Radio mirror (Nov 1936-Apr 1937)

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RADIO M IRROR our... a lovelier way to avoid offend inq! KEEP5*^to^ DA|NTY ...BATHE WITH THIS LOVELY PERFUMED SOAP! YOU are so much more than just sweet and clean, when you bathe with Cashmere Bouquet! For while its rich, deep-cleansing lather guards you completely from any chance of body odor ... its exquisite, flower-like perfume keeps you alluringly fragrant. Hours after you step from your bath Cashmere Bouquet's flower-like scent still clings glamorously about you . . . because it has the lingering quality found only in rare and costly perfumes! No wonder fastidious women all over America now bathe only with Cashmere Bouquet . . . the perfumed soap that brings you a lovelier way to avoid offending! Use this pure, creamy-white soap for your complexion, too. Its generous lather is so gentle and caressing. Yet it removes every bit of dirt and cosmetics; makes your skin alluringly clear and smooth. And now Cashmere Bouquet Soap costs only 10^ a cake! The same long-lasting soap which has always been 25^. Exactly the same size cake, scented with the same delicate blend of 17 exquisite perfumes. You will find this lovely Cashmere Bouquet at all drug, department and tencent stores. Why not get three cakes today ? NOW ONLY ICK-THE FORMER 2£4 SIZE lived. At least it was until six o'clock. She'd returned from a walk up to Fortysecond Street and had come into the lobby of her hotel, hot and dispirited. The clerk behind the desk smiled as she walked over to get her key. "Some calls for you, Miss Holmes," he said. "Man named Miller been trying to reach you for the last hour." "Miller?" Gwen repeated the name as though she were pronouncing a word in some foreign tongue. "Did he — did he leave any number?" "I'll see," the clerk began to answer when a hand fell on Gwen's shoulder. "Gwen — Miss Holmes!" Gwen turned. It was Bob! He'd come. Never would anyone look as good to her again. He was smiling that same smile she had dreamed about practically_ every night for two weeks, and under his arm was a long box, an unmistakable box. He had brought flowers! "Hello," she managed to say. "I've got great news," Bob said. "Come over here where I can tell you." Linking his arm in hers, he hurried to a deserted corner of the lobby. "What are you doing tonight? Got a date?" As though he didn't know! She said, "Nothing. Why?" He answered, "Why I thought perhaps we could go out tonight — see some of the hot spots you've read about." "I'll have to consult my date book," Gwen said, laughing for the sheer joy of having someone to talk with. BOB grinned. "Swell. I'll pick you up at seven-thirty. We'll have dinner first. Oh — here. These are for you." He slid the long box under her arm. "But the news you had?" Gwen said. "Tell you later." Gwen watched him go, a warm glow inside her. Bob was only fifteen minutes late. And the way he was looking, in his top hat and tails, he could have been twice as late. They had dinner — the best dinner Gwen had ever had — in a quiet, richly subdued restaurant in the West Fifties. It was nearly eleven when they left, stepped into a cab and set out for the Stork Club. Bob kept pointing out people of Hollywood and stage fame. Big names. Names Gwen only read in the Sunday edition of the local paper. Next it was the Hollywood Cafe, and Benny Fields, the singing master of ceremonies, with Benny Goodman's band. Instinctively Gwen swayed to the insistent throbbing of the music. She danced with Bob, danced again and again. Fields was singing the newest song sensation, "Here's Love in Your Eye," and Bob was holding her close. She felt his lips brush her cheek. She closed her eyes. Now she knew why heroines in stories wished certain moments could go on forever. Back at the table, Bob suddenly said, "Very nice — in fact, very lovely." "What?" Gwen asked. "Your eyes," Bob said. "And your mouth," he went on, as though making a brand new discovery. "And your nose is in the right place. Your hair — say, do you realize you're a darn beautiful girl?" He held her hand. He was saying more. "I think now's the time to spring the big news." "What news?" Gwen said dreamily. "You don't seem very anxious to hear," he said a little petulantly. "I've got a job for you." At that, Gwen did sit up. "Work, real work?" she asked doubtfully. Bob nodded his head. "And what work!" he exclaimed. "I've signed you to 60