onb is o. «Te ~cln s inss ent, distilled, his deepest convictions, suddenly' Brought to head on the eve of his sister‘s wedding. were w minute:s Author 18, for had line otf tur S81h¢( aut 1¢ didn the wrot o1 to go That is why why Timmins 1y more men. mif anC potlled lies, co hospit: cadet reacr arout brid of t not hol« ta t nod Hov so sh( Ooft Canada The only answer wogld seem to be that these lines pres TIMMIN®, ONTARIO Members Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association; Ontarioâ€"Quebec Newspaper Association ©W t hedc a tm 'W is a great thing to refrain even from telling an enemy and jump into the Mattagami; it is a greater thing to thatâ€"if needs bheâ€"you can knock the tar out of him. Il Mr. Matheson himself averred that the four verses ten in a few minutes, "Certainly not more than five he later said. (11( Ebe Borcupine Adbance She Would Not Marry Him O light that followest all my way I yield my flickering torch to thee My heart restores its borrowed r: That in thy sunshine blaze its day May brighter, fairer be. Published every Thursday by Merton W,. Lake Subscription Rates: 2 Cross that liftest up my head, dare not ask to fly from thee: [ lay in dust, life‘s glory dead,. ind from the ground there blossoms red that shall endless be. econd cla ay morning in the MacKay Presbyterian church 11 denominations sing it from time to timeâ€"one selections happens to be, "O, Love that wilt not hich is of particular interest for several reasons. morning in January, 1950, he stands as one of the i most mysterious figures, perhaps, in centuriscs, ich concern to the Porcupine as anywhere else. 11 that such a gem could have been conceived me? Any good writer will affrim that his best rom intense concentration over long periods s revising and rewriting. published. Joe tried to suppress itâ€"by means vious cunning. He who relished conspiracy, exiled him and took charge. V A C Guns In Gillies Lake place it is considered one of the finest and f all hymns. And in the second place the ‘cgze Matheson, wrote the entire four verses in minutes. And he was blind at the time. y have plenty of wireless and grenades? Why reless and grenades up to Gillies Lake, cut a ind drop the junk down? or Charlie Brown, Capt. Fred Evans, Capt. ileut. Harold Ferguson, Lieut. Bill Jamieson y Ostrosser, Sgt. Major Jack Wilson, Sgt. g, Sgt. Gene Thornton, Cpl. Harry Atkinson i Laviolette, Maurice Savard, Wally Mayhew > given tim2> and effort to insrtuct recruits ter, on the eve of his sister‘s wedding, (that fore his sister was going to do what he had d to do, ind now could not do, for his girl someone else;) he sat down and wrote these in Timminsâ€"to enrich all hymn books for ey had emptied the armories( clean out the f them, take the guns away from all boys‘ them into the Mattagami. Strew them well ast the mill, right to the bottom . all of them. that seekest me through pain, ot close my heart to thee; ‘ the rainbow through the rain el its promise is not vain morn shall tearless be. ild up the Red Army. Trotsky did. Joe Trotsky did. And when Lenin, the whole bunch of them, was dying, he Vill and testament that Joe Stalin was not that wilt not let me go, my weary self in thee, thee back the life I owe n thine ocean depths its flow icher, fuller be. m 1loc ada. truck with the antiâ€"tank guns and 3" morâ€" n Algonquin, and toss them in from the y trucks. Fill them with shells, every on 1 and Sten in the armories, load after load, scrap of metal in the place. mortars are good things to have around, are active, and why Major Buell wants ‘immins knows the most stupendous exâ€" â€"too well. That he went in young and gonies of masses of men, blinded, crackâ€" and entraills; starvation concaved belâ€" mind, children utterly neglected; homes, Oobliterated. They know all about it. 0st interesting fact is that Mr. Mathâ€" ot by choice, but because he had been ver, given the cold shoulder by his girl. lieved, though not knownâ€"on account ‘ blindness. Regimentâ€" i neaceotime s 70. Eightyâ€"one railway cars hauled bsolutely unlikely that local henchmen cal stores. Millions sent gifts. Plenty matter by the Post Office Department, Ottaws on i5 Wmm mm h United States: $3.00 Per Year D Companiesâ€" And now Maior Bob The questicn is one partâ€"a large partâ€"in the overall issue of what place Canada‘s farm economy should hold in relation to the economy of the rest of the country. No farmer would te so unfeeling as to put a price tag on his son before letting the city claim him as its own. Yet the arguâ€" ment still stands: the city is getting a product more valuable than iny carload of wheat or truckload of apples. Besides the farm youth‘s health and strength, the city gets his intelligence and skills, bought and paid for by farmers in rural schools agross the countryside. The crux of the farmers‘ argument is that if the city is to pay for this young wealth which flows yearly into its streets, i must pay for it in better prices for the other farm products inilk, meat, fruit and vegetables. Rural families continue to supply more than their proporâ€" tionate share of the nation‘s children. Fewer people live on farm:s than in urban centres, but the rural birthrate is higher. And if Canada‘s‘ farm leaders are achieving more and better opportuniâ€" ties for farm youths in their own back yards, still the glitter and promise of the City shine brightly even in the most remote back concession. So it‘s probably that the yearly exodus of thousands {rom the soil will continue. Cities, with their smaller birthrates, would without farmâ€"reared additions; farm parents are often happier to have their children find better opportunities ‘in city jobs. Nevertheless, the same parents voice an argument which may some day be accepted as an economic truth by Canada as a whole: if the city wants a betterâ€"reared, betterâ€"educated young boy or girl from the farm, it will have to pay for it in more favorab)» prices for food. When economists talk of invisible exports they usually mean investments and services purchased in Canada by foreign counâ€" tries. When farmers talk of invisible exports they. are referring to something far more precious and personalâ€"the abilities and characters of many of their own sons and daughters. Towns and cities pay for the food and raw materials they uy from the farms. But, argue farmers and farm leaders, they aon‘t pay for the people. â€" seeime much ue Crganiz mation the Le gilon organizations under the nan entnhnusi bined. nublic and the Empire S 1ln Che Eam Tiben The Borcupine $ TGas Doung ue wal ue ue ue n alaale alealaale aleate ce He makes about the same number of mistakes as most people, believes that if he can be right 50 per cent of the time, that that is pretty good thing. He is young, likes the North, and fully intends to stay. He will do his best on foot, ‘phone and bicycle, to cover Porcupine interests and to bang them out on an Underwood. Although all calls are most gratefully received, and lucraâ€" tive gestures appreciated, The Advance will not accept payâ€" ment for articles appearing in its news columns. na The Advance has taken on a new editor, a stranger. Perâ€" haps it is well that he is not a native. He doesn‘t know everyâ€" thing about everybody. He knows next to nothing about nobody. A strange man in a strange town in a strange provâ€" ince, possibly the gradual result will not be uninteresting. Any work replied Mr. Yutang, which paints something bright and only bright, will laose interest and color and readâ€" ership. "It would not be real. It would not be human. Saints without sins don‘t interest me." HMis friends back al all our faults to Americ It is his best, this writer belie which explained China.to Americ: Book reviews written ofr The Advanc far as possible, be taken from books ava local libraries or dealers. They will also be, as far interest to the Porcupine. This week, the first choi. tance of Living., by Lin Yutan 1a n rC€ pot at the in their O â€"ma War ° it med th lLiinmins where 1 practically no a fit smocthly into n after the amal Six in Canada War Veteran anadian Legi 1t No Greenbacks Allowed little e THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE TiMmimimno T No. 129 The Golden Expert igue the mm poin mbe Timmins Books New Editor hom( 1 Y i large partâ€"in the overall i ‘onomy should hold in relatio country. )1 s in 1 By G,. A. Macdonald LIHt,. W ilthoush Cobait and Tom Mag e each week will as ilable at one of the Mn , a price tag on 1. . Yet the ar more valuable t L # 0..0. w _ #4 #4 w# ## # _ a # C# # C ## *# *na‘sese o *#* w# #Â¥# # ww ## ## ## #4 w # ## #*4 ## # # #4 #4 # '. ar, The Imporâ€" library. D11 it they knev w branch. W first b« iimne. imiinins Oll mmin al mins there Not only the thirtyâ€" he branch, the fact ild be ready it e and mCre from overâ€" l imnimins XpDO Oganized In Timmins. « * between 1| ed h ch I1 them wit! diers who prcven TFeriault inimitabl tin Capt. Magladery, aft introduction, reminded thet after all previous diers had aiways been forgotten, despite the made to them when were threatened. He poor business, as wel gratitude. The Great Association belisved t} pointed out make the b they should of public s While lezsw the full ex treo. _A. _ newlyâ€"organiz the number c Pcrcupine Ca had taken up meeting â€" af mayor of t was not the mzsvor‘s fir meyor s a mark \he gall TI muaniutes A ux There was public at th New Empire Innis, mayc lives in . . t rims the pur; 1 Li eral publicity exter The Advance gave tisement to annow he full explan bjects of the C ut the whole To help the : elp the public isement was si ‘mith, organizin entence in tha vell worth repea ion of the attitu urned men were kc 16 11 ly nece Â¥a C 2y 1, WA ectarl 1€ 71 requl meeting, and | low in the ever ubl 1€ Soldiers { rod he aI int metr the bat best of ild have it MceInnis Presides nized bi A dvanee had 1try n t} upp N € Needi\ CHA up} W it tOv/n, ist by s thought howC Th l TC le1 retu Kouris} id the an life 1¢€ rell it 1€ Support Ww a : ag 1 nef it m h 1C 11 M pD 1i m l itinly The in / South Porcupiners Work @_â€" Hard to Build Church at the sides, bought lumber, cut it and made it int replace old benches, the most assiduous workers beif Wachnuik, Christopher Anderson, Allan Christy and kainen. Eleanor Wachnuik plays the organ which is old to play, and therefore also a plano, a recent gift of t wiic have since moved away. Miss Wachnuik stepped stitute one Sunday morning some yvears arn when spc¢ke briefly. Solos by Miss Hoggarth and James Geils, with H. W. Martin playing the piano accompaniments, added to the interest of the meeting. tute one Sunday morning some years ago when she was a ‘1 of 12, and has been playing at the church ever since. he is very good on church music,‘" asserts Mr. Hunter. Miss Wachnuik has moved to Hamilton, however, and has en replaced by Anita Kopare, a South Porcupine girl, who plays ually well, says Mrs. Hunter, even on the same old organ. W ter THE OLD HOM C TO WN H 1P VV not :n M e # INDIANS 7â€"â€" NOTHIN â€"~â€"= ThH" WwoobpsS IS FLLL 0 THOSE DANG CITY, peer HunTteres T oo * e uies U€ 946 the average Sunday School attendance w 5, deduceéed fro ma 52â€"week year. Hunter arrived in 1946, to succeed Rev. Jot iC Pentecostal church in South Porcupine (25 Golden is an old store building with big windows at the fron‘t. in a block with other stores. It is a selfâ€"contained but rather unsuited for a church, declared Rev. R. J. the minister. Timmin itence 1¢ membe al said, during the summer members of the congregaâ€" ved the big front windows and installed small ones es, bought lumber, cut it and made it into pews, to 1 benches, the most assiduous workers being Nicholas Christopher Anderson, Allan Christy and T. Hartiâ€" d,, fi@ CAOouUgNL,. If mMmMEen urage, their faith, their ‘ir loyalty to the service . A. Macdcnald, chairâ€" rcupine recruiting comâ€" VC 1€ haat: year Jim a 1 nmnmunists > them re PI rty ati Inside Labour ){ empha eturned A 1 t} \1ing morning of the Electrical Radio Murrav had f] lcials nittee were Ww 400,000 electrical rey who wound jug} 1€ uUp baillr nmunis )vernme buro on CIO 1 Cominform by Victor Riesel on w eE #) OoPE. :mis. KTo FRiTORRA HTHIACATE ts WORLB 1J » 23} Growing School room more h a new hipped their ~fear thi Hard Workers T C ie1 pl x MV ed 11 vound it all vil hi rant step vice â€" president; Mrs. Harry Lloyd secretary: Mrs. R. Leclierc, treagurer and Mrs. O. Cote, Mrs, N. Vaillanâ€" court, Mrs. O. Magnan, Mrs, P. Fay Mrs. Leo Dubien, and Miss D. Richer director. 1 JANUAK Y 1€ ucCc ban piay ts holiday smokeâ€"ful on and l "or} Ma Oc pa . And igned convel Machi y Day parade. national conyv When the Am: > Medina durin s were us up for the tv eed Rev. John Spillenaar A¢ JeI nate bill dress it upâ€"to whc pasted on its front noses at American JE officizls drag ar lay parade. When 1 ational conventions, en the Amsrican i1 M r >r ‘Kev ember CIO ‘s of the ind belief to this country‘s dcfcnqe it it out. ommunists will find out have captured only w ench Canadian thi prestige icials 0 By STANLEY ition (Lenin‘s) and ounterâ€"reviolutionâ€" protest ipponed until t«is 1s" as an Austrian lft. And Murray itelub a Hol i1 is 32, in 1949 new her W and hard vo families in to subâ€" she was a since. ro0cratic Farâ€" whoop it up on the Ritz" ipants seated front Apne indictâ€" 1 CIO label an national an Ameriâ€" n the Comâ€" s .elected brinch of Canadian i Cl Crusade nt, â€"And ites here ‘ riï¬ t O m point i1unitions _ demonâ€" 1( n Phil‘s Mar elec e in the ways do. vspapet Late MmMurray talinisits eéerQ ‘or the rushed j Inter