iImmediately your capacity for loving â€" and serving them becomes greater. The children and their‘ father, the home itself, are aware o, this extra good will flowing from you to them. They respond with gratitude of their own which is reâ€" flected.. in better health, more thoughtful behavior. You in turn exâ€" perience more gZratitude and wellâ€" being because of these added blessâ€" ings.= See how gratitude works to increase your happiness? Birng thoughtful used to be conâ€" fused with Pollyannishness. Pollyâ€" anfia was the heroine of a generation ago who was always being smugly cheéerful when things went wrong. She, was determinedly grateful beâ€" cause.gvenâ€"worse things weren‘t hapâ€" pening.= Of course, we always adâ€" mire a_chinâ€"up attitude, but just beâ€" ing glad for what you are spared is a mental attituhe and not worth "beans if you want to live genâ€" kick back when you‘re beirig roughâ€" erously and creativiely. Why not ed up a‘ little by life? Save your gratitude, not for negative Thanksâ€" giving, but for positive joy in what you do have. Just returning thanks, especially tho kind of lipservice we give on a full stomac‘h on Thanksgiving day, is only a small part of true gratitude. It is casy to name cur blessing and keep t the same time a "so what" menta‘\ atitude. But the kind of gratitude that works miracles is an cxpanding cemotion. You begin, for example, by being grateful for home and â€"children. _ The need to feel grateful is almost ps urgent {5r mental health as breathâ€" ing is for physical survival Indeed, an upsurge of gratitude is like fillâ€" iNnk . tne bngs with good, sparkling airâ€"â€"! seems to enlarge the whole being. UNION BUS TERMINAL NORTH BAY Anscther thing about gratitude, it is 10.10 a.n. SMITH ELSTON LIMITED Plumbing and Heating Sheet Meta) Air Conditioning Stokers and Oil Burners .__Phone 327 PHONE 10172 11.45 p.m. Daylight Time 5.00 r.m. 1 Cn lace trimmings which have beâ€" brush â€"gently wih a semiâ€"stiff brush. bleach. Rinse thoroughly by shakâ€" ing in a mason jar filled with water, repeating the process several times to make certain all traces of the bleach are removed. Crushed pile fabrics such as velâ€" vets and velveteens can be brought back to their original beauty if you hang them in the bathrcom while the shower is con, or let water flow into th ebowl to create steam. Spots on velvet hats can be erased by holdâ€" ing them to the spout of the teaâ€" kettle while it pours cut seam. When veijils on hats become very limp, remove them and dip in a soluâ€" tion made of one tablespoon of gum arabic dissolved in one cup ¢cf ht water. ‘Let ‘it dissolve completely, for two hours, if necessary. Dip veil in solution, then spread on towel to dry.. Press carefuwly. 1 teaspoon vanila 1 cup pecan halves 2 tablespoons flour Melt butter, add remaining inâ€" gredients and mix well. Drop ‘!; teaâ€" to dry.. Press carefuwly. Silne on garments is difficult to remedy if it comes from excessive? wear. If, however, it comes from poor ironing, hold the fabric about oneâ€"half inch from a steam iron so that the force of the steam peneâ€" trates the fabric. While still damp, come yellowed, use a very mild Apply a steam iron, or use a dam cloth under a regular iron to reconâ€" Cition suede bags which lock shopâ€" worn. While still damp, brush lightly with a soft brush or rubber sponge. Use an emery board on badly worn spots to raise the nap. . Maany a suede shoe has had its ‘locks improved with shoe dye apâ€" plied to the heels andâ€"edge of the sole. This expansive quality of gratiâ€" tude nct only keeps you from missâ€" ing out on the present, but it lrads you to expect more of the futureâ€" and life has a way of rewarding you according to your own evaluation of what you are worth. The person is .so expectant of good, so appreciative of its manifestation in his life, that the flow ¢Continues, unâ€" obstructed by a closed and ungrateâ€" ful mind. This is the age of miracle drugs for bodily ills, so why not protet your chiliren, with this selfâ€" generating aid to mental healthâ€"a grateful spirit? catching. That is because being gratetul enables you "to live in the present, and others, especially your children, can share the présent with you. For if you spend most of your fund of good thinking cn looxking forward to what you hope wil} hapâ€" pen next, or in reliving what happiâ€" ness you‘ve had, you miss the presâ€" ent. And children can »rarely go along with you cn mental excursions to the past or the future, but they is enjoying fixing lunch, or walking can join in heartily wih a mother who to the grocery, or haging clothes on the line. Yes, if you want to live with your children, not just for them;, be grateful for each day with them and enjoy every minute of it. Pral‘ye Cookies (Makes 20 cookies) 3 tablespoons butter 1 cup brown sugar 1 egg, well beaten RECIPE OF THE WEEK Household Hints THE HOME MAKER‘S PAGE by HELEN MALE No. 3098 is cut in Small, Medium, Large and Extra Large sizes. Medium size requires 2% yds. 35â€"in. fabric, is yd. 35â€"in. contrast. : No. 2960 is cut in one size requirâ€" ing only ‘s yd. 835â€"in fabric with s yd. contrast. Send 25¢ for EACH pattern namw. address, style number and size 10 AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Box 22.¢. Madison Square S<zston, Neow York, NY. The Fallâ€"Winter Fashicn Book shows 159 ‘other 513 extra. spoonful of each cookie on a well greased cookie sheet 4 to 5 inches apart. Bake in a moderate (350 deâ€" grees) oven 10 minutes. Let cool for five minutes. Use a wide spatula for looserniing cookies befcre removâ€" ing from pan. Cool on a wire rack. Do not stack. A GARDEN OF ANNUITIES Here‘s an odd but true story. Harry Forbes was a foundry salesâ€" man, working out of New York City, and things were hunkydory. He saved up $10,000 and put it into a business proposition. J‘ust then the golden apple of luck fell in front of him and he piicked it up. He inherâ€" ited $20,000 more. Well, he was sitâ€" ting pretty. _life insurance annuities. wiped out everything he had in the world. That was a pretty hard blow. But at the age of 40 he made a most unusual décision. He decided he would put all the money the could saveâ€"not into a businessâ€"but into He thought this us himself. No salesman got him by the lape! and gave him the ancient mariner look. And so he began planting everyâ€" Then <a panic came along and Y 3088 Apron with Pot Holder P _ _ L_j _ _" 186 AVUVDREY We e{zi’s Pc{{d of Gr,' o Poétry Tomas A. Edison was dismissed from fact most people agree 40,000 tickets a job as a young man for sleeping Could easily be cold to the event. while on duty. Grey Cup talk is everywhere and "How to Win Friends and Influence Peaple" he got back there was a flock of checks. Well, the old gentleman died a little less than two years ago at the age of 86. He always said the reason he was living so long was because he didn‘t have anything to worry about. Scarcely a day passes that some sports page doesn‘t carry an item aâ€" bout the scarcity o.) tickets to the eastâ€"west rugby final at Toronto. Although it has always been difficâ€" ult to snare a couple of the 20,000 pasteboards to tlie Dominiqn’s greatâ€" est fall sport shown through the count has made it even more so. In He liked to go flyâ€"fishing and he the matter with the Leafs" cry that went. Upon returning home, ‘there.will pop up whem they hit a slump, would be that lovely flock of checks. hey I¢ok like better than evenâ€"money ‘Heveven went on ‘an owl hunt, for bets to take the honors again.‘ Heseven went on ‘an owl hunt, for he ‘was fasjinated by owls. When he got back there was a flock of checks, At the age of 60 he began to enjoy his check shower. He had read about Grenfel and his work in Labradotr smothered‘ country. He went there. and he wanted to see that wild, snowâ€" hifed a dogsled team andâ€"a guide and crossed it from one end to the cther. At last, having seen the coupâ€" try that had intrigued him, he came back to New Yorkâ€"anrd there a whole flock of checks were smiling up at him. At the age of 60 he stopped work. He had put 20 years of his moneyâ€" earning life into an,idea. But it paid off. He had arranged so that a check would reac him <every day! That is exactly what I meanâ€"a check every working day of the year. Some were small, some were healthy. But every morning, when the postman knocked once, there would be a check. en o Eve1 ybody sald he was foolish. But be had an idea and he stuck to it like a cocklebur on a Missouri mule‘s tail. But he took a‘ strande angle He paid for a lot of smalli annuities with dlfferent wmpames And so he began planting everyâ€" thing he could into the annuity garâ€" den. He was earning money at his old trade â€" foundry salesman. He did ‘fairly well at he kept planting. But at the age of 40 he made a most unusual décision. He decided he would put all the money the could saveâ€"not into a businessâ€"but into life insurance annuities. He thought this us himself. No salesman got him by the lape! and gave him the ancient mariner look. THE OLD HOME TOWN VE n e DpaANG THESE scRiRBLERSâ€" \\a : 1 Ts 1 CANT MAKE OLUT hanp RATTED AGNES PooFLE IS ENGAGED / Fopry aJINE CENT AGAIN O.Mm .Em.ï¬ ENRAGED )\ FouNTAIN PENS. e | es â€"?? 3 THEY SPuuTTERrore Miscellaneous ~Leafs ~most powerful opponent is over confidence. If they can lick that and also overlook the ‘"What‘s the matter with the Leafs" cry that RepBereqd UV § Rsren: Oftice from being snowed under by rubber. The last two positions=~ seem like the biggest tossâ€"up. New York Rangâ€" ers and Bo:ton have little to establith themselves as threats and likely will battle it out for those two spots out of the playofifs. There‘s little to back up this guess but Hawks possibly could move into fcurth place through the work of Brimsek. It ail depends on whether the club‘s shaky defence tightens up and whether the speedy start to backâ€"check and keep Brimsek from being snowed under by rubber. Montreal Canadians‘ chances took an upswirg when they persuaded starâ€" ry Elmer Lach not to rctire and they svill have one of the best scoring forâ€" ward; in Maurice (Rocket) Richard so the club could slide into third pesition. Detroit Wings, although they gained little with the acquisition of the three Bruins and lost their best defenceman, once again appear slated Tor runnerâ€" up :pot. They seem to have sufficient player strength to outclass every other club with the possiblem exception of Toronto. They traded three players on their Pittsburg farm club for Bob Solinger, a min?>r league who promices soon to gain major league class. Chigago Black Hawks also have benefitted with tne acquisition of Frank Brimâ€" sek, the goalâ€"tending wizard from Boston. But Chicago is generaily weak in other spots. Boston Left Short Borton, in turn, has lost strength with the departure of Brimsek. They gained a topâ€"noch defenceman in Bill @uzrckenbush from Detroit but gave three players, Clare Martin, Pete Babâ€" ando and Jim Peters, in return, Then. too, they lost a rugged rearguard through the retirement of Johnny Crawford. Four o. the N, H. L. elubs, including including Toronto, were involvedâ€" in player trades during the offâ€" â€"season and again the Leafs benifited. That team at this time appears to be again the Stanley Cup champions, Toronto Maple Leafs, who have more standardâ€"grade major learâ€" gue players and fewer individual star; thin any other club. But the Leats had taken the trophy in the two previous seasons in much the same manner. Their depth in players had prevented them from beâ€" coming too crippled .or the individual player tco overâ€"worked. Now that That the schedule has been stretched to 70 games it emphasizes even more the nead for a team to have player depth:. They were lucky in that they drew the baclyâ€"bruised Bost;n Bruins in the‘r half of the semiâ€"finals and then took on the battered Detroit Red Wiâ€" ng; in the finals after the Wings‘ bruising scties with Montreal Canadâ€" iens. The Leafs were said to be lucky last season when, a ter finishing fouâ€" they weout on to take the cup. st:ndintgs in the National Hokey Leâ€" cgue are‘ indicating thit the team with reserves in depth will te the cne. to beat. ‘ _Specially written for the * Porcupire Advance By WALLY IZAK The :season is young with a long t‘me t3 grow ut already the cramped By Twentyâ€"five years is a long time tut Clarence (Hap) Day, coach of the Stan ley Cup championship Torgnto Maple Leafs, Celebrated a quarterâ€"century of ccontinuous stay in the National Hockey League last Nov. 13. Each junion in the final gets 30 per cent of the printed tickets. The losing union in the east gets 10 per cent while the resnaininz 30 perâ€"cent goes on genâ€" eral sale in Toronto after‘the finalists are decitled, _ _ The C. R. U., badgers and battered about for three years by .ans because they couldm‘t get tickets, this years deftly threw the matter of distnibution into lccal union hand:. This year‘s event was set for Varsity Stadium long sgo. But nothing has been d . ne about theâ€" 1950 final as yet so there is plenty o time fom Canadâ€" i@n Rugby Union moguls to think gâ€" bout gettinz a larger stadium. And since the Union con titutison stipulates the firal must be held in Toronto, it probatly will:remain there. anyone close enouzh to Toronto to travel the disiance without much inâ€" ecnvenience would be only tso glad to ~natth up a pasir of tisckets, But chances are smallâ€"exceedingly soâ€" â€"and cverycne agree s mething must be aone about it :oan. J And just how many Westerners can afford the time and expense to travel to Toronto for the one match? â€" A lenâ€" ient guess would probably be between 500 and 2,0C0, That leaves 4,000 tickets that could have besn allotted to eastâ€" ern fans who could easily get to Toronâ€" This, at first glance, scems like a gcod solution. â€" But let‘s see now. Since one o0° the finalist unions is in the west it gets 30 per cent and 30 per cent of 20,000 tickets is 6,000. That‘s 6,000 tickets Western Canadians can buy to a football game in Toronto. But there‘s a larger field in Toronto even n.w â€"â€"the Canidian Exhibition sports field â€"which holds some 22,000 fans and can easily be expanded to hold 35,000. . The fileld thoere, however, isn‘t as suited to rugby as Varsity Staduim and the paying qurface itscH is a bit too .ar away from the ‘stands for spectators comfort. Varsity, viewing the present sellâ€"out crowds of some 20,000 for most league games, intends to hang on to the Grey Cup claâ€"sic,. By next fall officials hope to have added. almost 10,000 more seats with the building extension of bleachâ€" oooooooooooooobooooooooo"""",, ‘_@ YOU‘LL FIND YOUR LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE HERE The quietâ€"spoken Day broke in with Recipes aAc3 in Milking Herds. S _ Hos /?/ Turkeys â€" D _ Chickens "We Deliver" 337 Phone 337 ~CARR‘S FLOUR FEEDS ’(BALAN_CI-'D FEED PRODUCES Branch Office, 24D Third Ave., Timmins, Ont. F. A Robinson,, CL.U., Branch Manager Representatives: _._K. Chomko, Bernice K. Kaye. M. J. Cybulski, M. M. McHugh, J. E. Sullivan; S. E Lefebre, Ansonville; E. R. Anderson Kapuskasing: C. O. McLean, Matheson, Do you realize Life Insurance is your easiest way of . â€" ~â€" _saving money? P â€"<P~ 4@ _ 4O @4 4 4 CS â€"G C _4 â€"G P â€"Gâ€"AP 44 O ~â€"O~â€"P P + PRODUCES . . . | 15 Commercial Ave. Many business women have found, after taking out a Mutual Life of Canada policy, that they have adopted the one sure way for them to save money successfully. Consult our local repreâ€" ~ sentative. He will show you a policy or ' plan that will suit your needs exactly. . Toronto in 1924 and :tayed there until 1936 whoea he was traded to New York _ Ame:icans. Ater a year wilh the _ Americans he became a lineman in the league and in 1941 became‘ comch of ~ the Loe:fs, cu:ceeding Dick Irvin who mowved to the Montreal C nadilans. In the eight years he‘s coached Tcronto he has pilotedl the Leats to five Stanley Cup titles. That‘s a great record for a great h>ckey coach. Our city has the advantage of posses.ing a well organized public lisâ€" rary and its shelve; are constantly getting richer through the acquisition of subscribers . . During the coming long winter evenings, n:tthing will bo more agreéeable than to while asway the hour;s in the companionship of a few go>d authors. ° The farther north a bird summers the farther south it will winter. HEAD OFFICE WATERLOO, ONT. _ Phone 1876â€"M 126 Toke St. Timmins Tobey‘s _ CARPENTER SHOP A LOCAL TREASURY Minor Alterations Counters, Shelves Bookcases and Built In Cupboards e e o # # 9 9 9 0# 0 00 4 wb For â€"Arvida (Que.) LeLingot ONTARIO