Those who lag behind in help- ing at home should be sub-| jected to more "persuasion,"' | the league says in an editorial | in its official organ, the China Youth Newspaper. With a membership larger than the Communist party's 22,-| 000,000, the league is an impor-) tant organization for Chinese of ages ranging from seven to about 30 years. The editorial was prompted by a letter from ChuMing-yu,| vice-secretary of a local league} branch near Shanghai, saying) that the traditional concept of male superiority still lingers in ZION CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH 409 ADELAIDE AVE. EAST PASTOR: REV. D. N. HABERMEHL, B.A., M.Th. For information re: weekly meetings or literature Write Box AS Oshawa Times 7:00 10:00 A.M.-MORNING WORSHIP NURSERY CARE PROVIDED P.M, "THE GIFT. OF THE-SPIRIT-' Radic Ministry Chr. Ref. Church: each Sunday at 9:15 °.M. (Back To God Hour), every other Sunday at 11 (churches in the area) A.M, CKLB Tomorrow! Reveols the startling signi- ficance behind world news! many parts of China despite) Communist policies stressing the equality of the sexes Chu's letter was given a prominent headline: "Male youth doing household takes not at all shameful." West Berlin Has 6,000 Communists BERLIN--(AP)--West Berlin surrounded by a Communist wall and barbed wire, has 6,000 card-carrying Communists Although banned in West Ger- many, the party operates le- gally in West Berlin under a 1946 four-power agreement. It has the same name as the East German Communist party--the Socialist Unity party--but mem- bers deny they are affiliated with the Communist regime in East Berlin. The local party held its first convention this year in an out- of-the-way hall surrounded by police posted to prevent inci- dents. There were none. The city's 2,200,000 people mostly ignored the event. Natural Steam Harnassed In N.Z. WELLINGTON (CP) -- Nat- ural underground steam has been harnessed in the centre of New Zealand's North Island for one of the country's largest electricity stations This: could be only a .small start in geothermal power. Sci- entists haye already proved four more steam fields each capable of producing as much super-heated steam ds the orig- inal one, and this by no means exhausts the _ possibility of others BOATERS SPEED YORK, England (CP)--Traf fic police may soon be booking citizens for speeding on a York . » with PROPHECIES next SUNDAY HOLINESS Envoy and Mrs. Tues. 2:30 p.m.--Ladies' Home 9:45 A.M.-- 7:00 P. SALVATION MEETING THE SALVATION ARMY 133 Simcoe Street South MAJOR and MRS. GORDON HOLMES SCHOOL 11:00 A.M. -- MEETING M. -- John Simpson League Wed, 8:00 p.m.--Prayer Meeting "A Welcome Awaits You at the Army" FREE METHODIST CHURCHES Pastor -- Rev. R.H 11:00 A.M ROSSLAND ROAD -- 1042 Rossland Road W. Eost of Gorrord James, 725-1280 9:45 A.M. -- LIBRARY TIME 10:00 A.M, -- SUNDAY SCHOOL "THE LORD'S EARTHQUAKES" THE FRIENDLY COMMUNITY CHURCH ERIE STREET -- off Simcoe St. (next after Bloor St.) Minister --- Rev. C. M. Bright, 725-3872 Junior Church up to 8 yrs. provided 10;00 A.M. -- FAMILY SUNDAY SCHOOL 11:00 A.M.--""ENCOURAGEMENT TO THE TEMPTED" 20 years! Monday - Saturday 9:05 - 9:35 P.M, "On Lacrosse Nights' The World Tomorrow will be heard at 8:30 p.m and Sunday 10:30 - 11:00 P.M 1350 RADIO GRACE LUTHERAN Lutheran Church -- Canada (Mo, Synod) PARK ROAD & HIGHWAY 40} Rev. Philip Fiess, Minister Ronald A. Jansen, Vicar SUNDAY SERVICES 9:45 A.M SUNDAY SCHOOL ""MIDWEEK WORSHIP" WEDNESDAY 7:30 P.M 11:00 AM MORNING WORSHIP FAITH Lutheran Church (Eastern Canada Synod) The Rev, Henry Fischer Pastor --- 725-2755 MASONIC TEMPLE BLDG. 91 Centre St 10:00 a.m. 204 Bond Cycle Centre Drive Safely! ducks in steel traps, of New | Brunswickers slaughtering un- | protected cormorants for | SUMMER VACATIONS! Please Drive With Care » - - Everywhere Follow the 10 Safety Rules Published Below and Save a Precious Life 1.--The good driver keeps his car in safe condition, 2.--He drives only when sober and never when over- tired. 3.--His mind does not wander, for safe driving keeps a@ man busy. 4,.--He always keeps to a speed which gives him per- fect cont rol. 5.--He passes intersections and grade crossings with care. 6.--To children and pedestrians he gives thought, for over them he has the power of life or death. 7.--He obeys the law of the land, knowing obedience may incr ease his years. 8.--He makes allowances for the hazards of driving at night, 9.--The good driver remembers that courtesy is the first law of self preservation, 10.--When he walks, the good driver remembers the GoldenR ule. THIS MESSAGE PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF THE PUBLIC BY THE FOLLOWING: ' Oshawa Sand and Gravel 877 King St. E. Eaton's of Canada Oshawa Shopping Centre Good Boy Furniture Mart 520 King W. Oshawa Dairy 431 Simcoe St. S. Boyd's Esso King W. 4 THE SERVICE COME WORSHIP WITH US! shire river. People living in 7:00 P.M.--'THE LORD'S SIDE" houseboats on the River Ouse claim speedboats are exceeding| the six m.p.h. limit and that} their backwash is damaging the moored crait, i Oshawa Times Motor City Cab 86 King St. E., Oshawa Wed. 8:00 p.m. Prayer & Bible St : r le Study 9 Prince A WARM WELCOME AWAITS YOU

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