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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1929. 2 RUTH DEWEY GROVES © 1929 By NEA Service; Inc. who was wrong; it was she. Connle always told her she had ne snap. “Oh, bother!” Pamela exclaimed when Mildred told her someone wanted to speak to her on the tele- phone. “Tell thamn to go fry ice.” She danced on until the music stopped. Then she skipped away. Pamela never walked except on the street. “Let's have a dance” Stephen said to Mildred. “Go ahead, boys, gite us a good number.” Mildred protested that she didn't teel like dancing, but when the music began to whine and coax and | Stephen came over to take her in his arms she suddenly wanted very much to dance with him. “Hung up,” a petulant cried, and, suddenly, “Oh!" Stephen and Mildred danced a voice few steps. Then the music stopped abruptly. Mildred looked over at | the musicians and saw that Pamela | was there saying something to the {leader. Shs moved out of Stephen's whirled toward them. vou mind going to the door s Lawrence” she sail Someone might slip in.” “I'll trundle along.” Stephen sail Kly to cover the awkwardne +hat hung about them. “Got a busy | dav tomorrow.” His glance was for | it not see it. She had away with her chin in the came over and hung on arm. “Don’t go.” she coax- “"There won't be anyone here for nother hour.” “T have to write a letter to Santa 15, Stephen laughed 1 stopped with Miss Lawrence la challenged outright. “I dare say we'll have amother,” Stephen retorted, but who shall say because vour " Pa- self but he felt it. “Well, I really do want to talk to you about a new car,” Pamela urged. “I think I've burned out the bearings. “Already?" “And Tve smashed a headlight and there's a hole in the body and the brakes are going and a couple of springs are broken and . . ." “What did you do? Try to shove a locomotive off the tracks? You women drivers . . ." “Have lunch with me tomorrow,” Pamela broke in. “And bring all the pictures of your latest models. Cars, I mean.” Stephen agreed. He could ask Mildred to lunch with him another time. He hadn't sold a car In a long while. Maybe Miss Judson was serions about wanting a new model. | 014 D. A. M. was getting nippity of late. Criticizing too. Claimed | Stephen wasted too much time out. side. Stephen said he had to build up his prospects. Of eourse it cost him a lot of money, but Stephen believed his social efforts would pay eventually. On the | night to Mildred and reminded her |again that he would gee her in the Imorning. &he understood that he neant in regard to some work but a gladsome little voice hinted that | he undoubtedly would repeat his linvitation to lunch with him. idently Pamela had not capti- vated him. Tt spunked Mildred up to know that Pamela hadn't utterly | eclipsed her. way out he said good} | Pamela turned to her gloatingly when Stephen was gone, “Isn't he ust the grandest thing a girl could wish for?" she said and did a whirling dance step or two. “I've | Leen trying all winter to make him | hut he's never where you expeet | [him to be." Suddenly she stopped | and grew serfous. “Where did you meet him?" cluded her recital of the fur theft “Oh, by the way, make a memoran- dum for me, will you please? 1 want to telephone to Bengay's In the morning about that Louisebou- langer model they were showing me this afternoon. Need a new dress tomorrow. Special event.” She paused and looked sharply at Mildred. “Lunching with your hero,” she said, and laughed. (TO BE CONTINUED) s DPOCTOR DEGREE Cracow, Poland March 27, (®— Sister Mary Fujanka, American Pole of the Felician Order, has ob- tained a doctor degree in natural sciences at the Cracow University. She is the first nun to win such a degree in any Polish school. Sister Mary will return to the United States to teach. NUN W READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS HAVECOLOR I CHEEKS 1f your skin is yellow—complex- jon pallid—tongue coated—appetite poor—you have a bad taste in your mouth—a lazy. no-good feeling—you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a substitute for calomel—were prepar- ed by Dr. Edwards after 20 years of study. Olive Tablets are a purely vege- table compound mixed with olive oil. Know them by their olive color. To have a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a teeling of buoy- ney like childhood days you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel— yet have no dangerous after effecta. They start the bile and overcome Pamela was showing Stephe n the latest in dance contortions constipation. Take nightly and note the pleasing res Millions of hoxes sold yearly 5e, 30c, 60c. Al Mildred saw no reason for not telling her the story “Well, isn't that romantic?" Pa- mela drawled when Mildred con- | that he was angry? To have a girl 4 be- | like Pamela interfering in his af- | fairs was nothing to shrivel his | pride. He did not say this to him- WILLIAM PANKONIN is proprictor of the Shuttle Meadow Meat Market, which carries not only [resh meats and fish but a full line of standard groceries at 106 Shuttle Meadow Ave. She needs the car too... We are extra careful in waiting on the chil- dren sent to our store. These boys and girls of today are going to be the family providers and the housewives of tomorrow. Now, I have noticed that when a child asks for Bond Bread, he or she knows what Bond Bread is. Offer the average child of a Bond Bread home any other loaf and that child will tell you that it’s Bond that's wanted and nothing else. It's surprising how quickly they say: “It’s the one in the green and white wrapper that looks like money.” : When a strange child comes in and asks merely for a loaf of bread, we send that child home with Bond. We expect Mother will be in later. She does come in, too, this new customer, and I believe it’s the goodness of that Bond loaf that brings her. I recommend Bond Bread for children. There’s no doubt about the purity of the ingredients used and children like it. They thrive on it. When you send food like Bond into the homes of your customers you certainly get satisfaction out of your business. W’ILL[A(?;;:"A};TKONIN After all— there is no bread like Bond AID a woman who lives in a suburb: “I look forward to week-ends, just as much as my husband does. But when Saturday comes, I send him off in the car for golf or fishing or something else that he likes. He thinks that I've been enjoying the car the other days of the week— but have 1? “My weekday use of the car is just like the use of any other tool of home-keeping. It’s all business. In the morn- ing [ take my husband to work and meet him at night. In between I haye to take the children to school, bring them home, go tomarket, go on the endless errands that it takes to run a home efficiently. The Business Woman finds a new answer to her oldest hygienic problem R e 304 “But the fun of sitting behind a wheel and saying to myself: ‘Now I’'m going to take a drive for the joy of driv- ing—to rest my nerves and smell the country® . .. that’s what I'd like to do on Saturday.” Though the automobile has become a necessity of mod- ern life, it is still a luxury in the best sense of the word. There is a thrill in driving for pleasure alone—in going just where you want to go—that nothing else quite equals. 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