ti llpf At 7.30 I first saw him At 731 T fell in love / Isflf* wmß/f days I was engaged JmK Then I married him WgW a I i The marvelously fascinating story of an American girl who became a war-bride t who married f "a man who didn't know one soul I knew, neither had I one acquaintance of his. Moreover, he was a man whose (' a||i i whole outlook was diametrically opposed to a romance which, improbable as it may sound, is not only true, but Hi I which is so acutely personal that with only one motive do I consent to tell it: I may be able to help some other girl °r woman who will find her part in the war begun, not when her husband, sweetheart or son went to battle. Hh y Da You Ham to Marry H.m? A<kcd the Docto, Abruptly. but now that the war is forever finished, and he returns to her again." Here is the West: when it was young, uncharted and boisterous: a No-Woman's Land into which the jIP tpcf A fnpptrTtl incp bride of Buffalo Bill went with him. Day by day she lived amid quick death: nowinatent: then in VJI Cdlcal Alllcnidll JAOmanCe a wagon: agam under the sky and in the back of a frontier saloon. You see the great West opening up: you see the great prairies: you see life held cheaply: you hear the death-barbed arrow of the | r%\ jf] h\/ Wnm ati Indi a n s pin through the air: the crack of pistol, and in the midst of it you see an American woman— V/J.V4 L jy <X VYUllldll the wife of the most romantic Indian scout in history. The real American breaks through evew line of this autobiography of Buffalo Bill's widow. j 184 pages: 15 cents • *i > THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA THURSDAY EVENING, ELARRISBURG %&&&& TELEGRAPH MAY 1, 1919. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers