{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, October 08, 1937, Page 18, Image 18', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-18/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-18.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-18/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-18/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
ge ne r ng e i ie e g e oe o a ne ar ge --a ge -~ Forced by the depression to give up fashionable fining), debutante, 19, and her two sis- ters face the necessity of earning their li CLAIRE, eldest, turns to cards for 22mm with Captain de Freyn, whom Ann distrusts BERNICE, blonde, 21, accepts a position as cock- he advice of Freddy. Anne while seek- ing work in a department store by quick wit adjusts a customer's complaint as she meets PAUL BRADLEY, vital, young executive who em- ' ploys her in the store. CHAPTER v RENDA SELZ, the dark, good-looking buyer in the gift shop, had been in love with Paul Bradley for a number of years. Not that he encouraged her. Her invita- tions to intimate.little dinners in her apart- ment had been politely but firmly declined by him. Definitely, he did not believe in mixing business with social relations, in so far as the latter could be avoided, and most certainly never with the \ women executives and employees in the store. - But Brenda was the aggressive, go-get-it type, and at 28 years of age she knew what she wanted. with Paul Bradley over a long period had drawn them closer - together, she considered. In a great store, everyone working there knows everyone else's busi- mess, by a kind of grapevine tele- h. The very walls have ears. ing in the mighty power of suggestion, Brenda was not averse to subtly letting it be known that one of those days, there might be an interesting announcement con- cerning herself and the handsome merchandise-manager. On this morning of late October, when shessaw him step out of the elevator to the main floor with « smartly attired young girl who t well have sat for a picture ' entitled: \The Promise of Spring,\ her face clouded. For the merchandise-manager looked gay, attentive. Shaken out New York ANN toelihood in tail hostess Innumerable conferences of his protective armour as the burst of a bulb in April sunshine, or chrysalis into butterfly, or what have you? He came directly towards Bren- da with the young girl. \This is Miss Ann Delafield who has joined us as a comparison- Selz. We must I rely on shopper, prove her originality. you to give her pointers.\ voice, thought Brenda, had a lilt- ing quality as he turned his hand- some gaze on the new arrival Assuming false sweetness, Bren- da murmured that she would be delighted. By _ ««- May Christie in the V, F. W. clubhouse at North | | Register or you can't vote. Pr ”Rh-w: crumb-4mm sonal registration in villages It seerned to say: e c encountered area Ts at a mama-mrmaum.m adversary!\ though Guzman-m?“- Skunk and black fox Sre popu- smv‘“..§.'.\._\“', morrow President in «anincorporated - before alter lar trimmings for coats and suits lages of less Mbu't- mfifi,nm conduct the session this fall. ninetltms'mm that counted <in mm =~) Th N added tartly: L am practically at the --- n‘l'lAAnn. her he By HELEN ROWLAND \We call it a girl HEARTACHES AND HEADACHES The average girl's fate is usually fore-ordained from lollipops to kisses and foregivencss. Wom at her birth by the type of man she fancies and 25° 1001s that way! falls for. Some of the most brilliant and attractive ; ; uth, There is something about these spoiled darli moods women I have known have never -these careless, irrespressible, lrreSslnble dyaxfi: - ten f : (fit 5 1m but clam -call it magnetism, personality, charm or whatey age, “Mm” you “Rein-tat xlnaius evgrabody and “bow“ beca were else seem flat, colorless and me beside them. T! n with a taste and partiality woman who has loved one of them may E13‘s? hi for the wrong sort of men-play- j i or divorce him; she may even recover from h boys, weaklings or L‘Z‘h‘m\ infatuation for him and fall in love and mar again. But no other man ever goes to her head makes the world go 'round for her, like that. step with this one!\ \I'm delighted to begin at the fille,\ bottom, and I'm very grateful to|crystal plaque two inches square, Mr. Bradley,\ said Ann. united to three rows of gaily-col- ov lh-: 12:1 his ored metal beads. = ould 's cre- \$'pose I t to take them to ative policy, his brains and| Miss Selz in gift shop, since power that are responsible for the| Mr. Bradley introduced me success of the organization. But| there?\ thought Ann, a little cha- don't get away with the idea that grined. ~> But the most dangerous type of man to women is not one of these. He is the unintentional woman-charmer-the man with the magnetic personality and the Great Big Heart, for whom ALL You know how it is. Once a man has acquin a taste for cocktails and champagne, he may cut out and stick to buttermilk and ginger ale for t! he's easy to please, for he isn't.| Or she could take them to him (To be continued) women seem to fall, whether he rest of his life. But somewhere deep down in t And don't tor a minute think that direct? Hadn't he said so during PLANS FALL DANCE wants them to or not. He JUSt Helen Rowland fi‘gfil’r‘l‘ztgft’fil etn ih \the, suppresse you can vamp him, and get ahead |their brief but satisfactory inter- can't help it! And his heart is so even the headach i \ us, light-hearted days on your looks. Just because he's |view in his office? ROOMY that he can't refuse any woman ad- gor a qizy runaround puo hos, NHPC filial—\nu a chance doesn't \Dipl‘xzmgq is needed, young Freeport Girl's Club To Hold mittance. Chatines maa y nfgmremzzroga? its; r: ZOZP‘Azznfi v woman: Ann Iternly told herself. Affair Tomerrew poignant memory of his kisses and a sigh for t! I had a letter of introduction => <i> == A large aitendance is expected I have met this type of man so often in life but | old heartaches. At least, they were exciting. Nev - y at a fall dance at the Freeport |I never met him in fiction until I met Peter Madi- | a dull moment! fiwtxugmerseafmshu ‘lltolmfbpem a second filmy“): the hand-| Elks club, tomorrow night, under gan, the hero of \Candies in the Wind,\ William C. » - s o me merc lise - uspices of the M. M. Girls' club |Lengel's latest novel. All women were \candles There is something appealing about to go to boarding-school in Paris| wouldn't it be better policy to gr the Church of the Transfigur- |in the wind\ to Peter-and the wind always blew man, which pulls at fvefypwwfminiflrlrlf..xe?§z1Sf?“ $1!th 02: x “his {gadgufhmwmt ta: piny’up to the buyer of the gift ation lanreeport and the Twenty- his way. strings and makes her feel that he needs to ) J shop? five club of Merrick. \taken care of\-and that sh vas especial of fact I was engaged to work| But Brenda Selz had gone to Just one of these born heart-breakers-these \IT- dained by heaven to \save if”: \x51“??? [filling here Iw1lhout even presenting it. lunch, she was informed. men,\ with the magnetic way and the tender man- women: Oh well, go ahead and \save him.\ if ye This was a natural but scarce-| It was then that Ann realized ner, can do more damage in the world ~f women, can-but don't try to save him for YOURSEL from Mr. Thomas F. Barclay, one CH as she would have loved Mrs. Edward Kohout heads the committee in charge, assisted by Mrs. Hubert Wells, Miss Elsie ly tactful speech, considering the|that she herself was healthily Becker, Mrs. Ralph Golden, Mrs. without meaning to, than all the \villains.\ He Because he was born to ev j person to whom it was addressed hungry. On being told there was Melvin Dunham, Mrs. Joseph begins in his cradle, by vamping his nurse and later -but NO woman“)rgusbuilifl‘ryn‘x‘smsg:ri $1112? had had the larger part of her|a restaurant at the top of the Eicher and Mrs. Frank Aldred. his school-teachers, and gets everything he wants, home-it's a hotel. education in the teeming side- walks of the Ghetto, before Brenda said sharply: \We drake “e Mme don't play favorites, Miss Dela- Old Home Town DUCK. - WHEN SARAH STARTS CHEWING HER LEAD PENCIL SHES ABOUT TD TAKE UP a CoLLEcrion! YOU'LL EXCUSE ME [. SURPERS AH-- NOW, LILLI. T HAVE ~HOW NIZE OF f You To INVITE SUPPERZ WHEN I FINISH 1 with HiM,His FACE*LL BE 50 CHANGED THAT HE WONT KNOW Where TO PUT HIs wHar Ever )T is- iL HAVE To TME CHAIRS FoR VTB AUNT SARA} PEABODY, TRAE DYNAMIC CRGANIZER 1S GETTNG READY To START HER FALL AND WINTER SOCIAL DOMN&zs nke.--- ne # By Lee Falk & Ray Moore m M The Phantom UR L 'B VP MB Coe. Fog Pave brstves he, Natl ote nere Inspector 'ade Asmone sux rope setween ms HANDS ASSM, tue Assassin, waurs!