Romance, January 1943

The issue starts out with a couple of pages of poems.

1. Moon Over the Andes: To save her father's life, Kitty consented to marry the man who held her prisoner, with the full knowledge that her courageous act would forever rand her as an adventuress in the eyes of the man she loved.

2. Dangerous Kisses: Heaven could be hers for the taking, and all Starr needed was the courage to share it with another woman's husband.

3. We'll Kiss Again: Peter was the first and only man Leslie had ever loved, and in order to save him for the Air Corps she was willing to pretend she was the kind of a girl any man is glad to forget.

4. With Half My Heart: Stuart's kiss was a dedication of eternal love. Could Dana accept such a pledge wen half her heart roamed the war-torn Pacific skies in search of her lost Jerry?

5. The Bride Carried a Fern: People who live in a speeded-up world sometimes find that yesterday's plans can become tomorrow's heartbreak. So Patty discovered on the eve of her wedding.

6. A Date for Breakfast: Carmen was a short girl with a theme song that said she wanted glamor, her name in bright lights and a millionaire husband. She sang it so often that she had come to believe it. But how could she impress it on a certain persistent marine?

7. Premium-One Heart: Heart Insurance for soldiers seemed like a fine, patriotic service-until Sylvie discovered she was paying the premium.

8. Three on a Honeymoon: A rebound marriage seemed the only way to forget Johnny. But what was Susan to do when he turned up to haunt her honeymoon?

9. Husbands Aren't Exciting: It was a marriage of two people who knew what they wanted, and so they decided to dispense with romance. But how could Ginny go on pretending after she fell in love with her husband?

10.Champagne Interlude: When a girl is on the point of getting a proposal-a forgotten husband is the last thing she wants to see. And that's what happened to Jean when her past caught up with her at five thousand feet.



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