Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 20, Hammond, Lake County, 18 May 1918 — Page 3
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77ie ilfVsf Great Story of the
Girl He Left Behin
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Girls: She's eighteen; beautiful; a sub-deb a flappersparkling with the zest of youth! Along comes the one man. She marries. Two weeks of wedded bliss and then he enlists. She's joyful glad to give him up to make the world a decent place to live in. Then come the days of yearning for her dear one the long, long hours of anxious waiting, of faith, of hope, of prayer. Then the knowledge that a little stranger is to arrive. Love sublime, beautiful brave, loyal sacrifice sincere, tender devotion are expressed in a neu) way in this first great story of an American war bride "Over Here", by Ethel M. Kelley. It starts in tomorrow's Chicago Sunday Tribune.
is a classic of war-time sizzles with a new, bold
philosophy that epitomizes the courage, will and fidelity
of American womanhood. It lays bare the most sacred thoughts ana
Over Here
literature. It
emotions of an American war bride, i ou U hnd a smile and a tear in tne same paragraph. Beth says: "Sometimes get to wondering if I'm grown up enough to love Tommy the tvay I do without spontaneous combustion or something. I hadn't got my hair up on top of my head when I knew that Tommy was all there was to it. I knew it in my soul. War is hell, but there is something about doing your part that helps you through it. " Don't miss this great message of the war. It starts tomorrow in the color section of The Chicago Sunday Tribune. Reserve your copy now. Phone your newsdealer.
Read This First Great Story of an American War Bride Starting In lomorrow's
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WITTER & FITZGERALD, Wholesale Distributor Chicago Tribune Phone -401. 567 Bulletin St. Hammond
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