By Lewis Milligan "God is perhaps giving us a sign by which He will take away from us every illusion that we are capable ‘of building a tower here whose pinnacle shall reach io 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 War Veteran Lives «t tP T P A LAAA L ILAAC C AL L BC C â€"AC C C AC ACâ€"AC s A Modern Atlas Eugene Montgomery, junior mechanical draftsman at the Mclityre Mine, fell from an aircraft in England and injured his back. . He has lost the use of both legs permanently. Euâ€" gene is shown here at work in the draf:ing room at Mcintyre where they have built a special table to which he can wheel his chair. 1 Section 8 Pages Junior Chamber of Commerce lt it t P P BCA AC se m on cam i 0 00â€" The Peoples Candidate Board of Trade and Ted Towers »Sponsored by "We ought to give up every thought that the care of the Church, the care of the world, is our care." said Dr. Barth. "Burdened with this thought we could straighten out nothing, we would only increase disorder in the Church and the world still more. For just this is the final root and ground of all human disorder: the dreadful, is regarded as one of the profoundest theologians of modern times, and his message was delivered as a keyâ€"note for the Counrcil‘s discussicn on the present disordered state of the world. Published in Timmins EVERY THURSPAY plan for. the "Shape of Things to Come." Befose he died, he wrote a pessimistic book en itled "Mind at the End cf its Tether," in which he adâ€" mitted,. that . all _his. efforts.. had been in vain, and that so far as the mind of man ecsncerned the problems of the world were insoluable. Wells had left God ou of his panning, Socialism and Sciente were his twin deities. Prof. Harold Laski in one of his books says that it was. the state of things in the world that made him a Socialist â€" it also m a d e him an a‘heist, for he forsook â€" his Jewish faith. Strangely ~enough, it was the disordered state of the world and the imperfecticns ofâ€" mankind that have ‘turned 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 awhility to srasp the "scheme of[ things entire," have humbly subâ€" mitted their lives to the grace and guidance of divine Power and Intelliâ€" gence. There are a great many people in tbhe world today who are worrying, not only akout the present, but chiefly about the future s ate of mankind. H. t%. Wells spent the greater part of his lile condemning the imperfections of the social order, and in drawing up a 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 tlre Gospel to the coal miners at Briâ€" godless ridiculous opinion that man is the Atas who is destined to bear the dome of heaven on his shoulders." Obn*# After being on five missions over enemy territery and seeing a bit of action, Eugene Montâ€" gcimery fell 20 feet from the aircraft and perm anently injured his legs. That was in 1944 after he had been transferred from the Army to the Air Force. He started work at the Mcintyre in June 1947,. He had studied drafting at Timmins High and Vocational School and took added courses at Reâ€"habilitation school. â€" Above are s hown ‘his wife Christine and their nine month old baby. _ Christine is a local girl, "who used to chum around with my sister," as Eugene puts â€" Eugene and Christine attend the hockey matches and visit with their neighbors and live a full happy life. Advance Photos Canade TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9th, 1948 tcl. Wesléey had noâ€" cutâ€"andâ€"dried economic theories; he did not regard men as classes or masses, but as inâ€" dividual souls, and he preached indiâ€" vidual conversion as the first essential to socg.al salvation. For fifty years he travelled, mostly cn horsekack, all over the British Isles and the orderâ€" ly reéforms cof the n‘neteenth century were largely the result of his spiritual inlluence. Lord Shaftsbury â€" was a deeply religious man, and he did more for the advancement of social reform ithan all the irreligious agi ators of his day. C 2e x Wesley knew nothing about Socialâ€" ism. It was not until the year 1830 that the term Socialism was mentioned in Enzland. Robert Owen is said to have been the first Soc‘alist, and he was a vrofessed atheist. Born in Scotand in 1601, he migrated to the United States at the age of 24, where he joined a radical . group â€" of_ ONT:‘ 18100 °* products are desired and purchased by pedple all over the world and the capacity to produce such goods largely determines the economic welfare of every man, woman and child within her borders. Because the sale of every article produced in Ontario brings valuable dollars into this Province, we all are more assured of job security .. . and we and our children can have more of the better things in life. But to produce,.such goods in sufficient quantities, skilled labour is vital. That is why every single one of us should be glad that war veterans are constantly being trained to provide the skilled hands so needed by industry. They receive ON THE JOB training under expert instructors in our Ontario factories. This training, provided through the coâ€"operation of the Department of Veterans‘ Affairs, the eral Department of Labour and the Ontario Department of Educaâ€" tion. starts the veteran on the road to skilled craftsmanship. In assembling business machines, for example, veterans must have a thorough knowledge of clectricity and must learn to perform intricate work on precisien machines having thousands of separate parts. These Canadianâ€"made business machines are sold in all parts of the world, creating new wealth for Canada and Ontario. Thereflore every effort of these newly skilled veterans helps to make Ontario a finer place in which to live and contributes to the welfare and happiness of all her citizens. THE BREWING TINDUSTRY (ONTARIO) which was opposed to reilzgion and adâ€" vocated revolutionary social changes. In his latter days, however, he gave up hope. of establishing a political Utzspia and became a spiritualist. pubâ€" ilshing two bcooks on the subject one of which was entitled, "Footfalls on the Boundary ‘of Another World." Robert Blatchford, one of the most pupular and trenchant Marxian Soâ€" clrlis‘s at the beginning of the preâ€" sent century, was an avowed atheist and materialist, and yet, like Owen, he became an ardent spiritualist in his last days. Heé"abangoned his faith in Socialism as a remedy for the ills of mankind. Robert Owen and Robert Blatchford were sincere men, With x deep sympathy for the workers and a burning des‘re to imvrove their 1lot. But they disscvered that they were no Atlasses and could not carry the world on their shoulders. They also ciscovered that men were immortal Normal, Full Life Published In Timmins, Ont.. Canada â€"*"Tow railway fares ior Christmas and New Year‘s hcliday ‘"travel between all stations in Canada and to certain border poin‘s in the |\United ~States were announced today by J. A. Brass, chairman of the Canaâ€" \dian Passenger Association. Return tickets covering both holiâ€" days will be sold at the regular oneâ€" . way fare plus cneâ€"half with this reâ€" spirits passing through this region of ilimne 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, ridiculbus opinâ€" ion that man in the Atas who is deâ€" stined to bear the, dome of heaven ol his shculders." Shown at the manual controls of his car, Eugene drives back and forth to work from his home 36 Railway Avenue, Schumacher. . His wife bought him the car and the Legion heiped him get the job at the McIntyre. _ The Company offiâ€" cials have tkeen most heipful. . They built a ramp at the side door of the office building so that Eugene could wheel his chair down to his car. for GNTAIMRIO LEARNING MACHINE ASSEMBLY :ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo00000000000000000000. John N. West, 25, of Toronto, a Royal Canadian Navy veteran, is shown here making an adjustment to one of the 10,000 ~parts in a business machine dc-:ignm{ for a New Zealand firm. Various types of business machines are produced in Ontario faeâ€" tories. â€" Because of their inâ€" tricate mechanisms it is esâ€" sential that these machines be checked by expert craftsmen at every stage of their production. MACHINE ASSsSEMBLY U 6 6 6 6 6 6 0 6 408 0 0 6 6 0 0 t 0 06 0 8 00 t 0 4 40 4 4 44 CAN SEE BEHIND THEM ‘ Eyes of rabbits have fields of visâ€" sion which ~ overlap behind their heads. Wi‘h this arrangement they ‘can see an enemy approaching from [the rear, without turning their heads. Special tickets for teachers and students »will be sold at regular oneâ€" way fare plus oneâ€"fourth for the round trip, which these titckets good going from . Wednesday, Dec. 15 up to and includingâ€"noon â€"Saturday â€" ~January â€"~4, and permitting return as late ab Monâ€" day, January 10. duction good going from Tuesday, Deâ€" ceinber 21 to noon Saturday, January 1. inclusive, returning from destinaâ€" tion up to midnight of Monday, Januâ€" ary 3. Single Copyâ€"Five Cents DA 4 L 4A LA > The Pioneer Paper of the Porcupine Established 1912