VVhY not go home for ChTistmM? . . . Perhap* you haven't been there for years. Restful cabins . . . comfortable public rooms . . . marvellous meala . . . and the perfect Cunard Personal Service await you in whichever class you travel on these popular ships. SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SAILINGS /rom MONTREAL on Nm. 24 â€" R.M.S. "AURANIV to Bavn and London. Nov. 37 â€" R.M.S. "ATHENIA" to BcUut, UTcrpool, GUuftow. from HALIFAX on D*e. »-R.M.S. "AUSONU" D«. 15â€" 1LM£. "ASCANIA" to Plymoatb. Havre, London. D«cU-R.M.s. -Lrrmv to Bolfut, LlT«pool, Glaitow, from aUnt John. Dec. M. Passing Marks in School Depends On Pleasing Teacher So a Research Director Ex- plains Why More Boys Than Girls Fail in Ejcaminations Cleveland. â€" More boys than girls, report the statisticians of the Cleve- land Board of Education, invariably "flunk" school courses, but not be- cause boys aren't as bright. Here's the reason William L. Con- nor, research director, grivee: "Boys pester the teacher more, and she consciously or unconsciously takes it out on them in marking." The latest survey of the board of education's bureau of child account- ing bears out similar results obtained three years ago in showing that boys do not excel girls in a single subject, so far as the percentage who keep from "flunking" is concerned. "Boys are as bright as girls," Con- nor maintains. "In fact, boys gener- ally rate higher on tests than do girls. It just goes to show that pass- ing marks in school depend upon pleasing teacher. "The schools are set up in such a way that a premium is placed on con- formity, and girls conform better than boys." Low Round-Trip Fares t^bln Uan from IM6.M Toorlat C3aM . ... .-.from MM Third Oaw •" *• A«k about oor Spedal Chn»tmaa Excumoas. Irom your local a«ent or Irom the neareat Cunard office 717 Bay Stre«t. i Elgin 3471 1 t^rww^ Toronto CUNARD amchor-donald;on Are You WEARY? Do you find it hard to do thing« >ome dayjT Dsvi when body and brain (c»l oppreaaedT Incomplete eliminaUon of body wastM is prob- ably the reaeon. It is moet bkely the reaaon •Ten thoush you are aa regular si can bo in Tour daily babite. becauM regularity is no iuarantee of completeness. FoQow these aim- ^ health rules: Eat moderately, sleep stlfll- oently, get Iota of fresh air and exeroiaeâ€" and once or twice every .eek take a braans. Bparklin* slaas of Andrews Liver Salt. An- drewTwill purify and invigorate your whole „,tep an<r help Nature end tIio« ti«d ^ei^achey" days. Get Andrews Uver Salt from your druggis'- 35c and eOo In tins. 7io for the now, larie bottle. Sole .\geots; John A Huston Co. Ltd.. Toronto. ^ tJMore Turret Fine Cut for the same money â€" and Poker Hands, too! Now we give every man who "rolls his own" more Turret Fine Cut for the same old price I Oa this new deal you'll get still more cigarettes from every paclc- age of Turret Fine Cut â€" you'll actually save money by purchasing this cool and fragraat cigarene tobacco and buying your own cigarette papers. Remember, too â€" you can get 5 large booklets of ^ "Vogue" or "Chantecler" cigarette papers Jree in exchange for one complete set of Poker Hands. It pays to "Roll Your Own" with TURRET FINE CUT CIGARETTE TOBACCO SAVE THE POKER HANDS Duchess of York Eats Seaweetl Portree, Isle of Skye. â€" The Duchess of York ate seaweed one day recently. The occasion was the lunch at the opening of the new hostel at Por- tree, presented by the Earl of Elgin. Every item on the menu, except cof- fee, came from the island of Skye. Snipe cream and a special seaweed mould were the two delicacies Skye lived up to its title of the Misty Isle. But the mist that gath- ered on the mountains did not damp the enthusiasm of the large crowds that awaited the arrival of the royal pair at the hostel. The Duke of York, declaring the hostel open, said: "I have heard that its romance and beauty have earned for this island such titles as the Isle of Mist and Shadows, and the Isle of Glowing Morn. "And now I should like to add an- other â€" the Isle of Kind and Loyal Hearts." Tf^AVa lfiri\C55IOfl5 fAFT Ff1l\E:iO Judging Babies Requires More Than Wisdom New York.â€" As a city magistrate, Benjanun Marvin spends a great deal of time passing judgment upon vari- ous and sundry persons brought befora him, but judging babies â€" that's some- thing entirely different. Asked to serve as a judge in a tr.by contest, the magistrate replied as follows: * f.very baby is the pret- tiest baby in the world to it> mother, and it would require more than the ^ wisdom of a Solomon to select the prettiest child and at the same time please the mothers of the other ba- bies. I'll stick 10 my own job, watch- ing adults who pass before me. It's much easier. Heaven and Earth A wide, rich heaven bangs above rou, but it hangs high; a wide, rough world Is around you, and it lies very tow.â€" Donald J. Mitchell. « ' "Life has commonly more unheroic â- ,han heroic features." â€" Adolf Hitler. WIFE'S DEUGHT AT HUSBAND'S LOSS 30 Pounds of Fat! Here is something all wives of fat men will be glad to know. It is the experience of a woman whose husband recently weighed 230 lbs. She writes: "I really feel I must write and tell you that, after taking Kruschen Salts for nearly 3 months, my husband has got his weight down from 230 lbs. to 200 lbs. This has been achieved by nothing else but Kruschen. I am too heavy also, and 1 started taking Kruschen only three weeks ago. Al- ready I have got down from 153 lbs. to 144 lbs. We are delighted." â€" (Mrs.) C. Kruschen combats the cause of fat by assisting the internal organs to perform their functions properly â€" to throw off each day those waste pro- ducts and poisons which, it allowed to accumulate, will be converted by the body's chemistry into fatty tissue. If Past 45 and ^'Low" and Upset Look for Add Stomadi HERE ARE THE SIGNS: • NenousncM Frequent Headaches : Neuralitia Feeling of Wcakneaa : InUieestlon Sleeplcaaneea ; LoM of Appetite Mouth .Acidity â- Nauwa Sour Stomach ; Auto-lntoilcatlon i 1 WHAT TO DO FOR IT: •<J^sl TAKE â€" 2 teaspoonfuls of Phillips' Milk o< Mag- nesia in a glass of water every morning »hen you get up. Take another tea<ipoonfvjl 30 minutes after eating. And another before you go to bed. ORâ€" Take the new Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets â€" o»t UbUI for each teaspoonful at di- ractcd above. If you have Acid Stomach, dont â- worry about it. Follow the simple directions given above. This small ddsage of Phillips* Milk of Magnesia acts at once to neutralize the acids that cause headache, stomach pains and other distress. Try it. "You'll feci like a new person. But â€" be careful you get REAL, milk of magnesia when you buy â€" genuine PHILLIPS" Milk of ^Iag- nesia. See that the name "PHIL- LIPS'" is on the label. AISO IN TABUT fORM Each tiny tablet is the equivalent of a teaspoonfi:! ol Cieniiine Phillips' Milk of MagfwsU ': Better Protection For the Faunily, Aim Of Chilean Measure Santiago, Chile.â€" It is a 1,'ng time .-ince Congress has been asked to pass a law assured of so much disinterest- ; etl support as that relating to the ' Propiedad Familial'. .\ group of deputies â€" conservatives, liberals and ' radicals alike â€" have presented a spe- cial bill in the chamber amending so- cial legislation with respect to th« family in all classes. If the present family head loses ; his employment, drinks or is put in ; prison, the painful spectacle is pre- ; sente<l of innocent women and child- ! ren rtnluced to the utmost distress i through no fault of their own. The I idea of the bill is to constitute the I family as a legal entity, the effect.* i of which would not be subject to em- ! bargo, as it is under resent 'legisla- ' tion. Under the new law the family head will be compelled to inscribe his home at the national property office. listing his family and home effects. His misbehaviour or ivresponsibilitv, even if it leads to conviction before the law, will not permit any family property to be embargoed nor the home to be broken up to satisfy an award for damages. Where inveterate irresponsiWlity i.< proved the State will be empowere<l to intervene and provide for the main- tenance of the family and the edoioa- tion of the children. A CAiVADIAN IN OPORTO, FOR TUGAL. Portugal. â€" "Europe's Garden by the Sea laid out," to quote a quaint translation from the works of one of Portugal's best romantic poets â€" is a country that is too little known in C.°.nada. Since the days of the Penin- sular War, it has had a treaty with Great Britain and, under the terms of this treaty, Portugal sent 10,000 troops to the Great War. A country â- >' ith a most interesting and- impor- tant history; beautiful in its unique landscapes and in the varied hues of the sea that borders its coasts, it is unspoiled by tourist traffic. In the summer of 1931, I directed the first party that ever left Canada or the United States, to visit Portu- gal. We enteret! the country at the frontier over the Minho River, sep- arating Tuy on the Spanish side from the fortified town of Valenca on the Portuguese side. From here we mo- tored through a primitive country where long homed, cream colored oxen were used to haul all kinds of com- modities â€" stone, wine, cork, produce, etc. Frequently the wheels of the cars were solid sections of trees and the patience of the animals â€" to say I nothing of the bare-footed driver â€" and the cumbersome pace, at which the vehicle moved, was in direct contract to the speed with which we, in Can- ada, are accustomed. We spent the night at Santa Luzia, a promontory above the town of Vian- na do Castello, overlooking the Atlan- tic and a considerable i>ortion of Spain and Portugal â€" a view that many prominent artists have hailed as one of the finest in the world. In the 1/ oming we returned to a lower level by a tortuous, corkscrew-like road and boarded a very comfortable train to Oporto. Oporto, the centre of the port-wine industry and the second city in Por- tugal, is situated ne.ar the mouth of the Douro River, The country here is hilly and Oporto is built on sloping ground, having two headlands, on one of which is located some of the prin- cipal buildings â€" the Bishop's Palace, Cathetlral, etc.â€" while the other head- land is clothed with vineyards. In this latter connection it would be in- teresting to know that Portugal pro- MADK IH CANAO* PKillips' Milk of Magnesia Coins made of an alloy of chromium and nickel, which is non-corrosive, may be tried by at least two foreign Powers. Such coins would be very clean to handle. OLD PEOPLE FEEL YOUNG Just because more vears than vou care to count have tied by on your Kfe's calendar is no reason for feeling old. A^, after all, isn't â- matter of vears. It is â- matter of heedth. Stay vigorous and ytou stay young. But how, YOU ask. Do it the way thousands of people of advancin; years do. Take Wincarnis regularly. Wincarnis is a delicious wine, free from drugs, that briugs you all the valuable elements of grapes combined with the highest grade beef and guaranteed malt extract. Its invigor- ating elTect is alitumt magical â€" yet jMrfectly natural. Thesa valuable elcmeuts in \\ inoarnis giva your ageing aysteni exactly I be ttimuiating nourishment it requires. Tb«y sootlie vour nerves, enrich your bk)od, and flood vour whole body vhb almost youth/ul buoyancy emd visour. Mora than 20,000 medical men have heartily endorsed Wincarnis. It is • great tonk. It will make you feti young again by creating for you new ttores of strength and energy, tiet Wincarnis from vour druggist â€" Sales AgenU: Harold F". Ritchie vVCo. Ltd., Tocoato. 38 â- V. ?fel'"' duces over 211 million gallons of wine in a given year and that most of this trade is in Anglo-Portuguese hands, many of the firms havinsr names like Macdonald, Johnston, and so on. The wine is brought to Oporto â€" the name means "the Port" â€" from the many vdneyards that line the river and it is either conveyed by ox carts or by the equally picturesque littb wine boats â€" each having a single mast and a multicolored square sail â€" the wine being contained in three or four casks amidships. Oporto has c.lso a big trade in fish and is the distributing centre for that commodity to many parts of Europe. On the day. I am about to mention, I was strolling down the river, wendine my way through a market where fis'n women, ox carts, poultry sellers and their customers â€" all of whom were viewing my progress with much g^ood natured curiosity. The harbour, at this point, was full of shipping and I was busy taking pictures of all the different activities. I had just snap- ped one picture, showing the boats, with the huge, steel-arched bridge in the background and some women washing clothes, at the river-bank, in the foreground, when I glanced at a three-masted schooner and was sur- prised and thrilled to read the words "LUNENBURG, NOVA SCOTIA." painted on her stern. I can assure my readers that it didn't take rae long to accertain the ways and means to board that ship and, when I had ac- complished my desire, I found that the crew were do less surprised and pleased to see me than I had been to see their vessel. All were Newfound- landers â€" young husky fellows; the skipper being under 30 years old â€" and they had been in the port for nine- teen days, with a cargo of winter fish, under the hatches. They had crossed the Atlantic, under their own sail, and were a bunch of homesick 'tx)ys. an.\ious to dispose of their cargo and return to their homes. Portuguese sailors, in turn, are often to be seen on the Grand Banks, off Newfound- land â€" it is an international exchange of maritime activities that is not realized by many in this country. I had meant to mention other inci- dent.s, occurring during our visit to Oporto, but these must wait for an- other time. Next week, in view of the tremendous interest in every- thing pertaining to Germany, I shall relate something of my impressiotvs of "Hitlerism," as gathered from visits to Germany in July and .\ugust of this year. When Your Daughter Comes to Womanhood Give Ber Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Most girls in their teens need a tonic and regulator. Give your daughter Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for the next few months. 'leach her how to guard her health at this critical time. When she is a happy, healthy wife and mother she will thank you. Classified Advertising FAKXS WAB TEH. REVE.NUE PRODUCING PROPER- TIES exchanged for equipped farms, preferably clear; good buildings, atocs and equipment, for good Toronto pro- perty showing good returns and cash. Write John Stark & Co.. 331 Eglinton West, Toronto. PATEHTS. A \ i'jFFER I'O EVER? l.NVE.N'TOR. ii. List of wanted Inveut'ona ind full uiiurmatlon sent free. The Bamsay Com- pany, World Patent .\ttornevs. 273 Banl t Street, Ottawa, Canada. Bia SSWIVQ 1U.CSXWE BASOAXHS. Wife Has Right To Keep a Diary Hungarian Court Denies Plea of Husband Who Broke Pledge Not to Read it Hungary's highest court has luieu that a wife has the right to keep a diary and that her thoughts and feelings as e.xpressed in it do not con- stitute grounds for divorce. Two years ago a man of wealth married a I'J-year-old girl of a fam- ily which was ihen prosperous. A iter the couple returned from a honey- moon trip of three months abroad th<.' wife announced that she had kept u diary since meeting her husband. "These are my most secret thoughts," she said. "I have no gir; friend in whom to confide, and be- sides I w ish to keep the diary becausv.- I have literary ambitions. But you must give me your word or honor never to read it." The husband complied. Some time later, leafing through a notebook left on a table, he saw an entry which ar-.^used his suspicion. His wife com- ing home at that moment, he could not read further. Haunted by jeal- ousy, he sent the wife to a watering- place and read the diary. The day before the wedding the girl had -set down her belief that for most women marriage is a renuncia- tion. She wrote that her husband was wealthy and held a good position in society, but that she knew he was not the man for her. Later entries reveaieii that she came to hate him. "We have not one thought or feeling in common,'' she wrote. One notation said that the arrival of children would be "fright- ful,"' as she was sure she would hate the child as she did her husband. Upon her return the husband re- vcjiletl that he had seen the diary an<i said he would insist upon a divorce. The wife refused, saying she had always fulfilled her duties as a wife, that he had given his word of honor not to read the diary and that it did not constitute grounds for a divorce. In the first court the wife's view prevailed. An appeal by the husband resulted in a reversal of the verdict and he was granted a divorce, based on the wife's objection to bearing children. The wife then appealed to the highe.st court and the divorce plea was withdrawn. SINGERS, S16.00, J19.0O, ELECTKIG Singer, $20.00. Fine condition. Norwood. »13.00: Gooderich. $13.00; Xew Ravmoiid. $13.00: New Williams, $12.00: New Howe, $12.00: Standard. $10.00. Also Ravmonds, Williams, Rnyals. Hud- sons, New Home, Whites, Davis, and many others at $7.50 each. All guaran- teed In fine running order. Good sewftrs. Lowest prices in Canada. Send for list. Universal Company, 232S St. James, Montreal. AQSSTTS WANTED. LOCAL REPRE SENTATIV E3 wanted for special Christmas pro- ijusition. E:arn $5 to $10 per day. Spura or full time work; liberal guarantee. Winston Co.. Toronto. Dept. 1. RICH IN VITAMINS ; Gas in the Stomach Gas In the stomach, belching, sour water brash, pain after eating, etc., can be overcome within three minutes if you will taUi. a little Bisurated Mag:ies:a In water after you eat. The ordinary Bi- surated Magnesia which you can get at anv drug store will correct acid stomach and stop acid indigestion Immediately. Try it and see. Woman of Forty Most Likely Accident Victim Chicago. â€" If you're a woman of about 40 years of age wearing high heeled shoes and carrying a shop- per's bundle then you're the most likely person to be victim of a street oar mishap. E. J. Krth, manager of • the acci- dent bureau of the Philadelphia Com- pany, Pittsburgh, gave that as a com- posite picture of street ear accident victims in an address before the 22nd annual Safety Congress. Strangely enough, he sflid, most of the injuries were rot suffered during peak traffic houi-s hut at time? when 20 or less passengers were on the cars. ITICIRA Soap for daily u«. Oinrnipnt to httl >kin initttioDt. Taleuni ideal alter bathinf. Suap 25c. Ointment 2.'>«-. â- nd 5<>c. ralciu) 2jc. Divine grace soraetitnes descends In the form of plain common sense. SKIN RASHES Givt Place to Velvet SnMoth Skins In almost rountJen numbers, skin sufferers have bad cause to be thankful for D.D.D., the prescription of a highly successful physician. Dr. D. I). Dennis. This liquid prescription, now made and endorsed by Campana s Italian Balm chemists, allays irntstion almos'l, at ooce, and quickly clears up such skin troubles as eczem.*, hiven, acne, ring- worm, dandruff, pimples and rashes. Ask your druggist tor D.D.D. Prescnp- tion. Trial size, 35c. Guaranteed to give instant rehef or money refunded, t ISSUE No. 43â€"33 YOUR LIVER'S MAKING YOU FEEL OUT OF SORTS Wake up your Liver Bile â€"No Calomel needed ffh«n yun fe«l blue, depre e» e d . aour on th« ^•orU. that's your Uver wtnrh isn't pouring iu wily two pounds o{ lii;uid bile into your bowels. "- DigeetioD and elimiDation are being eiowcd up, (ood IS acrumulaiiDK and decay^m^ infud* fmi and oiakiag you feel wr^toaed. M«r« bowel-uioven Lilie salts, oil. oiltierml water, laxativ« candy or cheviim cum, ct 'flcughago, don't go far snough. You need a liver stimulanL. Chrt«r*s Littte Liver PiUs is the beet one. Safe. Purely veg* teble. Sur«. Ask (or them by name Ee^uM jtutes. 250. at all dnigst»t* *> END PA\H- Soothe SORE HANDS by Rubbing in iul LLliJMl ^WC OF »UM^| LiT TSBm