Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 9 Dec 1948, 2, p. 1

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By Lewis Milligan "God is perhaps giving us a. sign by which He will take away from‘us every illus‘on that we are capable of building a tcwer here whose pinnacle shall reach (o heaven." That is a cuotation from an address delivered by Prof. Karl Barth at the opening session cf the World C o u n c i l of Churches in Amsterdam. Prof. Barth Disabled “0"00 tw h P AP PAAA P CC PAE C ts Eugene Montgomery, junior mechanilcal draftsman at the Mine, fell from an aircraft in England and injured his back. He has lost the use cf both legs permanently. Euâ€" gene is shown here at work in the draf.ing rcom at Mcintyre where they have built a special table to which he can wheel his chailir. c 1 â€" @Ohe Porrupin: 8Pages | L J § io ult lt .allth .alts.allth .tts callth i) PP PC t Junior Chamber of Commerce The Peoples Candidate Board of Trade and Ted Towers Sponsored by "We cught to give up every thought § is the Atas who is destined to bear that the care of the Church, the care|the dome of heaven on his shotulders." of the world, is aaur care," said Dr.i There are A~great many people in Barth. "Burdened with this thought the world today who are worrying, not we cculd straighten out nothing, we|only akout the present, but chiefly would only increase disorder in the |about the future s ate of mankind. H. Church and the world still more. For ] i. Wells spent the greater part of his jfisl this is ‘he final root and ground | 1"1‘3 foédemfnn.g the .1mperfe?tions ,Of- the social order, and in drawing up a of all human disorder: the dreadeI’!n‘nn fAr ‘"#hana nf ‘Phinags â€"tnNn is regarded as one of the profoundest theolcgians of modern t‘mes, and his meéssage was delivered as a keyâ€"note for the Council‘s discussicn on the present disordered state of the world. in Timmins, Ont., Canade __ EVERY THURSPAY |\ 1%. Wells spent the greater part ‘of his life condemning the imperfections of the social order, and in drawing up a iplan for the "Shape <of Things tof !Come." Befose he ~died, he wrote a pessimisti¢c book en‘itled "Mindâ€"at the End <f its Tether." in which he adâ€" mitted that all his efforts had been },11 vain, and that so far as the mind ,of man concerned the problems of the world were insoluable. Wells had left® God ou‘ of his panning, Socialism and: Science were his twin deities. * Prof. Harold Laski in one of his books savys that it was the statt. of ‘hings in the world that made him, a Scrcialist â€" it also m a d eâ€" him an a heist, for he forsook â€"his Jewish faith. Strangely enough, it was the disordered state of the world and the. imperfecticns of mankind that have. the minds of men to. religion. The grea‘est emancipators of the huâ€" man race have been men and women who, realizing their own imperfections and their ability to grasp the. "scheme of things entire," have humbly subâ€" milted their lives to the grace and guidance of divine Power and Intelliâ€" gence. The movement for social reform in England did not begin with Karl Marx or the Labor Party; it was cssentially a spiritual movement and began with John Wesley preaching tlhe Gospel to the coal miners at Briâ€" godless ridiculous Copinion . that man is the Atas who is destined to bear the dome of heaven on his shoulders." After being on five missions over enemy te zemery fell 20 feet freoem the aircraft and perm anen he had been transferred from the Army to the Air ® June 1947.. He had studied drafting at Timmins V courses at Reâ€"habilitation school. ~ Above are s how: old baby. â€" Christine is a local girl, "who used to ch: i%. _ Eugene and Christine attend the hockey matches full happy life. TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, DKC] Wesley knew nothing about So A4am.It was not 4until the year »L{ the term Socialism was mentione Englard. Rotert Owen is said :o beer the first Scc‘alist, and he w vprofessed ‘atheist. Born in Scotan I8401, he migrated to the United S at the age cf 24, where he join tcl. ‘Wesley had no cu â€"angâ€"cri economizt theories; he did not rega men as classes or masses, but as i dividual souls, and he preached in vidual conversion as the first essent to social. salvation. For fifty years _ travelled, mostly on horseback, over the British Isles and the ly reforms cof the n‘nsteenth céntu were large‘y the result of his spiritt ifnfluence. Lord Shaftsbury was geeply religious man, and he did mo for the advancement of social refor thah all the irreligious agi ators of 1 day. % radical groubdb of ‘"Free Enguire world and the cap wclfare of every m every article produc more assurm{ of joI better things in lif labour is vital. Tha are constantly bein They receive O\ factories, â€"* This traininv, rovided thr Affairs, the ?ecfi-m Depart tion, starts the veteran on business ma(fxim--_ for exa clectricity and must learn t thousands of separate parts all parts of the world. crea every effort of these new|ly which to live and countribu ONTA IRIOD *# . every man, le produced is l‘(‘cr()f 'inh =(*¢ igs in life, J ital. That ntly being ir ive OÂ¥X TH C fortr «q i1 P3 odu 11 ir xt t l TV ire desire re such : 4 1t 41} opposed to reilgion and adâ€" ‘voluticonary social changes. ter days, ,however, he gave of establishing a political 1 became a spiritualist, pubâ€" o books on the subject one ras entitled, "Footfalls on the of Another World." â€" Blatchford, one of most ad : trenchant Marxian Soâ€" the beginning of the preâ€" iry, was an avowed «athgist "ialist, and yet,. like Owen, an ardent spiritualist in his He abandoned ‘this faith in as a remedy for the ills C »Rober®" ‘Oweir *‘anc'.“ Robert: _ were sincere men,, with a athy for the workers and a es re. to imnrove their 104. disrcvered that they were s and could not carry the their shoulders. They also that menâ€" were immortal Oth. 1948 it STRY (ONTARIO) «VHBACG for C and purchased by in her bord ~ of the Department of Veterans‘ the Ontari0o I)c'pilrtm(‘flt of EdUCfl- ced craftsmanship. In assembling st have a lhnmugzh knowlgdgc of work on precision machines having aaile hitsiness machines are sold in r Canada and Ontario. Therefore s to make Ontario a finet place in ind happiness of all her citizens. P11 Normal, Full Life rchased by people all sver the selv determines the economic borders. â€" Because the sale of s into this Province, we all are aildren can have more of the i sufficient quantities, skilled muld be glad that war veterans hands so needed by indusu'y. rt instructors in out Ontario 1944 after Published In Timmina, Ont., Canads spirits passing through this region of iline ~and that this was not the only vorld. They finished . where Wesley had begun, and the present world disâ€" order, as Dr. Barth declares, is the result of "the godless,. ridiculous opinâ€" lion, that man in the Atas who is deâ€" stined to bear the dome of heaven on hisâ€" shoulders." MONTREAL â€" Low railway fares forâ€" Chnstmas and New Year‘s holiday !t;avelf between all stations in Canada and to. cértain. border poin‘s in .the United States were announced today by J, A. Brass, chairman of the Canaâ€" dian Passenger â€" Asscciation. Return tickets covering +both hoh- days will be sold at the regular oneâ€" way fare‘ plus cneâ€"half with this: reâ€" EVERY THURSDAY Sshown at the manual controls of his car, Eugene drives back and forth to work from his home 36 Railway Avenue, Schumacher. _ His wife beught him the ‘car and the Legion helped him get the job at the Mclntyre. The Company offiâ€" cials have been most ‘helpful. They built a ramp at the side deor of the office building so that Eugene gould wheel his chair down to his car. for LEARNING MACHINE ASSEMBLY g a a a ® a a # a w0 a a h8 # h a a a A 4 a 6 a A b a b 6 b 4 8 A 6 6 Bb a 4 6 4 6 6 John N. West, 25, of Toronto, a Roval Canadian Navy veteran, is shown here making an adjustment to one of the 10;:000 parts in â€"a business machine designed for a New Zealand firm. Various types of business nachines are produced ~in faeâ€" tories, â€" Because of their inâ€" tricate inechamiximns it is es« sential that these machines be checked by expert craftemen at every stage of their production. â€" MACMHMINE ASsSEMBLY a o i a 0 6# 6 0 6 # 0 46 0 0 A 0 0 0 6 40 0 0 00 b 0 0 8 0 40 # 4e CAN SEE BEHIND THEM Eyes of rabbits have fields of visâ€" sion ‘whitch ~overlap behind thely heads. With this arrangement . they ‘can see an enemy approaching from \‘the rear, without turning their heads. duction good going from Tuesday, Deâ€" cember 21. to noon Saturday, January 1,â€" inclusive, returning from destina~> ‘tion up to mndmght of Monday, Januâ€" ary â€"d. Special tickets : for, teachers and students will be sold at regular, oneâ€" way fare plus oneâ€"fourth for.the round trip, which these tickets good. going from â€" Wednesday, Dec, 15 up to and including noon Saturday January 1, and permitting return as late as Monâ€" cay, January 10. : h Single Copyâ€"Five Cents

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