"Y? \\ / \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\‘ Wendy-Was WITH ROMANCE! When love and beauty meet on the threshold of the future, there is no l Wreath Diamond Ring with the only 4-Point Guarantee of perfect color. cut. brilliance and flawless qualityl FREE INSURANCE Hill llllllFS IOOK \ l PlillllllESl NAME Ill If/Zilllli‘! l4 I1 C. W. PATTERSON JEWELLER Great George Street CODKIN BROS. SIJMMERSIDE, r. n. i, Bridal Wreath Diamond ard v . Wedding Rings raTiiiorsi um: m DIAMUNDS They'll Lead The Fight In Burina my. Gen. Albert o. Wedemeydr, right. has been named deputy m" of staff to 10rd Louis Mountbatten, left. Allied commander in south- east Asia, as this command prepares for drive into Burma, ma ciiaawrrrrowrl GUARDIAN c ~--- <-..-¢\>.-.. f‘ All That Glitters B! Frances Parkinson Klyrs . .. The old f i Isabel said. toss- ing Mr. mum letter aside. "Why on earth should I scrimp and save. so that Stephen can have every luxury?" Her annoyance grew steadily worse as her thoughts went round and round in a vicious circle. she had onlv consented to a div- orce. Giles would have taken her away from all this trouble. She thought that perhaps—jlst per- ha e had better telephone G es on Tuesday and tell him that she had changed her mind- In the morning the household was astir with preparations for the wedding. and the shifting limelight played on Oaxidaze now. Her hearty laugh. her resonant voice, rang vibrantly through the house. She was in the highest spirits, and her exuberance ‘s her full-blown an a-rrstingxly handsome bride and her last-m - ute idea oi.’ having Bonnie and zce act as her attendants was a. very happy one. All Candace-s former heaux turned out in full force. Everyone was unaffectcdly happy and hilarious. Isabel thought so much guftawing, so much in crimlnabe was ver vulgar. But nobody cared wha Isabel thought. She was again an alien and an outsider. She went to bed exhausted and dispirited.‘ She decided to caii Giles fiist Until the last she had cherished a. hope hat Qandace mignt invite him to he wedding: but Cadace, when sabel had finally mentioned the matter to her. made a wry face and said she had learned better to throw monkey wrenches into matrimonial works. It appeared $116 was not considering Isabel at all; she was conmdering Zoe. in whose connection she now thousht _ot Giles. So there was nothing ici- Isabel to do but to nflOllL over a public wire what she had pictured herself as whispering in some sec- luded nook. And there were so fow telephones at Hunter's Green, none on her side of the house, she had to wait until the gun room. still bridal feast. had been cleared out. Then she closed the dour. picked up the telephone receiver. and‘ gave the toll operator Giles‘ number. She got no answer on her call. thouvh she waited a long time to get t c private wire in the apartment where Giles was staying. Finally. in desperation. she asked for the number of the hotei, and spoke to the rl at the switchboard. "I've g and trying 1O get Cap- ta Arno d’s apartment. I can't understand why I don't let any answer." "Oh. you mean Admiral Meal-s’ apartment, where Captain Arnold has been staying? I don't lielimc there's anyone there. a JusL saw the girl go out. I guess now that Ca - t n Arnold's gone, she'll ta e things easy for a. wnue. say Captain Three competent Ottawa Royal Canadian Army Cadets are seen . nere busy studying morse code. The boy in the centre is handling the I "but-Z" “Nip the cadet 0Y1 "l! Tightls ready to record the im-rming mos-i IaE-le; Cndets throuzlic:_\t_ Canada are today receiving interesting courses of tms nwluro. Tn addition they learn about; weapons, flcld engineering,’ ma)? leading, military mathematics, field craft and internal combustion‘ engines. (Canadian Army Photo) Top-ranking graduate in his class at No I Service Flying Training Bchooi. Uplands, near Ottawa, J M, E. Coyne of Winnipeg received his . wings from his sister. Flight Officer Sally Coyno, who was a member of i {he first group tn enlist in the R C.A F. Women's Division. Commis- sioned after graduation. Pilot Officer Coyne had led his classes at IrJtlal Training School and Elementary Flying Training School. A graduate of the University of Manitoba. he was a Rhodes Scholar in i940 His bfothfl. LAC JIlmP-i Cflync, also a Rhodes scholar, is just beginning his pilot's course at Uplands. and has also lcd his classes at f. T. S. and ll. l". T. S. They are sons of J. B. Coyne, K. C. and Mn. Ooyne, who were point hr the ceremony. 1 1 "Gone? Did you Arnold had Zone?" "Yes ma'am. He. left on Satur- day. We're forwarding his mail to Cuba. if you'd care to write.’ Mechanically Isabel h receiver. Almost instantly phone rang again. Because sh not yet risen from her chair at the tel hone table Isabel, still acting m anlcally. picked up the re- ceiver again. "East Elizabeth, New Jersey. 15 ci-illin Mrs. Stephen Windsor. I8 she ready to talk?" Isabel heard saying. She was not lk. she was suddenly flil- ed with panic. Bhe had to say yes. she had to sit where sihe was and listen. “Mrs. Windsor? l have bad news for you. But then I warned you- Have you been listening’ to the radio this morning? No? ell, your husband has. and he learned th the market has collo gletely. He's lost everything he rid-including the last remnants of hi rnason. He mfly "V9 5°‘ years. but I'm afraid I can't hold out any hope to you that he ll ever recover." UHAPTEI. XVI! cos C telinn, u y acan a a’ Novemboeroli i934 Dear : 1t does seem good to on buck here e1 our five years’ again ter absence. and everything looks ust aabearutifultomaaaitdldweu I came here as a bride. Now I ho and believe that Alfredo will kept at the Foreign Office for a long time so that we can enloy our wonderful home at our leisure and h th nit. of welcoming ygunantie me not? of the family It seems strange to ihiuk that though I have been married so long, I have never wri en to you from here before. You'd be Btlrprised how many Americans speak to me about C i- tal Kaleidoscope. We keep hear {l8 about it wherever we go. and 1m all puffed up with pride when any- one savs to me. "Robert Morton 1'4 your brother. isn't ne1 or What relaglon exactly is zoo Wins’ to you ' "I would still be satisfied to sit quietly at home in the rden all the tine. but Alfredo hlnks we should mingle with the American olony as much as possible, and of gourae with family and his and the Billio- most. ft nice to keen mcetini! in one country friends mat you hove made in another. The latest and exciting arrival in Meliw If the Christmas holidays. It would Whileenlid. City is Guy Grenville. who is First Secretary at the British Embassy. Tho only rson I of who does not ll law and her attitude has been very cool toward him rroin the beBin- nink. He started dropping in fairly freuuently as soon as he got here, and I thought, the reason she m- senalfd hit “lush legions; Bftlfl wag o I o m i! t e van e o heIr hosfitalim. b as reaze at ytnlstlmeyour plans for the winter must be all made and I know how hard it is for both you and Bob to leave the Bureau. But I am wondering if you could not possibly come here for mean everything to me if you could. My love to both Ronnie and Isabel whenever vou happen to see them. I'm so sorry Iur them both. But then I realize very few women have as manv reasons to be harmv At first the wall: between her Florida Avenue apartment and the French Embassy had seemed very long to Isabel. Her salary was u good one. as secretarial salaries went. but most of it nus consumed by the cost of keeping Stephen at a sanitarlum, and she nad almost no other source of income. so she kept had come to enjoy the walk. The |fresh iiir revived her and gave a irzlow to her cheeks. She looked llovelv when she reached her des- tination. and the knowledze of her heiohiencrl charms was a tonic in itself. And sht- needed a tonic Very much in those day's. 1T0 be Continued) War-—25 Years Ad!) Today (By The Canadian Press) OCT. 22. i918 --Western suburb of Valenciennes occupied by British troops. Canadians advanced south of Condo. Along the Lys canal French and Bcloian forces effect-ed crossing. In the Balkans the Franco-Serbian armies continued their advance to the Adriatic. Gibraltar was seized by the Brit- snow Giw is my mother-in. ‘ no maid. Gradually. however. she in“ Cost 0f Living Index llot Just Figures Alone i II-IAMIIIoOOOI UITAWA. Oct. at the minion O w ‘they'll bell liimanadevioe tcma expense i.ri dictatorial f of living has almost o cost has w a tiilnoethewar and . Balanced the total gain is 18.5 Dfl‘ cent. be higher. with the challenge: "Well. lots war started and dex was establ . rlex con " expense of the Canadian who his recreation in mo g: w gasoline was rationed and tires came unavailable. on the road. So the index was take into account the .1.- llD canned salmon- days So the index makes what importance to items answer" ish in 1704. (Canadian Praia llaff Writer) M-(OH-DMVII I-ureau of Btltia and then states ashion mat the cost no much, wltifin’ very mewifeaigues komwfarmoi-eaincetlu in: aria». til rpun t the cost of living h: run 18.6w‘ but other essential purchases have Shown little rain since the war be- off. the Bureau says, though the food group as such may But all foods but together repre- sent less than 35 par cent of the Sometimes the Bureau is faced conditions have changed since the ti: basis of the in- It answers that the Bureau hasn't nailed slits colors to any cost-of-liv- m ‘for instance. the Can- adlan in his hour or ease. The in the BB-soline andfltiée fl S be- he obviously couldn't be spending as much time to Canadians increased expenses in other forms of transportation and. i.n addition. his recreational experss in rmpect to books and movies which takes the place of the car Therefore. the index value of recreational motor- lnq goes down, and the others go There are some foods which can no longer be bougjht. Bananas and t er6's little DOint including lhem in the index these com- pensations, on the basis of reports shizwtieng what people buy as sub- - u S. If asked how the Bureau decided give various the essential living costs of a family. the Bureau officials "In 1'93’! and i938 the Bureau al- OI 0o ' albino-us- i5 Wonbllio as I have. I'm still sure that ll . fredo is the most wonderful human m)“ c’: uvmg- “cwrdlng 9° Bun“ lhhbh ma" Ym‘ ‘n “'4 h“! being in the wmi and so ‘om as research. Some foo . such as , wasberrunsorhardrubblngbxydolfi I have him and his love nothing bread and muk‘ have ‘how’ “me “uh rich" "1 ‘"35"! WV“ m!" else matters. I hope 1 haven't given ‘WWW l" "m9- Rel" “m! mis" before- Ever! ounce o dim lirelm‘ you the mm. impression ma, I celléncous items. including health ‘M51155 o“; more ‘um an,“ (o, thought it did. 60S m irlaxcgeation, transportation unusuaistainnyourwashoomeaa k- As ever devotedly, a “mmitgalgafvimygingn; 111% qhj“ ‘hm-m; b] ,» e s . Helm‘ Illa-lei? proportion of the family bud- "HW" Hid” ‘Mimi g . O g was And TradcllarkRedste-rad willie vnrnoursirieu iOCIbBlyltm TRY US! Win OX YDOUS SFHUSTI-E-IUBILE’! SUDSI mdua way as so many women do! With 0x doPaW-lustle- SAFE for Colors, Rayons," Tool Tod?’ Oxylol i lid Iran ‘than befoi-‘m-‘Svza at [:00]; liable colors and rayons, mo: mother thing-ls goes much farther than before. A box of Oxydol es much more clothes or dishes: I 129 xmci. USER TEN-S How SAVES CLOTHES IN WARTIME! l“ -~ 6 O ‘r0 made a. study of the living expenses of nearly 1.500 Canadian families Thso families were specially pick- ed as t ical wage-earn‘ em. tiles. e consisted of a usband and wife and one child or more. The average number of people in the family was 4.8 and the average income was $1.458 a. year. "Officials from the bureau ob- tained from these families a care- ful record of their expenditures during the l2 months from October, 1937 to September, i938, It was 0n the basis of these records that the bureau knew hoiv much importance to give to the various kinds of food, clothing, recreation. and all the other things that come into the family budget". ‘Th9 average eiepi-ianfiivea oo YCBYS. NEW BURMA iRflAD ~--\l'my Nurses Bernice Taylor, of Kan, a i Jo $.43- Chinese soldiers. returning m... advance patrol against the laps. pas 1th. aballdolwasitllochiol- .v..;~a.....l....-....~u.-w ~- eifi M N Tracks and l”?! ply bask and forth over a typical aeetlon of the road Cooke, M. Men“ l,‘ mm‘ Allied troops and Inppllea to drive the Japanese oat of Burma. As northern Burma la ' " Illlntliehlghwqwfllhiiatheldbuniaload lhkflllils Along he lower dolls of the f-fonalswas in math-sadism Indio. across the Burmese frontier into Japaneseoccupied territory and down riisaed. Junk-choked WW qn towiaaida flic old Burma Rood moves a new and vital hwiway whldaiatobeotmiollusd-liflfn Chins and a probable invasion route for ilie [Otth-GOIMXIE Allied drive into south-eastern Asia, U. minding-ans the fiohtina which must lootnnpaaig it. ‘the route will page near atrium enemy bases in order to connect with the original Bum; Road. whioh turns norm and our, thioum the anoimtaine iowam chuncllins- The project was begin: lest December. and in apito of torrential raim and other obstacles. it is 1 for different story than 1min the orilmi truck route to Oh w hacked t the lhnd $6: of tho 3i oooliea. Huge bull-flours and other ised equipment now smash 9th alb tn Hila- ' Says Work Ban lie Provided For All In Peaeetime OBANGEVILLE. Ont. Oct. l0- (CPL-Pcnsions minister Macken- zie said tonight thaf “with the full authority of the government" he ac ‘ the proposition that "if. un- der the stresses of war we can cre- ate full employment for our people. we should be equally able to do so in times nf peace." In an address prepared for deliv- pw» "gar: whlcliaoon Always alert against lap attack. two Negro n anI-alhaltlaalha hgiaoslalaiakasq d ovsircomc. perl as potontially one of strucflve and u moat in Canadian or world history.‘ “I do not mean ands andwrwar Intwhan mini-us cigrtioellaiiion of omderl. b0 tempo idly laid off.“ la gold. “That dexvieloplaont oann _ _ avoided but security and full be the iruaran plovment must of the government. . Riuslena use man's nil manufacture alcoholic drfnh. ll. S. Engineers liittle Jungle and has In Building Rugged Lifeline to iililaa‘ . .T RAIN] u" he new Burma :0“ ' out t0 Tokyo. layl Meyer of Tuskegee, fl “w! forward b l: 0d folowing “l6 Nllflt K 91D s ldioraalibaill-l-ll‘ Al