feel that I had really come alive. This arrangement worked marvelously as I was idealy happy and contented while June was free of domestic ties and able to devote her thoughts to the semi-social side of her business life in which having an ordinary husband to consider would have been to say the least of it, a severe handicap.
Now we are in yet another part of the country and live in a rural circumstance in a large house among magnigicent scenery. I have my own apartment on the top floor consisting of what June calls the play girl's pad, plus a dressing room with rails for all my gowns and the sort of makeup table even Liz Taylor would'nt mind using. We call the apartment Ma Folie (My Ext- ravagance) and I guess that name just about wraps the whole affair up.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Never before have we had the plea- sure of a fiance's or wife's viewpoint about the matter presented simultaneously with the story of the Cover Girl herself. In this interesting case such an additional contribution is made on the following few pages by "June" who gives her own side of the matter. We esp- ecially thank her for this contribution which we regard as unique, both from the fact of it's simultaneous ap- pearance with the Cover Girl's story and for it's con- tents as well. Surely, "June's" acceptance of Roma and working with her as she did is wonderful. Where - as, the circumstances were unusual too, in that "June" owned a charm school, she herself must be a wonderful- ly understanding person and our hats are off to her. It's too bad that more wives who, though they might be unable to do as much for their "girls" could not at lea- st show some of the same perceptiveness displayed by "June".
It will interest all readers I am sure to know that Roma, though not the first Cover Girl from outside the U.S. (Joan in #8 from Australia captured that honor) is the first one from the continent of Africa. She lives in the Union of So. Africa. This shows again that our sis- terhood extends to all parts of this earth.
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