Oakville Journnl Rreord, Monday August 27, Clergy Urged To Widen Role And Include Secular Needs By C AR L M 0L1JN8 K ING S TO N (C P ) -- The Anglican Church o f Canada re sumed debate today amid regoverning a s s e m b l y o f the curring remind el's that deci sions on internal church affairs must be geared to the needs of the secular world. Some 350 clerg y and laymen began the second half o f their eght-day general synod under a renewed appeal to seek their mission beyond the rites and trappings of religion. The message was stressed at a service Sunday night in St. G eorge's Cathedral by Rt. Rev. Stephen F . Bayne, L o n d o n based executive officer of the World Anglican Communion. He said tiie mission of the church is " not.-a selling campaign of Christian opinions" but must he found in "ou r society, our jobs, times, our fam ilies and existing study commission on m arriage under Bishop S. C. Steer o f Saskatoon to draft recommendations for the next synod in 1965. The resolution, passed with only about half the synod m em bers present, directed the com mission to pay particular atten tion to statements by Most Rev. H. E. Sexton o r Victoria, arch bishop of British Cblumbia. and by Canon Clough. The archbishop's statement, delivered to his own diocese last April and circulated a m o n g synod members here Saturday, took note of a grow ing feeling within the church that clergy should be able to rem arry divorced persons in some cases. The cases would be considered individually on their own merits by a responsible official o f the church. 'M U ST FA C E R E A L IT IE S ' " W e must face up to realities without cheap' ng the institution o f m a rriage," Archbishop Sex ton said after the discussion. Canon C l o u g h s statement called for a decision that would enable the church to deal honestly with tlw> rem arriage of a divorced person, while stress- I ing that; the church should "in 1 ix) way weaken or make null and void the historic principle of the indissolubility of m ar riage." He said that "th e practice o f ! sending people who have been divorced to be m arried by min- 1 isters of other denominations and then receiving them back again without question is an evasion. It makes what one bishop c a l l e d `ecclesiastical Renos' of other churches." T h e church's relations w th divorced persons has been de bated by Canadian Anglican leaders for 30 years. A proposal to oerm ii rem arriage was de feated by the synod 20 yearago. the lower house of clergy and laymen approving the idea and riie upper house ofbishops rejecting it. Parish clergy' said Saturday their biggest, recurring problem is attempting to reconcile the church's r e f u s a l to accept divorce with the d e s i re to accord full church membership to worthy divorce victims. CROSS PACIFIC IN 39-FOOT SCHOONER Two men and a woman sailed f after docking are: Josef Painto Las Angeles in a 39-foot ; chernegg, 39. owner and skipschooner after a 57-day nonper of the boat; his Australian financve, Benita E. Burge, stop sail from Yokohoma, Ja pan. Standing in their craft I t j j 38, a nurse from New Guinea: and along for the ride William Casson, 29, a Reuters News correspondent. (A P W IKEFH O TO ) W ASH IN G TO N (C P ) The | Douglas Stuart, board chairman Kennedy) administration w a s o ! the Quaker Oats Company warned /Sunday that Canada- and a fan n er U.S. Ambassador U.S. relations may be damaged I to Canada. severely and the free world dis-1 Am ong Canadian members lllusioned i f the United States | signing the statement are Walimposes import restrictions on ter L. Gordon. Toronto management executive and Liberal Canadian lumber. member of Parliament: H. H. Adding its voice to those of Hannam. president of the Cana other liberal-trade bodies, the Canadian - American committees dian Federation of Agriculture: Claude Jodoin. president of the said the r e s t r i c t i o n s pro Canadian Labor Congress, and posed by some U.S. softwoods Donald Gordon, president of the interests .could lead to hostility Canadian National Railways. nnd retahatorv action by CanThe statement^-aras issued ns / ada ar.d reinforce w6rld scepti cism *klent Kennedy's ^new lir tat&l trade jiitiative. At the swine time the com mittee. made up of prominent business and professional lead ers from both sides of the bor der, criticized the " heavy" re liance of the Canadian govern ment on increased import re strictions as a way of meeting an emergency exchange crisis. In a statement tfie committee said: " Moreover, w e consider that 1t is particularly unfortunate that these higher duties were imposed without more convinc ing emphasis fin their tempor ary nature and a clearer indi cation as to their probable dur ation. M A Y HL'RT POSITION "Such increases on duties, if Tong retained, w ill tend to im pair rather than enhance the competitive position of Cana dian industry -- and this just when it must be improved if Canada is to overcom e its basic difficulties of recent years and resume a more satisfactory pace o f economic growth." Committee co - chairmen are Robert M. Fowler of Montreal, president o f the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association, and R. C anada May Hit Back Party Whip Key Man If Lumber Trade Cut In Snap Vote Calls Jk * · a special body of U.S. and Ca nadian government officials pre pared to open discussions at Ot tawa Tuesday to seek a solution to the U.S. lumber problem. This meeting is to deal specifically with Kennedy's July 26 call for initiation of negotiations with Canada on softwoods im ports. The U.S. industry main tains excessive imports from Canada h a v e disrupted the Am erican market for domestic production, causing A h a os -in' unemployment amonk Ameses producers.___________ j j O T TA W A C P -- The part whip is an important officer in any parliament but he will be doubly so in the 25th parliament overw he lminsr m ajority of t>upwhich opens Sept. 27. Traditionally the whip s job is to help party leaders in the management o f followers «n the Commons. It s his L " make sure M Ps attend o f the House, especially a vote is called. When the government porters as in the last ment. it is reasonably easy for the whip to have enough o f his (M P s on hand to turn aside any attempt to defeat a government measure. theme tied in with the synod - opening message last Wednesday f r o m Archbishop Howard H. Clark o f Winnipeg, primate o f all Canada, who said the church cannot hope to make the world hear its message " if there is not a sensitive aware ness to what is going on and what people are thinking." Synod put these ideas to work I in the closing hour of Saturday's \ session when aseries o f speak- j ers called on the church to I "fa c e up to realities" of divorce and rem arriage. They urged a TO RO NTO (C P ) -- The gun reconsideration o f A n g l i c a n that killed Barbara Huntley, fi. policy that f o r b i d s the re a m arriage o f a divorced person Frid ay discharged w h i l e neighbor was struggling to dis whose form er partner * still arm her policeman father, laving. Vaughan Townhhip police said ·LEADS T O CONFUSION" . . . . The practic 1 o f refusing to Saturday. Barbara,y o f suburban Richm arry a divorced person and then accepting him back into vale, diofc u^.tantly when a bul I he church with a blessing after let from Cfcnst. Donald Hunt rem arriage elsewhere results in le y 's service revolver # struck "confusion, inconsistency a n d her in the head. No charges w ere laid. Const contradiction." said Canon J. C. Huntley. 32, was permitted to Clough o f Winnipeg. The assembly empowered an return home after questioning. Gun Killed Girl During Struggle M etro p o 1 i t a n Chief James M ackey said Const. Huntley has not been suspended. An inquest will bo held. Police said neighbor Charles Christian was called to Hunt le y 's home by Linda Huntley. 13. after a shot was fired through a bedroom wall. The gun discharged while Christian attempted to disarm Huntley in front of Linda, Bar bara and their brother T erry, thinking up new' gimmicks to stay "gim m ickm en." " T h e y te-ep GAITSKELL ON HOLIDAY Hugh Gaitskell. leader of Bri- i his wife are vacationing in the tain's opposition Labor party, Italian Riviera resort town. In steps from a small dock to the his nght hand. Gaitsktll car beach at Paraggi. Italy: after ries a face mask equipped his daily swim. Gaitskell and with dual breathing tubes. (A P W IREPHOTO) In such circumstances t h e W ASINGTON (CP\ An it reveals that die nightmare of opposition parties' whips recog American res e a r c h Institute joblessness is persistent even in nize they have lal tie chance to says runaway technology may an affluent society and that defeat a government measure condemn "m illions of workers proud men still feel the econo on a s n a p vote and. con to meaningless labor which de m ic need to do useless work sequently, their job also is grades the dignity of man." stories and advertisements that lightened. The report by the Centre for that they detest." But in the forthcoming P ar the Study of Democratic Institu liament the Conservatives are The blame for an unhappy sit tions--a privately-endowed edu outnumbered 149 to 116 by the cational and research institute uation must be shared by both Liberal. Social Credit and New --calls on unions to reassess the ; i management and labor, says Dem ocratic oarties. So t h e role of automation in an indus Jacobs. whips on both sides w ill have i trialized society. "W e need new standards for Written by the centre's labor expert, Paul Jacobs, the study assessing the effects of technol cites as a typical trend toward ogy upon society . . . today, so " umvork" the practice of pay- ciety must iudge technology by pue s.iojtsoduioo j^deds.weu 5ui not only what it brings in bene printers to set " dead horse" or fits of efficiency but also by the useless copy under union con social costs, both hidden and open, that inevitably must be tracts. T O K Y O (R eu ters' -- Japan's ( The Irony of dead horse re- paid/* steel industry, 'w'hich has under ; pi*oduction copy, says Jacobs, is Until now, unions have led at gone phenomenal growth in the that printers, " men with a deep tempts to am eliorate the imact last 10 years, is preparing for sense of pride in their craft, o f u n e m p l o y m e n t , partly still another period o f rapid ex should so demean themselves through demands for retention pansion. because of their fea r of unem of workers no longer required Since 1952, Japan's steel mills ployment." on payrolls. Now' unions should have m ore than quadrupled K E E L NE ED take the lead in setting new their output. The country now' "Perhaps it is even tragic, for standards for assessing technol- ranks as the fourth largest Bogey Of Runaway Automation Feared As Mass "Degradation" Japanese Steel Production W ill Be Further Accelerated PARRY* (C )--Anex ex-r <n t a i n e d a T A R R Y ' SOUND (C PP )--An - 1 The buildings c o plosion at the freight of a fire drug store,bowling alley, clothsprayed spectators and firemen ing store, radio store, threp doc tors offices, the bank premises with glass early Sunday and apartments. Eleven persons were injured, two of them seriously. Royce About G O firemen . fought the 1 The time m ay come when a MackWam, 38. of P arry Sound I blaze for 12 hours before bringto be ^n their toes. On the faoe of it. it might vote is called in the Commons, and Robert Haughn. 14. of Richjt under control, seem simple for the thi*ee opposition whips find they have wood. Ohio vacationing herr. Police d tMt li/e may have opposition w h i p s to agree enough MPs on hand to defeat w ere reported in satisfactory s, tefl a ^ hdd one among themselves.with permis the government, but it s not the condition m hospital after emer sion of their leaders, to defeat policy of one or more of the gency operations removed glass the buildings. the government on any given j opposition parties to bring down from the heads. Road D eaths F e w e r vote. the government. T h e whips will Nine others, including two I _ , . , However,a gang-vote against| have t:o shoo members out of firemen, were treated in hospi- 1 L»ON D O N R-°ad deaths the government might not suit j the House to avoid having \otcs tal and released. Fireman Rob- fe ll by 21 1 in the firs t fiv e the political aims o f one or recorded, ert F a r r o w , 21, required 52 m onths o f 1%2 com pared w ith more of the parties. LO.N<« W EE K EN D S OUT , stitches to close gashes in his the sam e period last yea r, SEEKS E A R L Y V O TE f t # tJckl ish position ot minor-, leg back and e* r suffered when T h e re w e re 101 fe w e r deaths For example; Liberal Leader I ity rule also Iso may \vffcct one j was Jhit b y a living glass in M a y than in M ay. 1961. a Pearson has dndicateif w ,u p ractice'--th a t of door blow n out by the explosion, decrease o f about 18 p er centpress for an early election. The within a few Police estimated damage at quickest w ay `.a gel one would hours travel nt Ottawt skipping about $400,000. Two buildings be to defeat the government on Frid ay and Monday sitl ngs to w ere destroyed and two heavily a motion o f non-confidence. have a long weekend at home. damaged. But Robert. Thompson. Social Parties whose policy it is to There was no immediate indi Credit leader, and T. C. Doug try fo r a quick defeat o f the cation of the cause of the cxnloIS PLEASED las. N ew Democratic leader, government m ay liave to be on sion. First reports that a pro TO ANMOCNCE have s a i d - the government hand in full force every Friday pane gasheater at the 7-ear of slwuld be given a chance to put and Monday in case the votes one building h a d exploded were that he is back in the wastepaper business forward a program to stimulate are needed. later discounted when it w as at the economy and combat un The gam e of having just learned the tanks had been dis 60 ALLE N ST. employment. enough M Ps on hand for a vote connected at the height of the Combining their votes with to suit your party's purpose is bla/e. Many Thanks To All the Liberals on a non-confidence as old as parliamentary govern The fire destroyed two build The Friends Who Were motion might not suit their ment. It has produced such ings and heavily damaged a So Kind And Helpful. book. curious situations as that in 1863, branch o f the Toronto-Dom nion This is where the opposition when the government had a · Bank and another building. whips are going to do some m ajority of one. juggling. Enterprising opposition whips enticed three government supporters out for a sight-seeing \,tour, s t e e r e d them into a j i number of l a v e ms, then | deserted them and hot-footed it back to the House where a snap vote was called. The government desperately put up speaker after speaker ! * G u a r a n te e d w o r k m a n s h i p lems of the Growing Japanese Steel I n d u s t r y , Takesti Aka- to delay recording the vote V j'c b ^ i L / * C o u r te o u s S e r v i c e saka, executive vice-president Finally, the throe w a y w a r d of the Nippon Kokan K. K., supporters, f o g g i l y realizing emphasized that steel consump they had been duped, staggered tion per head o f the population back to the chamber an time In 1961 was 598 pounds in Japan, to save the government -- and 3rd L I N E A T S P E E R S R D . 827-4133 the Whip's skin--by one vote. compared with 1,100 pounds in the United States and 1,386 pounds in West Germany. I Mystery Blast Injures Eleven BILL ROGERS FOR A L L MAKES OF TRAFALGAR S^ E steel producer in the world with an annual production of 28,000,W INS O R FU G A M E 000 tons of crude steel. S A R N IA (C P )--Windsor AKO The steel market has suffered a mild recession this summer, defeatd die Sarnia Knights 13-7 resulting in cuts of 20 per cent before 1.000 fans here Saturday in production and restrictions night in a Junior O R FU en on raw' materials. But leading steel manufacturers regard this counter at Norm P erry M em o rial Park. as only a tem porary setback. The official aim is to reach an annual crude steel produc tion of 48,000,000 tons by 1970. If. STE PH EN GOOOERHAM In a report entitled ProhO A K V ILLE Congratulations to the D A IL Y JO U R N A L - RECORD Beaver Lumber wish the Daily Journal' Record every possible success in their new venture. At this time we would also like our new venture: THE BEAVER LUMBER HOME IMPROVEMENT CONTRACTIN' G DEPARTMENT OPENING TODAY AUGUST 2711i Increased Grants Sought For Parks It also asked the m axim um grant of $50,000. covering 50 per grant of $50,000. covering 50 per cent of acquisition and develop ment costs o f area* providing camping facilities, be increased. W. G. MacDonald of Toronto was elected president at the fi nal session o f the two-day an nual meeting, attended by 150 delegates. Vice presidents are R. A. J. Munson of St. Catharines and Robert Harrison of the Toronto suburb of Noith- York. Gordon Scharlach o f Kitchener, i « secretary-treasurer. LO OK ING FOR A JOB? SAVE YOUR STEVE ·4 J- i! COILS OF BARBED WIRE ACT AS RESTRAINER West Berlin police set up a bar bed wire barricade near the Wilhelm trass* to keep demons trators back from the Sovietbuilt wall that divides Berlin. The w ire was a precaution against possible incidiiots as West Berliners protest t h e shooting o f refugees by Red Vm m m border guards. (A P W IR E PH O TO ) SHOE LEATHER CALL DRAKE *'»*· itltction el wMt fulf-tim t| 9 h i k / / 41 - ./ * * # 4 GOODERHAM 1 BEAVER LUMBER COMPANY LIMITED 390 DUNDAS ST. NORTH BEAVER LUMBER HOME IMPROVEMENT Contracting Department VI 5-3448 41 Col borne St. E. JM 5 6669 Hsm t In or cht'f tj pw w w utaektrt a m p h rim eo* P e rso n n e l L ife B u s in e s s G roup # Pe n sio n