All-Story Love March, 1943

This pulp, as some others in this series, has an odd ad in it for a pulp that's aimed at women. Right after the table of contents, there's an ad featuring Charles Atlas about “how to make your body bring you fame...instead of shame.” Two pages later, there's an ad (showing a male figure) about how to become a foreman.

1. Always Marry an Orphan: “That was what Chad thought every man should do after he tried to plan a honeymoon with the girl he loved and found he would have to share it will all of her zany family.”

2. Double Trouble: “Falling in love with Brans was like a story come true-until Juliet realized it was the tale of Red Riding Hood and the wolf.”

3. Rich Man's Darling: “Grandy was an eighty-three year old Cupid, bet maybe it takes eighty-three years of living to make a man as smart as he was.”

4. Kiss and Run Away: “It didn't solve Ginny's problem to be footloose, as long as Bret held her heart.”

5. Love and Learn: “Julie learned what happens to a girl's heart when the boy next door dons a uniform, and says good-by in the moonlight.”

6. The Bride's Last Fling: “Three golden days and moon bright nights cost Laura one bridegroom-but rewarded her with another.”

7. Enemy Husband- part 3. Because she plotted to escape from the Japanese island of Osako, Ruth Caxton fell into the hands of the native military police. Could she escape paying the price her German fiance expected, when he was the only person who could rescue her from the inhuman treatment of her Japanese captors?”

There are also some scattered poems and other ads. There are also a few ads using a war-related theme.



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